Insight into the Humanities: A Conversation with Bernie Ferrari
Insight into the Humanities: A Conversation with Bernie Ferrari
Every year, °µĶų³Ō¹Ļ Trustee Bernard (Bernie) T. Ferrari ā70, ā74M (MD) spends 30 minutes with David. Michelangeloās David, that is. He halts there and looks up in wonder at this eloquently cut 5.5 meters of block marble at the Accademia Gallery in Florence, Italy.

Linda and Bernie Ferrari
āI stand there and ask myself how this was done by a 26-year-old man so long ago,ā he says. āIt gives me perspective into the human spirit and insight into the possibilities of what we can do.ā
Ferrariās passion for the humanities runs deep. āLiterature, music, the artsāall of the humanitiesāhelp give our lives meaning,ā he says. āWe need them in our lives.ā
As a science major and then a medical student, Ferrariās University days were full of classes, required readings, and countless labs. He didnāt have much free time, nor the space in his schedule to take many humanities classes. But, the ones he did take sparked his curiosity and interest. He recalls memorable courses in architecture and film, and spending time in Rush Rhees Library where on Friday evenings he would listen to elegant string quartets.
Having just announced his retirement from Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, Ferrari talks about time, and what defined different periods of his life. āWhen you become a physician and then a surgeon, every second is taken. Itās only later that you can carve out time for yourself. For me, interest in the humanities began in high school and then grew in college. They provided a respite from the intense course of science and medical study. And now, I can discover anew what they humanities bring to the surface of life, which is beauty.ā
Both Ferrari and his wife, Linda, have a deep appreciation for the Renaissanceāan intense period of cultural, artistic, and political rebirth in Europe between the 14th and 17th centuries. Itās when a movement called humanism was born in Italy. āLinda and I are incredibly intrigued that such a small peninsula during a relatively short span of time could produce so many geniuses.ā
The output and productivity of the Renaissance is a bit mind-blowing for the Ferraris. āFrom Filippo Brunelleschiās dome for the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore to Michelangeloās David to Donatelloās crucifix of Santa Croce . . . we look at this incredible array of humanistic creativity and wonder: how did this happen?ā
That wonder fuels the Ferrarisā deep commitment to the humanities. They both recognize the value of preserving research that can inform our collective humanity. For them, the faculty who conduct humanities research are paying an important service to the world, and providing a lens through which to see it.
āConducting research in the humanities is like looking in the rear view mirror of history, to see what man can accomplish,ā he says. āBut, itās even more than that. The humanities help us determine the angle and aperture of the windshield, tint it, and even redirect it to allow us to ask questions about our future and our present in ways we might not ask otherwise.ā
Ferrari gives the example of Niccolò Machiavelli, often called the father of modern political science. In thinking about Machiavelli, Ferrari references Christopher Celenza, is a Georgetown dean and professor and who served two years ago as a Symposium invited speaker. āCelenza writes extensively on Machiavelli and what his contributions mean to us today. His research helps us think about leadership, and he tees up excellent questions. All of the dusty library hours Celenza has spent on his research have contributed volumes of insight into todayās society.ā
The Ferrarisā philanthropic commitment to the humanities at the University emphasizes their vital role. āIn todayās world, especially in higher education where so much of the emphasis has turned to preparing students for specific jobs, it is most important to preserve the humanities,ā he says. āIn our view, the humanities cannot become victim of the yearly, and even daily, realities of budget limitations. They are too important.ā
āAll jobs require the skills they offer and the beauty they bring to our lives,ā he adds. āWe need endowments like these to forever protect them and to provide, on small and large scales, a foundation off of which they can grow.ā
Learn more about this yearās Ferrari Humanities Symposia . Read about the most recent gift from the Ferraris here.



āKristine Thompson, April 2019
