Edward H. Levi quotes:

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  • Universities are the custodians not only of the many cultures of man, but of the rational process itself.

  • The concept of reason itself appears as an artificial attempt to separate intellectual powers from the frustrations, emotions, and accidents which cause events; the concept of reason is viewed as facade to prevent change.

  • The introduction of many minds into many fields of learning along a broad spectrum keeps alive questions about the accessibility, if not the unity, of knowledge.

  • The University conceives of itself as dedicated to the power of the intellect. Its commitment is to the way of reason.

  • Law builds upon and, I should like to claim, is one of the liberal arts. It uses words of persuasion and changing definitions for practical ends.

  • The role of a liberal arts college within a university is to be a genuine part of that university, giving and responding to the other parts.

  • As an instrument for practical action, law is responsive to the wisdom of its time, which may be wrong, but it carries forward, sometimes in opposition to this wisdom or passion, a memory of received values.

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