Third Thoughts on Curiosity

Richard EdlinThe Teachers' Lounge1 Comment

Free-Photos / Pixabay

When one of my grandsons comes to stay, you can be sure that among the first books he plucks off the bookshelf and curls up on the couch to read is How Things Work. He has a delightful curiosity in how aspects of the created order function (such as photosynthesis or the limbic system) or how human re-creations operate (such as the internal combustion engine or computers). He then takes great pleasure in sharing these discoveries with his siblings and his grandparents.

Conversely, his little sister, who has an artsy inclination, takes her own curious delight in studying and sharing patterns and shapes in the design of clothing or costume jewellery.

For both, their curiosities provide ample material for wonder, reflection and praise when we end each day at the children’s bedsides, thanking God for what we have learned about Him and His world throughout the day.

So, as Steven Levy asks, is curiosity a vice or a virtue? Augustine viewed curiosity as a vain desire. Aquinas considered that it could easily become an intemperate distraction. Twentieth-century German philosopher Martin Heidegger declared that curiosity was an undignified distraction from reality. In more recent decades, Griffiths concludes that, especially in the postmodern university, curiosity often has become an undignified self-indulgence. Littlejohn (2019), referring to the hours of relentless but often fruitless web surfing, engaged in by many people today, claims that curiosity can be a seductive and habitual diversion into salacious activities. Pornography or identity politics come to mind.

So, should we abandon the pedagogies of nurturing enquiry, curiosity, and cognitive dissonance among our students? Not a chance.

Instead, we can carefully examine the framework by which we as teachers (and parents and pastors too) encourage curiosity. Psalm 8, and the creation mandate of Genesis 1, show God giving to humankind the creative capacity to know about the world, to re-create in it, and to look after it as God’s stewards. Creativity, imagination, and curiosity are central to this call.

These capacities should lead to the righteous and humble wonder that the Psalmist declares in Psalm 139. In that psalm, David has ruminated upon God’s incredible omniscience, omnipresence, and sovereignty. He then pauses in the middle of this curious reflection to declare that “such knowledge is too wonderful for me, too lofty for me to attain.” David takes curiosity to a whole new level outside of ourselves, leading to a more awe-filled, authentic, and responsive understanding of our Heavenly Father.

Levy is right in suggesting that curiosity should not be a hedonistic, distracting novelty. Curiosity and imagination should be wonder-filled delights, propensities that we enlist in the breath-taking unwrapping of God’s mystery parcel of creation on the road to a gospel-grounded worship and service of our Creator.

Indeed, whether we are talking about intellect, human relationships, employment, education, curiosity, or any God-given grace, let us not allow our students to take a good gift from God and turn it into an object of worship. Our own example and pedagogies must give curiosity and all other blessings their divinely intended context.

Levy therefore wisely directs us to the telos question: towards what end. And the answer is Coram Deo–curiosity in the presence of God. So my grandson’s forensic mindset and my granddaughter’s investigation of beauty in color and design can be encouraged and celebrated not as ends in themselves, but as gracious curiosity gifts from a loving God, taking these youngsters beyond self-gratification and helping them wonderfully to understand God’s world God’s way.

Praise God for divinely shaped imagination, curiosity and wonder–and praise Him for Christian schools and homes in which these virtues can be gloriously and faithfully exercised!

Author

  • Richard Edlin

    Dr Richard Edlin is the Director of Edserv International, a mission-based organization serving Christian education communities around the world. Originally from New Zealand but having lived with his family in several places around the world since 1987 outside of his homeland, Dr Edlin is a well-known international speaker on topics relating to a Christian worldview and education from a Christian perspective. Of his many writings, The Cause of Christian Education, which is now in its 4th edition and has been translated into several languages, is his most well-known work. His recently published little book for Christian parents entitled Thinking About Schooling, has been enthusiastically received in the Christian schools community. His own areas of special academic include philosophy, cultural sensitivity training, and effective teacher professional development strategies around the world. His two doctoral degrees are from the US and South Korea. At the present time he is particularly interested in the concept of reformed critical realism; the development of symbiotic teacher education partnerships, especially train-the-trainer schemes, between countries across the Asia/Oceania region; the essence of Christian schooling, imagination and the Christian school, critical friend institutional support, and the challenge of secularism.

One Comment on “Third Thoughts on Curiosity”

  1. I appreciate Richard Edlin’s “Third Thoughts on Curiosity,” and agree with everything he wrote. There is something about the “third way” that transcends “either – or.” It beckons something new, unimagined in a dualistic world. Secular or sacred? Both. Spirit or matter? Both. Jesus, God or man? Both. Father, Son, Holy Spirit? Three in one. Now there is something to inspire endless wonder!

    I hope my article, Second Thoughts on Curiosity, didn’t suggest we should do anything to discourage it, but rather to follow it all the way to wonder. Richard, I would love to see our grandchildren explore this amazing world together!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.