Alexander, James2020-02-132020-02-1320191084-8770http://hdl.handle.net/11693/53345What is a university? In the nineteenth century John Henry Newman famously spoke of “the idea of a university.” This phrase has dominated all discussions of the nature of the university since. Most contemporary writers are against any attempt to theorise the university in terms of a single idea. But against the now standard view that universities should only be characterised empirically as institutions that perform many different activities, I attempt to defend the idea of the university, not by reviving a single idea of the university but by suggesting that there are, at root, three ideas of the university. These are rival ideas, and strictly incommensurable, though they often exist together in a state of tension in actual universities. I call them the eternal, the immortal, and the immediate ideas of the university.EnglishUniversitiesEducationIdeaHistoryPhilosophyThree ideas of the universityArticle10.1080/10848770.2019.15815031470-1316