Edward H. Levi served the University of Chicago for most of his
professional life, as a professor, dean of the law school, provost, and
eventually president. Gathered here are fourteen talks he delivered
between 1963 and 1969 that include such topics as the role of the
university; the purposes of undergraduate and liberal education,
professional training, and graduate research; the relations between the
university and its surroundings; and the causes of student unrest.
Throughout these talks, the reader will find expressions of Levi's
essential belief that "the university must stand for reason and for
persuasion by reasoning."