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17 03, 2016

Better scientists with liberal arts (Loretta Jackson-Hayes, Washington Post)

By |2016-03-17T17:37:38-04:00March 17th, 2016|2016, Academia, Everything Else, March, News, STEM, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

We become better scientists, the more we value the liberal arts. The author recounts how the liberal arts "unlocked" for her the true value of education, and her students in turn became more adroit at their science and their ability to communicate their ideas to others. She writes: Our culture has drawn an artificial line between art [...]

8 03, 2016

Obsessing about STEM (Fareed Zakaria, Washington Post)

By |2016-03-06T15:46:58-05:00March 8th, 2016|2016, Academia, Arts, Debate / dialogue, Employment, Europe, Everything Else, History, Language, Medicine, News, Philosophy, Politics, science, STEM, Technology, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Obsessing about STEM: America seems entranced by STEM education, at the expense of our future, which requires more agile ways of thinkings that the humanities and liberal arts provide. "The United States has led the world in economic dynamism, innovation and entrepreneurship thanks to exactly the kind of teaching we are now told to defenestrate. A [...]

8 03, 2016

Why read the classics

By |2016-11-02T11:52:14-04:00March 8th, 2016|2016, Academia, Arts, Europe, Everything Else, Italy, Literature, March, Quotes, Writing|0 Comments

Why read the classics: Italo Calvino (1923-1985) explains the nature of a classical literary composition, which has various means of speaking to us throughout the different times of our lives. If the books have remained the same (even though they too change in light of a different historical perspective), we ourselves have certainly changed, and the encounter [...]

6 03, 2016

The Clarion Call for STEM (New York Times)

By |2016-11-02T11:52:14-04:00March 6th, 2016|2016, Academia, Debate / dialogue, Economics, Employment, Everything Else, Language, March, News, Philosophy, Politics, STEM, Technology|0 Comments

The clarion call for STEM: state legislatures and politicians -- from both parties -- stress education in the sciences, rather than in the humanities and arts: taxpayers should subsidize, the argument goes, those courses of study most likely to produce better taxpayers. "When it comes to dividing the pot of money devoted to higher education, [...]

27 02, 2016

Math and science are liberal arts (Cecilia Gaposchkin, The Conversation)

By |2016-11-02T11:52:15-04:00February 27th, 2016|2016, Academia, Debate / dialogue, Employment, Everything Else, February, News, Philosophy, STEM, Technology, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

The liberal arts include the sciences, and the sciences make use of the approaches the humanities bring to observation and inquiry.  The author writes: The idea that STEM is something separate and different than the liberal arts is damaging to both the sciences and their sister disciplines in the humanities and social sciences. The value of a liberal [...]

23 02, 2016

How books lengthen our lives

By |2016-11-02T11:52:15-04:00February 23rd, 2016|2016, Europe, Everything Else, History, Language, Literature, Philosophy, Quotes, Writing|0 Comments

Umberto Eco explains how books, as our familial elders, deepen our emotional lives across generations. Valentino Bompiani once circulated a saying: “one person who reads is worth two.” It was said by a publisher probably as a clever slogan, but I think it means that writing (and in general language) lengthen one’s life. From the time when [...]

19 02, 2016

History and nemesis, the natural and moral sciences

By |2016-11-02T11:52:15-04:00February 19th, 2016|2016, Debate / dialogue, Everything Else, February, History, Philosophy, Politics, Quotes, U.S. / Canada, Writing|0 Comments

Thoughts of Frederick Douglass on finding the trajectory of moral and social justice in the course of history. There is, in the world's government, a force which has in all ages been recognized, sometimes as Nemesis, sometimes as the judgment of God and sometimes as retributive justice; but under whatever name, all history attests the [...]

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