Buchanan, Scott (1895–1968)
BUCHANAN, SCOTT (1895–1968)
Scott Milross Buchanan shaped the Great Books program in American higher education as it developed at the People's Institute (New York City), the University of Chicago, and St. John's College (Annapolis, Maryland). A philosopher, critic, author, and educator, Buchanan promoted and experimented with the pursuit of the liberal arts through discussion of classic texts in philosophy, literature, mathematics, physics, astronomy, political science, history, economics, and languages.
Buchanan was born in Sprague, Washington, to William Duncan Buchanan, a medical doctor, and Lillian Bagg Buchanan. Their only child, he moved with his family to Jeffersonville, Vermont, where he spent his boyhood years. His father died in 1902.
Soon after he entered Amherst College in 1912, Buchanan became a devoted follower of its president, Alexander Meiklejohn, an educator nationally noted for his defense of liberal education and his masterful use of Socratic seminar methods. Buchanan's custom-tailored undergraduate curriculum amounted to a triple major in Greek, French, and mathematics. After graduating with a B.A. in 1916, he spent two years as an administrator and an instructor at Amherst before attending Oxford as a Rhodes scholar from 1919 to 1921. There, he met Stringfellow Barr, a Rhodes scholar from Virginia who would become his lifelong friend and his partner in innovative academic endeavors.
Upon returning to the United States, Buchanan married Miriam Damon Thomas, a teacher and social worker. The couple had one child, Douglas Buchanan. Determined to seek further academic study, particularly in philosophy, Buchanan entered Harvard University, where the English mathematician and philosopher Alfred North Whitehead offered him intellectual encouragement. He received his doctorate at Harvard in 1925. His dissertation, a philosophical inquiry into imaginative and scientific possibility, was published in 1927 as Possibility.
From 1925 to 1929 Buchanan served as assistant director of the People's Institute, an educational outreach endeavor affiliated with Cooper Union College in New York City. The intent of the institute, founded in 1895 by Columbia University professor Charles Sprague Smith, was to deliver academic and literary lectures that would attract and invigorate a community of both recent immigrants and privileged intellectuals. With Buchanan's help, this popular approach to adult education soon included smaller discussions after and between the lectures and a series of seminars at public library branches. On the advice of Columbia University professor Mortimer Adler, Buchanan incorporated elements of the Columbia Honors Course in Great Books for the library seminar series. The original list of books was adopted from British intellectual Sir John Lubbock who devised it in the 1880s for publication and use in the Workers' and Mechanics' Institute in London.
While lecturing at the People's Institute, Buchanan explored the elements of poetry and mathematics and determined that relationships among the words of poetry and the ratios of mathematics deserved further inquiry. That inquiry became his book Poetry and Mathematics, published in 1929, the same year Buchanan accepted a faculty appointment in the philosophy department at the University of Virginia. There, he renewed his friendship with Stringfellow Barr, a professor of history, and worked with a committee on honors courses that pushed unsuccessfully for an emphasis on Great Books during the first two years of honors study. During a year-long leave of absence in England in 1931 through 1932, he studied the work of George and Mary Boole and other mathematicians, publishing his findings about symbols in literature and measurement in Symbolic Distance in Relation to Analogy and Fiction (1932).
In 1936 Buchanan and Barr left the University of Virginia at the invitation of Robert Maynard Hutchins, president of the University of Chicago, who was attempting to strengthen the liberal arts program against the wishes of many on his faculty. Buchanan and Barr joined Mortimer Adler and Richard McKeon, who had come to Chicago from Columbia University, and together they formed a Committee on Liberal Arts chaired by Buchanan. Although all four were instrumental in crafting the Great Books program at the University of Chicago, Buchanan worried about some of their philosophical differences. Within a year, he and Barr accepted the challenge of trustees of the barely surviving St. John's College, Annapolis, Maryland, to revive it as a prominent liberal arts college.
With Buchanan in the position of dean and Barr in the position of president, St. John's quickly became known as an intellectually exciting and innovative institution. Firmly defending the liberal arts, it required all students to read and discuss approximately 100 enduring classic texts of the Western intellectual tradition, from ancient Greece to the twentieth century. Tutors and Socratic seminars were the means to dialogue that illuminated the learning from these texts. The program areas covered included languages, mathematics, science, political science, philosophy, literature, music, and history.
Buchanan quickly became known as a brilliant thinker and teacher, as well as an ardent defender of the liberal arts during a time of increasing vocational education and a proponent of the required curriculum during a time of elective coursework. For him the aim of a liberal education was to spark insight, understanding, and imagination that would result in a disciplined and vibrant intellect prepared for lifelong learning. During his stay at St. John's, Buchanan joined with friends and associates Mark Van Doren, Mortimer Adler, Robert Maynard Hutchins, and others who sought to infuse liberal arts into the public debate about the ends and means of higher education. While at St. John's, he authored The Doctrine of Signatures: A Defense of Theory in Medicine (1938).
Buchanan left St. John's in 1947 to pursue a series of endeavors that were personally important to him. For two years, he directed Liberal Arts, Incorporated, in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. From 1948 to 1958, he served as a consultant, trustee, and secretary of the Foundation for World Government; and, during that time, he spent a year as chairman of the Department of Religion and Philosophy at Fisk University, Nashville, Tennessee. He became a founder and senior fellow of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara, California.
A final manuscript, Truth in the Sciences, remained unpublished when Buchanan died in 1968. It was published in 1972.
See also: Higher Education in the United States, subentry on Historical Development; St. John's College.
bibliography
American Council of Learned Societies. 1988. "Scott Milross Buchanan." In Dictionary of American Biography, Sup. 8. New York: Scribners.
Buchanan, Scott. 1975. Possibility (1927). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Buchanan, Scott. 1975. Poetry and Mathematics (1929). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Nelson, Charles A., ed. 1995. Scott Buchanan: A Centennial Appreciation of His Life and Work. Annapolis, MD: St. John's College Press.
Wofford, Harris, Jr., ed. 1969. Embers of the World: Scott Buchanan's Conversations with Harris Wofford Jr. Santa Barbara, CA: Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions.
Katherine C. Reynolds
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Careswell.(history of Winslow House, Marshfield, Mass)
Magazine article from: The Magazine Antiques; 9/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...buried at sea off Hispaniola. Josiah Winslow (1628-1680), Edward Winslow...It may be from a house built by Josiah Winslow for his family while his mother...Governor Edward Winslow and Governor Josiah Winslow were long dead, was still refe
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Colonial-era slippers reunited at Plymouth museum
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 6/9/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...Pelham at her wedding in London to Josiah Winslow in 1651 has finally met its match...The most important thing about Josiah," Behrens said, "is that he...Herbert Pelham, Esq. and wife of Josiah Winslow, governor and leader of the N...
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SOUTH SHORE HAUNTS ; Ghosts alive and well on land and at sea
Newspaper article from: The Patriot Ledger Quincy, MA; 10/27/2008; 700+ words
; ...was built in 1699 for Judge Isaac Winslow, the son and grandson of Colonial governors Josiah and Edward Winslow. Winslow family members occupied...s first treasurer, she married Josiah Winslow in London and returned to Plymouth...
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A GHOSTLY PRESENCE IN HISTORIC HOMES
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 10/17/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...Regina Porter, resident director of the historic Winslow House in Marshfield, said she has heard and...understood. According to Porter, Penelope Winslow was the wife of Governor Josiah Winslow. After their marriage in 1651, she and her...
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Madcap memoir brings Lowells into focus.
Newspaper article from: The Boston Herald; 10/2/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...first woman to step on Plymouth Rock, and Edward Winslow, who signed the Mayflower Compact and kept the...took a metaphorical ax to one of those skeletons, Josiah Winslow. This Winslow, brought up by his peacemaker father as an equal...
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A new vision in sight ; Renovated Pilgrim Hall to tell the colony's story in a modern way
Newspaper article from: The Patriot Ledger Quincy, MA; 2/16/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...dissolved and the territory became part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony," Baker said. "We have Josiah Winslow's headstone. Josiah was Edward Winslow's son and was the first native-born governor in the colony." Baker is having a replica...
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The Great Swamp War.(battle between colonists and Narragansett Indians in South Kingston, Rhode Island)
Magazine article from: Cobblestone; 10/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...the governor of Plymouth colony, Josiah Winslow, the men began a long, cold march...month of the Great Swamp Fight, Winslow had a new, fourteen-hundred...desertions and constant hunger forced Winslow's army to disband on February...
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EARLY MOURNING EMBRACING DEATH WAS PART OF LIFE IN THE PAST, EXHIBIT SHOWS
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 6/8/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...gold mourning ring from 1680 made by a silversmith to mark the death of Plymouth Colony Governor Josiah Winslow. The ring has strands of Winslow's hair visibly encased in the gold. The hair from the deceased was often used in the 19th century...
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Like a breath of fresh air ; Renovated Pilgrim Hall Museum to reopen Saturday
Newspaper article from: The Patriot Ledger Quincy, MA; 5/29/2008; ; 615 words
; ...Exhibits include John Hopkins' beaver skin hat, Josiah Winslow's tombstone (and a reproduction stone where visitors...Mayflower, original handwritten land patents, Edward Winslow's chair and other artifacts long hidden in the shadows...
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Electrical fire damages historic house; Family homeless; firefighters save Scottish terrier
Newspaper article from: The Patriot Ledger Quincy, MA; 1/25/2003; ; 613 words
; ...Old Colony Lane, owned by William and Dorothy MacMullen, around 12:30 p.m. The house is known as the Josiah Winslow House. Winslow was one of Marshfield's first residents and was thought to have built his house in the 1640s. However...
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Winslow, Josiah
Book article from: The Oxford Essential Dictionary of the U.S. Military
Winslow, Josiah (1629?–1680) colonial military leader and governor. Born the son of the governor of Plymouth Colony, Josiah Winslow became its military commander in 1659. He became governor himself in...
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Josiah Winslow
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Josiah Winslow c.1629-1680, American governor of...b. Plymouth, Mass.; son of Edward Winslow. Educated at Harvard, he was an assistant...born governor of any American colony. Winslow also served (1658-72) as the Plymouth...
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Winslow, Edward
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Literature
...that of William Bradford. When Winslow returned to England (1623...Puritan regime and specifically to Winslow. The latter was sent by Cromwell...Indies, where he died of a fever. Josiah Winslow (c. 1629–80), his...
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Edward Winslow
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...America on the Mayflower in 1620, Winslow negotiated (1621) the treaty...declined to hold the governorship. Winslow was an active explorer and was...West Indies. He was the father of Josiah Winslow. Bibliography: See G. F. Willison...
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Narragansett
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...the common fate. Their fort near the site of Kingston, R.I., was attacked (1675) by a colonial force under Josiah Winslow, and in that engagement, known as the Great Swamp Fight, the Narragansett under Canonchet lost almost a thousand...
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