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Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

The Death of Why?: An Interview With Author Andrea Batista Schlesinger

The topic below was originally posted on my blog, the Intrepid Liberal Journal.

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The phrase “knowledge is power” is a cliché in our culture. Yet as often as we hear it from others or speak it ourselves, how often have we contemplated the process of acquiring knowledge? Is there a blueprint for obtaining knowledge and wisdom? Are we encouraging children to be intellectually curious or merely teaching them that every question has an instant and obvious answer?


In her book, The Death of Why?: The Decline of Questioning and the Future of Democracy (Berrett-Kohler Publishers), New York City policy expert Andrea Batista Schlesinger writes that,

“Why is the first question most children ask. With this question we express, to the delight and chagrin of our parents, our power.


In my life, questions have always been power. Asking them enabled me to overcome the challenges I faced as a young woman sitting at tables where I didn’t automatically belong.”


Although only thirty-two, Schlesinger has operated in the arena of policy debates locally in New York City and nationally for over a decade. Since 2002, Schlesinger has applied her background in public policy, politics, and communications to transform the Drum Major Institute (“DMI”) into a progressive policy think tank with national impact. During her tenure as Executive Director, DMI created its Marketplace of Ideas series which highlights successful progressive policies from across the country and launched two public policy blogs that reach several thousand readers a day; and embarked on a national program to nurture careers in public policy for college students from underrepresented communities.


Recently, Schlesinger took a leave of absence from DMI to serve as a senior policy adviser to the re-election campaign of New York City mayor Michael R. Bloomberg – a decision that is controversial among New York City liberals like myself. Prior to joining DMI, Schlesinger directed a national Pew Charitable Trusts campaign to engage college students in discussion about the future of Social Security and served as the education adviser to Bronx borough president and mayoral candidate Fernando Ferrer.


The one life lesson Schlesinger has learned above all others in her career and promotes passionately her book is that questions equals power. It is Schlesinger’s contention that our culture promotes instant answers at the expense of inquiring.


With this book, Schlesinger has four primary objectives:

  1. Convince readers of the importance; of inquiry in our democracy

  2. Illustrate how the very institutions that should be encouraging inquiry such as schools, the media, and government, the Internet are instead undermining intellectual curiosity in our society;

  3. Inspire readers with hopeful examples of people working to restore inquiry to its rightful place of importance;

  4. Convey a sense of urgency among citizens to develop effective “habits of the mind” and not be easily seduced by instant easy sound bite answers to complex challenges such as global warming.

Death of Why, is a well researched and scrupulously sourced eleven chapters and 215 pages of text. Where Schlesinger’s book is especially provocative is when she takes bloggers like me to task for engaging in robotic group-think and avoiding engagement with people possessing different viewpoints.


Former New York Governor Mario Cuomo said that,

“The road to wisdom is asking ‘why’? Andrea Batista Schlesinger has been asking ‘why?” and supplying her own bright and thoughtful answers for long enough so that some of us suggested she write a book. It’s foruntate for all of us that her answer was ‘why not!'”


The publisher of The Nation, Kathleen vanden Heuvel added that,

“From her start in politics as a teenager Andrea Batista Schlesinger has asked the important questions. Now she asks her most important: are we teaching young people to value inquiry, and if not, what hope can we have for the future of democracy?”


Schlesinger graciously agreed to a telephone podcast interview with me this afternoon about her book. She was engaging and assertive in a conversation that was just over forty-six minutes. Among the topics discussed and debated is her contention that we’re ideologically segregated, her argument that the Internet has reinforced a destructive group think mentality in our society, her advocacy for civics education and objection to teaching “financial literacy” in public schools and we closed by discussing her decision to join Mayor Bloomberg’s re-election campaign as a senior policy adviser.

Please refer to the flash media player below.

This interview can also be accessed at no cost via the Itunes Store by either searching for the “Intrepid Liberal Journal” or “Robert Ellman.”  


14 comments

  1. It’s an odd thing, but while there’s a dearth of ‘why?’ amid the populace, I see a countervailing tendency among experts in all their professional deformation and specialisation. They always have an answer. People rarely say ‘I don’t know’ any more. I call this tendency, a growing one since the specialisation of labour since industrialisation, as the dangers of solutionism.

    Without going into a discredited Rumsfeld rant about unknown unknowns, I’d just like to reiterate Sophocles famous statement; “Wisdom is knowing what you don’t know.” Our own Chris Blask is brilliant at expressing this level of humility and curiosity, and looking at the various probabilities of competing outcomes.

    As a writer, this is best expressed to me why the poet Keats’ description of Shakespeare

    I had not a dispute but a disquisition with Dilke, on various subjects; several things dovetailed in my mind, & at once it struck me, what quality went to form a Man of Achievement especially in literature & which Shakespeare possessed so enormously – I mean Negative Capability, that is when man is capable of being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubts without any irritable reaching after fact & reason.

    I’m bit loathe to post this up on a US blog, because I remember going to high school in Boston, deploying my sceptical English downbeat humour, and being told: “You British are so negative…”

    But I love this point about children who keep on asking why. They always do. I was walking down the road an hour or so ago back from the coffee shop, only to hear a six year old girl ask her mum: “What do AM and PM stand for?” I never heard the mother’s answer, but as a Cambridge graduate I realised I didn’t have the answer to hand myself. Stymied by a six year old!

    When I was a kid I was always asking why, why, why to the point of exhaustion, until the inevitable answer came: “Because I told you so”.

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