“This is an ambitious volume, providing valuable philosophical tools to tackle three critical policy questions within higher education: What should the content of curricula and pedagogies be? Who should have access to college education? And what should be the relationship between higher education and broader society?”
— Danielle Allen, coeditor of Education, Justice, and Democracy
“This collection of essays is valuable in reminding all of us that higher education both raises profound moral and philosophical issues and, at its best, encourages faculty and students to be more conscious of the importance of such issues, better prepared intellectually and personally to confront them, and, yes, wiser. These essays are also a useful antidote to the arrogance too often represented by strident assertions that ‘I am right and you are wrong.’ Issues of consequence rarely lend themselves to one-sentence answers.”
— William G. Bowen, president emeritus of Princeton University
“With all the understandable attention being paid to the economics of higher education, it is wonderful to focus also on the many moral issues in play. Brighouse and McPherson—and their superb team of contributors—challenge us all to step back and consider ethical dimensions underlying how and what we teach, the distribution of educational resources by the government and by colleges, and so much more. What a provocative and engaging volume.”
— Morton O. Schapiro, president of Northwestern University
“In this book, Brighouse and McPherson marshal leading philosophers to discuss not just the usual economic benefits of higher education (though that notion figures into most of the discussions) but also how morality and justice fit into it. Amy Gutmann, renowned for her extraordinary book Democratic Education (1987), begins the analysis by making a case for the liberal arts as necessary for any pre-professional education. Along the same line, the humanities are defended by other contributors as necessary for understanding the purpose and function of education. The contributors’ observations are lively, not defensive, and they do not require an either/or commitment. Other contributors in the volume emphasize developing definite character traits and skills in students and helping students learn which experts to trust; they also emphasize the need for student and faculty diversity—not just for signaling justice but for epistemological uses as well. Contributors also highlight the obligation that elite, private colleges (represented by most of the contributors, though they believe their suggestions fit public colleges as well) must ‘contribute to corrective justice.’ The book concludes with suggestions for future research on values in higher education. . . . Recommended”
— Choice