Thinker

Ivan Illich

He argued that schools produce the need for schooling, not the capacity to learn.

Social critic, 1926-2002
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Ivan Illich was born in Vienna in 1926 and spent much of his career in Cuernavaca, Mexico, where he founded the Centro Intercultural de Documentación in 1961.1 The center became an intellectual base for questioning the institutions that industrial societies treated as self-evidently necessary.

In 1971, Illich published Deschooling Society, arguing that compulsory education had confused learning with schooling. The system, he wrote, taught students to identify personal growth with institutional processing and to believe that what is not measured has not happened.2 The book did not argue against learning. It argued that the institution designed to promote learning had become its primary obstacle.

1971
The year Illich published Deschooling Society, arguing that schools taught dependence on institutions.

Illich extended the argument to other institutions. Medical Nemesis (1975) argued that professional medicine had reached a point where it generated as much illness as it cured, a condition he called iatrogenesis.3 Tools for Conviviality (1973) proposed a distinction between tools that enhance personal capacity and tools that reduce people to operators serving the tool’s own logic.

His concept of "radical monopoly" described how certain institutions eliminate alternatives rather than compete with them. Once compulsory schooling exists, self-directed learning loses legitimacy. Once professional medicine dominates, communities lose the capacity to care for themselves.4 Illich died in Bremen, Germany, in 2002.

1961
Illich founded the Centro Intercultural de Documentación in Cuernavaca, Mexico.
1971
Deschooling Society argued that compulsory education confused learning with institutional processing.
1973
Tools for Conviviality distinguished between tools that enhance capacity and tools that reduce people to operators.
1975
Medical Nemesis argued that professional medicine had begun generating illness alongside curing it.
1 Todd Hartch, The Prophet of Cuernavaca: Ivan Illich and the Crisis of the West (New York: Oxford University Press, 2015).
2 Ivan Illich, Deschooling Society (New York: Harper and Row, 1971).
3 Ivan Illich, Medical Nemesis: The Expropriation of Health (London: Calder and Boyars, 1975).
4 Ivan Illich, Tools for Conviviality (New York: Harper and Row, 1973).
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