It was a bit like attending a rock concert. I knew that Nobel laureate Amartya Sen 鈥 Thomas W. Lamont university professor and professor of economics and philosophy at Harvard University 鈥 had made major contributions to moral philosophy, development economics and human rights. But I was still startled by the great roar of acclaim that greeted the 83-year-old scholar as he came out on stage to deliver the keynotes lecture at a conference launching the new at the UCL Institute of Education.
The young Asian woman sitting next to me made gestures of obeisance. And Michael Arthur, provost and president of UCL, introduced him as 鈥渙ne of the greatest minds of the 20th聽and 21st聽centuries鈥.
Sen had been billed to speak on 鈥淲hat鈥檚 the use of education?鈥 and he got off to a great start recalling how he had heard that question before. He had first arrived in Britain in 1953 鈥渙n a slow boat to London from Bombay鈥, along with the Indian women鈥檚 hockey team. When one of the players asked why he was coming to England, he shyly admitted it was for educational purposes.
鈥淚 always hated school,鈥 the young woman replied. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 the use of education?鈥
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Sen told her he didn鈥檛 know how to play hockey and she offered to teach him, so he pointed out that would count as a form of education.
Yes, she agreed, 鈥渂ut it will also be fun鈥.
His lecture finally gave him a chance to explain to the hockey star and other sceptics why education can be both 鈥渦seful and fun鈥.
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This led to a rapid survey of how Enlightenment Europe had 鈥渇irst showed how whole societies can be transformed by universal education鈥 鈥 and how this was taken up in Asia in the 19th聽century (although he feared that Britain was now retreating from these ideals as a result of a referendum campaign based on 鈥渁lternative facts鈥).
鈥淭he big penalty for colonised countries鈥, Sen argued, 鈥渨as lack of education.鈥 Newly independent India had inherited literacy rates of only 12-13 per cent in 1947 and made slow progress in raising them.
Quite apart from its impact on employment prospects, Sen went on, 鈥渋lliteracy muffles the political voice of people and leads to insecurity鈥. Even basic levels of education, by contrast, could 鈥渉elp with health policy鈥, 鈥渟timulate an interest in human rights鈥 and make people more aware of their legal rights. Schooling for girls in particular played 鈥渁 big role in empowering women鈥 and reducing the size of families. Educational backwardness in many countries was 鈥渁 key reason for lack of development鈥.
Much of this is reasonably familiar territory, but Sen delivered his message with great passion and panache, and came up with some witty and learned responses to interventions from the audience even when he was too hard of hearing to understand the questions.
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In concluding his lecture, Sen quoted the views of H. G. Wells that human history was becoming more and more 鈥渁 race between education and catastrophe鈥. He offered it as his 鈥渇irm belief that we cannot allow catastrophe to win鈥. If only his hockey-playing friend had been there to witness the standing ovation.
Matthew Reisz is 糖心Vlog books editor.
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