Monday, June 7, 2010

Fragment -- #313

[March 2006 journal entry]

The 4 March 2006 Commercial Appeal included an op-ed column by David Brooks -- ‘Headed to Harvard? All is not lost’ -- re becoming truly educated. His proposals –

  1. read Reinhold Niebuhr,
  2. read Plato’s Gorgias,
  3. take a course on ancient Greece,
  4. learn a foreign language,
  5. spend a year abroad,
  6. take a course in neuroscience,
  7. take a statistics course,
  8. forget about your career for once in your life.

I have been thinking about his question and his proposals. Here is part of what I think I might propose (not in any particular order) to undergraduate students re becoming educated –

  1. a course on the decade of the 60s (United States and international),
  2. a course on Nazi Germany and the Holocaust (Reinhold Niebuhr would be a good United States theological point of reference because of his adapting his theological and ethical views to political realities, but I would prefer Dietrich Bonhoeffer),
  3. A course on Middle East history since the late 19th century,
  4. A course on ancient Rome (ancient Greece would be in the background, but the United States today is much more evident in ancient Rome),
  5. a course about the Human Genome Project,
  6. a course on appreciating art, music, dance, poetry (international),
  7. a course on history (any period) seen from the perspective of the powerless, the victims, the losers,
  8. a course on the link between fundamentalism (not limited to Christianity, not limited to religion) and violence,
  9. a course on the nature/limits of language,
  10. a course on Camus’ The Plague,
  11. create a discussion group in which each member reads the entire New York Times every day,
  12. keep a journal of all substantive conversations. I will stop the list at this point.