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Dear all,

I have been listening attentively to British scientists spell the
apocalypse after Brexit, but in light of our general interest in
universities organising themselves around wisdom-inquiry rather than pure
knowledge-inquiry, I wonder what your thoughts on this are. I can't recall
FoW having a proper Brexit back-and-forth... (forgive me if I'm mistaken).

Nick: perhaps you could step up and give a statement, from your
perspective, about whether Brexit is going to be as woeful as we are all
told.

Personally, I think the Brexit Jeremiads are spelling doom and gloom
because they see the purpose of universities as offering specialised
knowledge around particular themes. I understand there are moves now to
attend to Third World problems, which gesture at wisdom, but my suspicion
is that academics who are trained in knowledge-inquiry will simply adapt in
the sense of impact paradigms rather than real wisdom ones.

My own personal experience of how UK universities have responded has been a
classic case of what Dickens called 'telescopic philanthropism', embodied
in Mrs Jellybee. Rather comically, we see Mrs Jellybee in throes over
natives in Africa while her children tumble down the stairs and get ink all
over themselves. The point is this: that we can easily focus so hard on the
global and 'third world' or whatever, and ignore what's happening on our
doorstep -- the political mood that is shaping our localities and country.
Universities seem to be doing just this -- ignoring: they are going as far
as to ignore why some people voted Brexit, and claiming the moral
superiority in 'we know best what's good for this country -- science and
freedom of movement among EU scientists'. They claim that science and
technology is what drives Britain forward -- but forward for whom? Oh yes,
for Mrs Gibbs who wheels her rollator along to the surgery to gain expert
medical care. But what about when Mrs Gibbs gets home: her son calls
because workers have been laid off due to company cuts; her granddaughter
cannot find a job after graduating; her young niece had to wait hours in
hospital to deliver her baby. These problems are not going to be solved by
British science; they are to be solved by wisdom exercised in domestic
politics -- by new perspectives applied to political ideology. But so far
as UK universities engage in telescopic philanthropism, they will not see
these domestic problems and why Mrs Gibbs voted for Brexit -- because she
thought it would get her family back together.

My feeling is that universities have been colluding in neo-liberal and
globalised politics for too long because it suited their expansionist
agendas; their students -- especially the Red Brick ones -- seldom come
from the city or locality in which the university is situated, and their
PhD students and postdocs see the world and EU as their career marketplace.
One could easily pick up, say, Exeter University, and drop it outside
Ambleside or Antwerp, staff and students and all, and by and large it'd do
the same work.

I am not trying to tar individual academics; I talk merely in generalities
-- the big picture.

So, Nick and others, from the perspective of wisdom, is there any scope for
seeing the vote for Brexit in terms other than a gross folly and naive
backwardness -- the up-yours from poor Mrs Gibbs?

Best wishes,

Richard.

www.richardvytniorgu.com