小优传媒

Civic Engagement lecture recap

04/13/18

Integrity, truth virtue: Bluffton鈥檚 campus community explores honor in the world

Dr. Jonathan Andreas, associate professor of economics, opened the Civic Engagement lecture at 小优传媒 with a simple question: 鈥淲hat makes the world go round?鈥

鈥淚鈥檓 an economist, and I am here to tell you that it is not money,鈥 joked Andreas. Instead, Andreas believes notions of honor hold societies together. 鈥淲ithout some amount of honor, capitalism would fall apart.鈥

During the lecture titled, 鈥淲orthy of Honor,鈥 Andreas further explored Bluffton鈥檚 Civic Engagement theme, 鈥Integrity, Truth, Virtue: Bluffton's honor code in the world," a topic that students, faculty and staff have been discussing the entire year. 

For Andreas, there are two forms of honor: one鈥檚 own virtue, integrity, or character and one鈥檚 bestowal of respect, distinction or privilege on others.

Communities, including families, churches, governments and businesses, explained Andreas, are held together by a code of honor. Many times, these honor codes become the societal norms of the community and can have a positive impact.  

鈥淐ommunities help us choose the values that benefit the community and help us uphold the values,鈥 said Andreas. 鈥淭hat is partly what church is about. You don鈥檛 need a church community to have good values, but a church community can help you define your values and keep you from temptation.鈥

At Bluffton, the honor code, mission statement and four enduring values help set the norms for the campus community and enhance the educational experience.

However, Andreas explains, honor can also be used to elicit violence and war. Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot and Bin Laden came to power through genocide and terrorism, 鈥測et they all thought what they were doing was honorable.鈥

Because of the dual nature of honor, defining it is very difficult.  鈥淲hat is honorable is different for different groups of people in different parts of the world. It鈥檚 easy to think that we do is honorable and what everyone else is doing is dishonorable,鈥 explained Andreas.

For example, honor killings used to be more commonplace in the United States. 鈥淥ne of our founding fathers murdered another because of a trivial dispute,鈥 Andreas told the crowd. 鈥淎lexander Hamilton, secretary of the treasury, was killed by Aaron Burr, the vice president, in broad daylight and in front of witnesses in a duel. Dueling was what honorable people did.鈥

Of course, killing somebody through a duel would be reprehensible by today鈥檚 standards, but the example highlighted how norms of honor are constantly changing.

How do today鈥檚 students decipher what is honorable and what is not? Through careful reasoning and relationship building.

鈥淚 want students to start thinking about ethics and thinking about the communities we are a part of鈥攖he organizations, the churches, all of it鈥攁nd about if the leaders are honorable and holding people accountable. I want them to think about who are their friends,鈥 said Andreas. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a call to be intentional in thinking about their priorities. Go-with-your-gut ethical reasoning can sometimes work out, but it can also lead you astray.鈥

Andreas鈥 presentation was followed by Civic Engagement Day on April 11. The daylong event featured more than 25 sessions led by students, faculty and staff ranging from a coaches panel on integrity in athletics to an interactive event on ethical dilemmas such as cheating.   

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Jonathan Andreas
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