This week, as I start focusing on my tenure file, I have been asking what the point is of being a professor in the tenure system. I reflected on this Sunday on a ride out to a community pancake breakfast.
What’s so important that the people of a democracy would offer someone the potential of long term job security and intellectual freedom (however precarious), even at times of hardship and deprivation? And what kind of promise could ever be equal to that extraordinary trust? #OutdoorMoments
J. Nathan Matias 🦣
in reply to J. Nathan Matias 🦣 • • •J. Nathan Matias 🦣
in reply to J. Nathan Matias 🦣 • • •Because that story of collective understanding has very real power, it is always under threat, from the emperors who burned my Christian forebears and the priests who burned the Mayan archives of my ancestors to the politicians who threaten scientists today.
And yet the quest for truth persists, thanks to both visible and un-acknowledged courage of a thousand thousand thousand people over the ages, including my own many mentors.
J. Nathan Matias 🦣
in reply to J. Nathan Matias 🦣 • • •Nathan Schneider
in reply to J. Nathan Matias 🦣 • • •Phew, thank you. For all the mess of it, I share this basic gratitude for the guild.
Maybe of interest, since you are thinking historically, here is something I wrote as I stumbled into the tenure track: osf.io/efkm8/
A Wantless, Workless World: How the Origins of the University Can Inform Its Future
OSF