History

18 02, 2017

Combining medical insights with ancient texts to understand past diseases

By |2017-02-17T22:13:09-05:00February 18th, 2017|2017, Academia, Europe, Everything Else, February, History, Medicine, Quotes|0 Comments

Combining medical insights with ancient texts to understand past diseases. Francesco Galassi, a paleopathographist, explains its promise: Palaeopathography is a unique opportunity for palaeopathology, since it allows the investigation of symptoms and signs of diseases, vital for medicine, yet unavailable when only studying ancient bones or mummies. This is especially viable with famous historical figures [...]

12 02, 2017

Singapore’s sciences require the humanities (Alfred Chua, Today Online)

By |2017-02-12T08:52:52-05:00February 12th, 2017|2017, Asia, business, Everything Else, February, History, News, Philosophy, Politics, science, STEM, Technology|0 Comments

Singapore's sciences require the humanities: how a leading university understands the need for engineers to train in the humanities. From the article: Technology and innovation may be the twin forces to power Singapore’s new economy but increasingly, social sciences and humanities are getting some unexpected attention and gaining importance in the workplace and helping policymakers [...]

8 02, 2017

The lily and the river

By |2017-03-07T08:22:00-05:00February 8th, 2017|2017, Arts, Europe, Everything Else, February, History, Language, Literature, Philosophy, psychology, Quotes, science, Writing|0 Comments

The lily and the river: how much do we presume about our knowledge of the future, and how firmly rooted is our knowledge of our origins? Two fables from Renaissance scientists and polymaths: The lily set itself on the bank of the river Ticino, and the current swept away both the bank and the lily. Leonardo da [...]

7 02, 2017

From Bethlehem to Bedlam: classifying the incurables through science (Amanda Ruggeri, BBC Culture)

By |2017-02-09T23:56:29-05:00February 7th, 2017|2017, Europe, Everything Else, Exhibits, February, History, Medicine, Museums, News, Philosophy, psychology, science|0 Comments

From Bethlehem to Bedlam: classifying the incurables through science. What was founded as a place open to those in need became a palatial institution that housed those deemed mentally unsound. From the article: By the 17th Century, the asylum was well-known enough to appear in numerous Jacobean dramas and ballads. Often – as in Shakespeare’s plays [...]

1 02, 2017

Historians and health care (Emily Michelson, Times Higher Education)

By |2017-02-10T00:06:50-05:00February 1st, 2017|2017, Academia, Europe, Everything Else, February, History, Language, Medicine, News, science, STEM|0 Comments

Historians and health care: how the humanities can heal, body and soul. From the article: From my particular hospital bed, it seemed increasingly, blindingly clear how much humanities and sciences – in this case history and medicine – truly complemented each other. As Gretchen Busl wrote last year, training in the humanities teaches us “the language necessary [...]

22 01, 2017

Humanities aid the growth of STEM (Neil Kobitz, Chronicle for Higher Education)

By |2017-03-08T22:45:54-05:00January 22nd, 2017|2017, Academia, Debate / dialogue, education, Everything Else, History, January, Language, Literature, mathematics, News, Politics, science, STEM, U.S. / Canada, Writing|0 Comments

Humanities aid the growth of STEM: a mathematics professor calculates their value, an important formula...when others are now estimating the worth of the NEH as close to zero. From the editorial: ... [F]or STEM majors, as much as for other future professionals, a broad background in the humanities is likely to give them a tremendous advantage in [...]

9 01, 2017

What do the humanities have to say? And who should listen?

By |2017-01-09T10:39:09-05:00January 9th, 2017|2017, Academia, Debate / dialogue, education, Europe, History, January, Language, Literature, News, science, STEM|0 Comments

What do the humanities have to say? And who should listen? A note from Mary Beard, at year's end: They have just issued on the website a top 24 of Cambridge research stories this year. On my reckoning, 19 of those are pure science.... You’d think from looking at this roster that none of the work that [...]

2 01, 2017

The Greatest of New Years

By |2017-01-07T12:18:13-05:00January 2nd, 2017|2017, Academia, Debate / dialogue, education, Europe, Everything Else, History, January, Language, Literature, mathematics, Observations, Philosophy, science, STEM, Technology|0 Comments

The Greatest of New Years: that our age of science is also the age of the humanities, from our St. Petersburg correspondent, 1 January 2017 “S nastupivishim!”: “Happy upcoming New Year!” So the new year begins here, ahead of yours, and we have been enjoying the sparkling lights in the Nevsky Prospekt. There are fewer tourists [...]

Go to Top