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Friday, May 15, 2026

Caleb Anderson: The Denial of Complexity in the Search for Simplicity


I initially trained to be a history teacher, but have spent most of my career in school administration. I have sometimes thought that, in retirement, I would give my time to the nearest secondary school, at no charge, for the simple privilege of working with their senior history students, inculcating a love for the discipline, and maybe to encourage some students to further their studies of history at the tertiary level.

It has become increasingly obvious to me that the history I studied at University in the eighties, and the discipline that so energised me, is profoundly different from the history that is generally taught (and permitted) today.

When I studied history all arguments were on the table. It was about how well you argued your case, how you assembled the facts, how you justified a given assertion, how you dealt with the contradictions, and how you responded, if at all, to compelling contrary evidence.

Sometimes the biggest challenge was to argue a seemingly impossible case, something antithetical to your personal worldview, just for the sport of it.

History has never been value free, almost nothing is, but this is what has not only made it fun, it is also, paradoxically, what has made it one of the truest of all disciplines.

One of the fundamental baseline assertions in psychology is that we create reality by how we populate (or define) that reality. In other words, we deal with the complexities of competing and contradictory ideas by accepting some ideas and rejecting others. We do this all of the time. In other words, a particular argument is framed by the ideas we factor in and, equally, by those we rule out.

So, of course, with history.

It is possible to form opposing arguments, and for each argument to be equally compelling and, in a sense, for each to be true.

The history taught today is profoundly different.

History today is often, although not always, constrained by presuppositional assumptions that rule in some ideas and rule out other ideas at the outset. There are predetermined boundaries of content and discourse. Some things are held to be objectively, and incontrovertibly, true and others to be untrue, and even dangerous.

There is a sense in which this has always been, but it is a matter of degree.

There is a reason why the New Zealand History Curriculum commences in 1840 and not before, why its content is constrained by overarching statements that constrain and configure discourse, why whole perspectives and areas of enquiry have been ruled out, and why its content bears the fingerprints of the incursions of more radical and self interested disciplines.

Postmodernism and critical theory have denuded many of our disciplines of the very things that once gave them value, that provided insight, that protected us from simplistic arguments, that reconciled (by necessary accommodation) seemingly contradictory arguments.

It is hard to know if our universities, and the disciplines through which we once navigated and reconciled complexity and contradiction, are even able to be redeemed.

The postmodern narrative, in its sheer denial of complexity, in its ruthless negation of alternative facts, and in its unyielding adherence to dogma, has initiated a new dark age.

An age which is inevitably generative of the rejection of reality, and the usurpation, and disintegration, of order.

Caleb Anderson, a graduate history, economics, psychotherapy and theology, has been an educator for over thirty years, twenty as a school principal.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Quite right Caleb. When we compare the cleanness of the text book historical narrative with the actual primary sources (where they are available) the difference is stark.

It is confirmation bias writ large. They have their story and pick their sources to confirm it rather than letting the primary sources speak for themselves.

Anonymous said...

and so education morphed into indoctrination ...

Anonymous said...

How could a nation as open and honest as ours used to be, descend so precipitously into the ideological, biased and dishonest state it now displays on all the ‘elite’ levels, and particularly in education? Have we, the older generations, just been asleep at the wheel? What is our recovery programme, if there is one? Other nations appear to have similar problems, and some see the building of new and honest institutions as a solution, while the older organisations should be left to collapse under their own weight of corruption. Could this be our approach as well?

Anonymous said...

As Maori didn't have ( they still don't, but stole ours) a written language, their history is flexible depending on what benefits they want to extract from us.

Anonymous said...

We , I believe will get nowhere in ridding this country of faux education , until we cut off the toxic plant that has strangled good , honest education . That noxious weed is Progressivism ,
in education which has cancelled out all those traditional ideas of classical and Christian content, methods and discipline . There are now absolutes in education that have revealed Prog education is wrong . This is cognitive and neuro science, as well as real scientific research . We ,eg have a limited short term memory and need to get ideas well established into commodious long term memory that are readily accessible when tackling a new problem . This means memorizing , drills , retrieval exercises, repetition
and correction of work . Progressivism cancelled all this out and hence our appalling failure in the basics.
It was crazy ideas from progressivism that determined nonsense like the destruction of
self -esteem if a child was corrected. Hence no longer is critical thinking done because of this. Having your pet theory challenged is no longer done . It is interpreted as belittling rather than seeking truth.
The roots of progressivism were from the ideas of John Dewey , Rousseau etc They wanted to promote the belief we do not have many flaws as humans but are naturally good . This is especially true for children. Well this is complete nonsense . Just spend some time with preschoolers and you observe a whole range of behaviours- desirable and undesirable. The later need correction or the child becomes a little monster with no boundaries.
Progressive education needs to be scrutinized and much of it eradicated . Just see the chaos it has produced . Opening the doors to ideology which has cultist attributes. See Colinyx articles on Marxism and "the infantilisation of the citizen
' on BV. Cults don't tolerate other views.

Anonymous said...

The problem with history is that it is written by the “victor”. Will always be distorted to the extent the victor will benefit. The good old maorification of NEW ZEALAND is every where now.

James

Anonymous said...

Pwfff... wow!!! I take my hat off to you, Caleb. Deep... you bet cha - but correct. It's sad (I'm assuming) you're no longer at the coal face, for you SO ought to be.

Anonymous said...

Caleb is right, but note: We are now entering a New Dark Age... the Fall of Western Civilisation. It will not usher in a bright New Age complete with Robots and AI to make life easy. No..... the human brain will ROT and shrink.... Here comes a new 'monkeydom'

Anonymous said...

We used to guard the gates to the universities, but a few decades ago we shifted to a bums-on-seats funding model and threw open the university gates to anyone. This allowed activism and progressive ideology to take firmer root, providing prizes and awards to those who would be considered poor students or ‘low achievers’ by traditional objective measures. Those students found jobs in the universities and they continue to put activism ahead of scholarship. Now they are a self-sustaining force within the universities. They are the ones now guarding the university gates and educating the educators.
What Caleb writes is true of many once noble areas — including history, English, psychology, education, sociology, anthropology, politics, religion. And the situation is even worse in the new-fangled areas — such as communications, media studies, fat studies, women’s studies, Maori studies.
We need to take the prizes and awards away. That means changing the funding to universities in order to allow them to change. Until that happens, it’s probably better to study STEM rather than history. Try Japanese or Chinese language and literature for your major instead of history or English. That’s because STEM, Chinese and Japanese are not as captured. You’re more likely to encounter real scholarship in them which will help you more in life than anything you’ll get from any area captured by progressives.

Anonymous said...

Actually, in the bums on seats model, social justice courses, women's studies etc do not make any money because of low enrollments. Pretty much a worldwide trend. So others with huge enrollments need to work extra hard to subsidize their social justice colleagues who don't need to work as hard...but of course get paid the same or more. They probably talk about their lived experience...drinking chardonnay.

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