The Good of Cities for Intellectual Communities
An Address by Dr. Zachary Howard to The Ciceronian Society, March 15, 2025, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA.
Defining the City
The theme of cities within the biblical narrative and throughout human history underscores the basic reality that cities intensify, both for good and for evil. Cities are humanity en mass, and thus they take an individual human’s capacity to do good or evil and intensify it.[1] But what distinguishes the city from other parts of the country? Many may assume that population size sets cities apart from the suburbs or small towns. But in fact, it’s not population size but population density. The suburbs surrounding Minneapolis have a combined total population that is much higher, but Minneapolis is much denser—the number of people per square acre is far greater. Density characterizes cities and such density amplifies human good and evil.
Beyond density, though, cities also are defined by their diversity. There is, of course, diversity in economic and social status, from the wealthy and elite to the poor and low-status folks sharing the same sidewalks. And of course, the many opportunities of a city attract a wide range of religious, ethnic, and cultural diversity as often seen in the dramatic variety of food and restaurants available.[2] But there is another kind of diversity less often appreciated; and that is the diversity of land use in a city.[3] A city brings onto the same block and sometimes even into the same building both residential and commercial, legal and economic ventures. Putting these together, then, I define cities as intensifiers for good and evil characterized by density and diversity.
Since cities are such intensifiers for both good and evil, they are both better and worse as places for building an intellectual community. They are better insofar as they amplify opportunities for learning and growth by offering diverse experiences, exposing you to a wide range of cultures, integrating commerce, academics and the arts, political and legal pursuits through proximate, mixed land use. They are worse insofar as they often interrupt and distract intellectual pursuits, sometimes hindering sustained contemplation. There is a tension, then, for an intellectual community pursuing sustained contemplation in a city. And it’s one we are familiar with at Bethlehem.




