Arts

3 04, 2016

Judgments about the arts: mind what you put in!

By |2016-11-02T11:52:14-04:00April 3rd, 2016|2016, April, Arts, Debate / dialogue, Europe, Everything Else, History, Literature, Quotes, Theater, Writing|0 Comments

Judgments about the arts: mind what you put in! Ben Jonson tells his audience how much they may assess what they see, depending on their means: It is further agreed that every person here have his or their free-will of censure, to like or dislike at their own charge, the playwright having now departed with [...]

28 03, 2016

How humanities teach us the art of life (Arnold Weinstein, New York Times)

By |2016-03-28T08:08:20-04:00March 28th, 2016|2016, Academia, Arts, Debate / dialogue, Everything Else, Journalism, Literature, March, News, Philosophy|0 Comments

How the humanities teach us the art of life. A professor of literature asks about life's greater meaning, which the humanities may provide. According to the author, "The humanities interrogate us. They challenge our sense of who we are, even of who our brothers and sisters might be."    

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 [...]

15 02, 2016

George Washington summons the meaning of the moment (1783)

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

George Washington, at the close of the Revolution, imagines the nation in concert with philosophers and lawgivers, who foster letters, commerce, and well-being. The Citizens of America, placed in the most enviable condition, as the sole Lords and Proprietors of a vast Tract of Continent, comprehending all the various soils and climates of the World, [...]

30 12, 2015

Times old and new: “objective” creative engagement vs. “subjective” inward regression

By |2016-11-02T11:52:45-04:00December 30th, 2015|2015, Arts, December, Europe, Everything Else, History, Literature, Quotes|0 Comments

"As long as poets express merely their puny subjective impressions, they are not worth the name; but as soon as they know how to appropriate and express the world, they are poets. For then they are inexhaustible and can be constantly new, as opposed to a subjective nature, which quickly expresses its meagre inner life [...]

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