Learning how to think really means learning how to exercise some control over how and what you think. It means being conscious and aware enough to choose what you pay attention to and to choose how you construct meaning from experience.
David Foster Wallace
Kenyon College Commencement 2005, 2005
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Wallace spent the first half of his speech dismantling the commencement cliche that a liberal arts education 'teaches you how to think.' He acknowledged that most students find this claim insulting — getting into a good college already proves you can think. But then he reframed it entirely: the real education isn't about the capacity to think but about the choice of what to think about. This was Wallace's central thesis, and he stated it with uncharacteristic directness. The freedom he described isn't intellectual freedom in the academic sense — it's the existential freedom to construct meaning from the raw material of daily experience. Without this freedom, he argued, 'you will be totally hosed' — trapped in the default setting of self-centeredness that treats every experience as fundamentally about you. Wallace connected this to the old cliche about the mind being 'an excellent servant but a terrible master,' then made the connection horrifyingly concrete: adults who commit suicide with firearms almost always shoot themselves in the head. 'They shoot the terrible master.' The implication was that learning to think — really think — isn't an academic luxury but a survival skill.