History

15 05, 2016

An encounter with Renaissance art, and its consequences

By |2016-11-02T11:52:12-04:00May 15th, 2016|2016, Arts, Europe, Everything Else, History, Literature, May, Quotes|0 Comments

An encounter with Renaissance art, and its consequence: Boris Pasternak reflects on culture and individual genius. The chief thing that everyone carries away from an encounter with Italian art is the sensation of the tangible unity of our culture, whatever he may have seen this in, and whatever name he may give it. How much [...]

13 05, 2016

Happy graduation, humanities students!

By |2019-05-22T19:05:46-04:00May 13th, 2016|2016, Academia, Everything Else, History, Language, Literature, May, News, Philosophy, Religion|0 Comments

Happy graduation, humanities students! "Better a few good scholars than many indifferent ones." You embody the meaning of George Washington's mandate to James McHenry, to paraphrase: it is infinitely better to have a few good scholars, than many indifferent ones. For the number of humanities majors has now decreased to the lowest level in a [...]

4 05, 2016

Triumph of the Advocates

By |2016-11-02T11:52:13-04:00May 4th, 2016|2016, Academia, Debate / dialogue, Economics, Everything Else, History, Language, Literature, May, Observations, science, STEM, Writing|0 Comments

Triumph of the Advocates: a vision for this world, or the next. Lapidus. Hey you, Lepus! What are you doing there, sitting around? Are you stargazing? Lepus. Lapidus, what’s wrong? You look distressed. Lapidus. I’m tired, that is all. Perhaps that is the reason for my distress. I just dreamt the most amazing dream, a [...]

2 05, 2016

A scientist reads the book of life, without annotations, but through imagery

By |2023-02-17T12:16:04-05:00May 2nd, 2016|Europe, Everything Else, History, May, Philosophy, Quotes, science|0 Comments

A scientist reads the book of life, without annotations, but through imagery To read the book of life can be a great delight and an edifying experience; but only if one abstains from decorating every page with annotations in the margins and with corrections, and, even more importantly, from tearing them out and throwing [...]

30 04, 2016

Did Newton practice “junk science”? (Washington Post)

By |2016-04-29T09:52:45-04:00April 30th, 2016|2016, April, Europe, Everything Else, History, News, Philosophy, science|0 Comments

Did Newton practice junk science? A journalist takes issue with Newton's preoccupation with alchemy. As she puts it:  ... Newton was super into alchemy, a medieval "science" that preceded chemistry. Practitioners believed it was possible to transform one metal into another. The ultimate goal was figuring out how to transform lead into gold, and the elusive [...]

29 04, 2016

Nature, time, and self-discovery

By |2016-04-29T09:48:35-04:00April 29th, 2016|2016, April, Europe, Everything Else, History, Literature, Philosophy, Quotes, science|0 Comments

Nature, time, and self-discovery: a physicist speaks about the mysteries of our lives, hearkening to Lucretius: Nature is our home, and in nature we are at home. This strange, multicolored, and astonishing world that we explore -- where space is granular, time does not exist, and things are nowhere -- is not something that estranges us [...]

16 04, 2016

The fight over liberal arts education in Japan (Rie Mori, AAC&U)

By |2016-11-02T11:52:13-04:00April 16th, 2016|2016, Academia, April, Asia, Economics, Employment, Everything Else, History, News|0 Comments

The fight over liberal arts education in Japan. The humanities and liberal arts are under pressure from the government, but have allies in the business community. From the article: the national government wants to focus national resources for higher education on fields that nourish students’ skills that are immediately adaptable to the needs of the labor [...]

13 04, 2016

Scholars bulldozing history (George Will, Washington Post)

By |2016-11-02T11:52:13-04:00April 13th, 2016|2016, Academia, Debate / dialogue, History, News, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Scholars bulldozing history. How Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study will demolish an important site of the American Revolution: the Battle of Princeton. From the article: In today’s academia there are many scholars against scholarship, including historians hostile to history — postmodernists who think the past is merely a social construct reflecting the present’s preoccupations, or [...]

10 04, 2016

Where it’s at: the mystery and origins of the @ symbol (BBC News)

By |2016-04-10T16:45:14-04:00April 10th, 2016|2016, Economics, Employment, Europe, Everything Else, History, Language, Literature, News, Religion, Technology|0 Comments

Where it's at: or better, where "at" (@) has been. What is modern is ancient, if we should notice. From the article: "The earliest yet discovered reference to the @ symbol is a religious one. It features in a 1345 Bulgarian translation of a Greek chronicle. Held today in the Vatican Apostolic Library, it features the @ [...]

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