I have a confession to make. As much as I enjoy sports—more watching than playing them at this stage in my life—I’ve had a love/hate relationship with high school athletics. There are two reasons for this: (1) it seems that many student-athletes are making the “student” part carry more of the adjectival weight than ever, so that we have athletes who happen to be students rather than students who happen to be athletes and (2) athletics can make it difficult for teachers to plan lessons and assessments with the whole class in mind. Let me explain both further.
With regard to (1), most students won’t be D-1 athletes, let alone professional athletes. Their studies seem to matter more for their long-term success than their participation in athletics. Even though I value athletics, I’ve worried about how much emotion and attention my students put into sports compared to the subjects that may have something to do with their future professions or actions as citizens in a functioning democracy.
With regard to (2), it can be a pain to chase down student-athletes who miss class, especially when they miss a lot of class. I’ve seen student-athletes who seem completely lost at times because they (a) missed class where I’m present to teach/explain concepts and then (b) rush through the supplementary homework, aiming to complete it in a hurry rather than taking the time to learn the content. Because they miss several classes on, for example, days when they have to travel, this can cause the missed work to pile up on the student so that their concern is to simply do what has to be done to maintain a good grade. This leads to frustration in the classroom. I’m frustrated because I know they’re doing the minimum; they’re frustrated because they can’t keep up with the conversations or understand the assignments that were created with their presence in mind.
As NIL rights have come to dominate college athletics, I’m sure that many of my colleagues in higher ed are feeling some of this pressure. College athletics has become a profession. College athletes are athletes first; students second, much (most?) of the time. But at the collegiate level, most students aren’t participating in the athletics programs. (In fall 2021, there were 15.44 million undergraduate students in the U.S. and 520,000 NCAA student-athletes.) For many high school teachers, most of our students play at least one team sport, maybe more. According to EducationWeek, between 1991-2019, 57.4% of high school students “played on at least one school or community sports team in the past year”. It seems like there may be a decline in youth sports participation but in small schools like mine where students have an easier time making a roster, it often feels like students are playing sports all the time.
A couple of books that I’ve been reading have caused me to pause and rethink my intuitions/criticisms. First, in Emily Ryall’s Philosophy of Sports: Key Questions, there’s a chapter titled, “Is the Body Just Another Tool in Sport?” In the first paragraph, Ryall comments (on p. 67),
“Traditionally, and certainly in academia, the body is reduced to secondary consideration. It is the mind or soul that is of primary importance and of greater worth; the body is often considered an imperfect vehicle that contains these elements. Indeed, those who spend time perfecting their bodily appearance, whether through cosmetic surgery, steroids or pumping weights are often denigrated by the learned elite. Spending time on your body is considered vain and shallow, spending time on developing your mind by contrast is not.
Ryall notes that in Ancient Greece, “a common view was that the body and soul were inter-dependent and inseparable (p. 67).” In Greek thought, “A body without a soul was simply a corpse. As such, physical education was a much more holistic practice; training the body was also considered to be training the soul (p. 68).” Ryall reminds us that one of the founding fathers of western philosophy, Plato, was a “competitive wrestler” so that “one of the most renowned ancient Greek philosophers, and the first person to establish a higher-education academy,” happened to be an athlete (p. 68)
For Ryall, it’s the mind-body dualism of René Descartes that may be most to blame for our current dichotomy between training the mind and training the body. Anyone who knows about Descartes program of “extreme skepticism” knows that Descartes determined the one thing that he can’t doubt is that he is a thinking reality: “I think therefore I am.” Since the existence of physical matter could be doubted, but Descartes own thinking mind was necessary for him to even doubt, the physical and the mental had to be separated with the mental being something more real than the physical (pp. 68-69).
In A Philosopher Looks at Sport, Stephen Mumford makes the same connection. He observes that “Philosophers spend much time considering the nature of the mental and frequently ignore the significance of physical activity (p. 8).” But this is a mistake: “we are bodied beings, able to take pleasure in what we can do with our physical existence (p. 8).” Mumford “credits” Descartes with this the preeminence of this view, one he rejects. He states, “…we are essentially physical beings and this is a fact upon which the pleasure of exercising physical capacities to a degree rests (p. 9).”
For Mumford, we should prefer philosophers like Maurice Merleau-Ponty who emphasize embodiedness. He rejects the Cartesian idea that we are “essentially a thinking thing”. In fact, Mumford is so committed to this point that he writes, “I am slightly nervous about use of the term ’embodied'” because this implies “that there is a thing, in the body, which has become embodied” which means it exists before a body is given to it (p. 9).
Mumford prefers to say we’re simply “bodied”. He comments, “Everything that I learn, of that stimulates my senses, has come originally through my body (p. 10).” Borrowing from Wittgenstein’s comment “if a lion could talk, we would not be able to understand it” (Philosophical Investigations, section 326), Mumford argues that “if a disembodied soul could talk, we would not be able to understand it (p. 11).” Like Thomas Nagel’s “What Is It Like to Be a Bat?” the claim here is that being bodied as humans is how we know the world. Even if we somehow outlive our bodies as “mind,” the experience would be radically different than our current one: “There would be nothing recognisably us in this disembodied thing.” Why? “To be human is to have a body…” (p. 11).
Even if we were to reject this view as being too reductively materialist, the basic points are sound. We are bodied. If mind can remain after the death of the body, it seems to be an emergent property of the body that somehow continues after it’s source has passed (unless we embrace a concept like pre-existent souls and/or some form of strong mind-body dualism or maybe panpsychist ideas). But we don’t experience that form of existence until we die. As long as we’re living, we’re bodied. If this is correct, then our education is bodied. While sitting in a classroom learning Algebra is bodied, so is running drills in practice to help students learn the playbook. Both are ways of learning. Both are forms of education. So, as an educator, I should try to see my teaching as one way of contributing to student learning, but not the only way and not in a way that is inherently superior to athletics.
On a related note, if I’m honest, when I was in high school, sports was everything. Like most kids, I didn’t dream of getting a PhD in “Religion and Theology” but instead of playing left-field for the San Francisco Giants or cornerback for the 49ers. As I aged and realized that I didn’t have the necessary skills or size, I imagined being the next Bob Costas or Dan Patrick. I hated reading, except for Sports Illustrated or ESPN the Magazine. I hated math, except sports statistics. I learned American geography by looking on a map to see where the Chicago Bulls were located and I learned about international geography through events like the Summer Olympics. While I have no intent on throwing shade at the adults in my life at that time, I can imagine that if someone could’ve connected the subjects that I hated to athletics in a clear way, it may have peaked my interest! As a high school teacher, I find myself asking how I can connect what I teach to what already matters to my students. Sometimes this is difficult. Sometimes, I’m successful in showing the value of religious studies to students who will one day major in business, or economics, etc. Sometimes, students who are religious already or who appreciate literature will be excited about my biblical studies classes. But I find myself working to create and hopefully get approved classes like “Philosophy, Religion, and Sports” (which I’d like to start teaching in fall ’25 if I get approval) because I want to bring the educational skills that matter to me, and that I believe with benefit my students, to where they’re at already. (Obviously, many students aren’t interested in sports, but many are!)
This doesn’t erase the two concerns that I mentioned earlier though. Maybe schools need a full-time student-athlete czar that’s not the school’s athletic director. We have roles for school psychologists, for accommodations oversights, etc., but there may be a temptation to leave things to the student-athletes, or expect coaches to play the role of a go-between for students, athletes, and their families. A student-athlete czar would be responsible for coordinating schedules, assignments, etc., overlooking the academic performance of all active student-athletes while insuring communication on homework, missing assignments, key assessments, and so forth. What we don’t want is a dualism that goes the other way: a type of mindlessness. Athletes need to cultivate their minds. We admire athletes who combine their physical prowess with an intellectualizing of the game: think Peyton Manning reading defenses, Michael Jordan learning how to use the fadeaway jumper as he aged, catchers with a grasp of analytics, or former players like Greg Olsen who can explain the game to viewers from an insider’s perspective. Analytical and communication skills should be formed in athletes and pairs quite naturally with their athletic goals. I’d like to imagine that a “philosophy of sports” class would contribute to the holistic education of student-athletes.
Now, a final thing should be noted: sports aren’t the only path the non-dualistic education. Dance is bodied. Theater is bodied. A variety of fine arts classes are bodied. While it’s difficult to make a topic like religious studies bodied, some lessons can included bodied activities. But in the ecosystem of a school, physical education makes sure that the overall education of most of our student is a non-dualistic one, and I can appreciate that.