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Physical Scientists Need a Liberal Arts Education
Modern Age ^ | Winter 1992 | E. Christian Kopff

Posted on 10/30/2002 8:03:45 PM PST by cornelis

It is not so obvious that physical scientists need a liberal arts education, rooted in the study of language. They themselves assert that they have no time for it. They have insisted on the abolition of language requirements in almost every university graduate program in America. This development is directly related to the massive amount of fraud which now typifies scientific publication in this country. This scientific community has lost track of the historical and ethical roots of our civilization, the only civilization which has fostered the scientific ethic and considerable scientific research and discovery. Increasingly young men enter the sciences who do not understand that science is not a given, but an achievement, a tradition of research and discovery which si the hard-won accomplishment of one culture, fostered carefully and slowly for millenia until the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Scientists have lost touch with their own culture. They live without a narrative structure which frames and makes moral sense of their lives. They seem to belong to no culture and feel the claims of no cultural norms, claims that would be introduced and reinforced by a rigorous study of their own cultural traditions over the past twenty-five hundred years. For such people the borderline between fudging, misreporting of results, and outright fraud becomes as unclear as their own cultural heritage. All too often it is those who report or investigate such fraud who find themselves de-funded by the "profession." The attainment of truth is possible only within a tradition, as Alasdair MacIntyre has suggested. A rootless, traditionless, monoglot scientific elite has lost the basis of discovery, in science or any other area. Since they cannot discover truth and will not live without grants, they must lie.

Recently conservatives have talked much of valuing creativity and an openness to the real world. If such an attitude is to be more than talk, we must face the fact that creativity is not found in every tradition. Ours is one of the few creative ones and we must work to re-establish our children's direct contact with that tradition, which is their own, after all. Despite all the changes recent decades have seen, culture is still transmitted primarily through language. The essential works necessary for understanding and transmitting our culture were written in Greek and Latin. Translations are marvelous tools, but no translation can be safely used or taught except by one who knows the original tongue. An educational curriculum founded on Greek and Latin gave us Jefferson and Adams, Burke and Samuel Johnson, not to mention Copernicus and Newton, Luther and Calvin, Michaelangelo and Bach. Educators have developed curricula and texts which can teach these languages on any level from pre-school through college. Most subjects that are important for formative education can be be taught through and with these languages. The materials are out there, lying in the warehouses of the Cambridge and Oxford University Presses. We have in our hands the making of a reactionary revolution of excellence. The questions we must ask ourselves are the following: Do we have the will to give our children their own culture back again? Do we have the courage to restore meaning and creativity to our nation?



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: classics; education; godsgravesglyphs; greek; language; latin; liberalarts; science; scientism; scientist
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To: cornelis
Its crap.
101 posted on 10/31/2002 6:25:45 AM PST by Chancellor Palpatine
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To: Frohickey; AriOxman
Don't forget Osama Bin Laden is (was?) a civil engineer.
102 posted on 10/31/2002 6:27:49 AM PST by NukeMan
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To: jude24
fuzzy classes

I see you didn't sign up for Greek.

103 posted on 10/31/2002 6:35:27 AM PST by cornelis
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To: Constantine XIII; AriOxman
Man, I used to think just like you guys.

First, my bona fides: B.S. Nuclear Engineering from Penn State University, currently completing M.S. in Computer Science.

If you think that your life and work will be all 'bout engineering, chemistry, or whatever, you are in for a very rude shock. Even within those disciplines, the human element prevails mightily. You may have some starry-eyed notions that sheer technical capability will win over the day, when in fact grubby politics, deft maneuvering, a glib tongue, and psychology are at least as important. Think Marxism is crap? Sure it is, but explaining why in a coherent fashion is important, along with knowing why people are drawn to it and continue to be drawn to it long after it has proven not only worthless, but supremely destructive.

The world is larger than your current outlook, is all I am trying to say. You will only benefit from enlarging your worldview.
104 posted on 10/31/2002 6:52:56 AM PST by NukeMan
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To: Chancellor Palpatine
It's crap

In a democracy, crap is King.

105 posted on 10/31/2002 6:55:36 AM PST by cornelis
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To: NukeMan
Think Marxism is crap? Sure it is, but explaining why in a coherent fashion is important, along with knowing why people are drawn to it and continue to be drawn to it long after it has proven not only worthless, but supremely destructive.

That's what we have FR for, like, DUH! ;o)

106 posted on 10/31/2002 8:59:01 AM PST by Constantine XIII
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To: cornelis
The Closing of the American Mind: How Higher Education Has Failed Democracy and Impoverished the Souls of Today's Students

Excellent book. It should be a required reading.

107 posted on 10/31/2002 9:37:45 AM PST by Fzob
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To: AmishDude
Thank you for your well-informed and instructive post. The only question I have, is why would anyone consider an inadvertent error "bad scholarship." Not everything incorrect is bad scholarsip, my opinion, just like not every mistake is fraud or negligence: intent and amount of exercized care are the tests for the latter.

Consider that the proof with a "hole" is several hundred pages long, with mathematical "density" of thought. Consider also that it took the author several years of exclusive devotion. Under these circumstances, the "hole" is not bad scholarship: to the contrary, this story is an example of true, self-sacrificing scholarhip; it is simply an error, which was corrected honestly and swiftly, as you pointed out.

108 posted on 10/31/2002 9:59:21 AM PST by TopQuark
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To: Fzob; Constantine XIII
Excellent book. It should be a required reading.

Anyone worth their salt posting on FR would want to read it.

109 posted on 10/31/2002 12:55:13 PM PST by cornelis
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To: Billthedrill
Were science to attempt to function under the assumption that Mendeleev's table is no more valid than an alchemist's arcana and that their relative truth is merely a function of the observer, science as a body of knowledge would come crashing down into pop irrelevancy.

Of course, scientists have themselves fooled to think that their science is objectively free from the function of the observer.

110 posted on 11/01/2002 7:56:21 AM PST by cornelis
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To: StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; 2ndDivisionVet; 31R1O; ...

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Note: this topic is from October 2002.

Blast from the Past.


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111 posted on 09/03/2009 4:13:14 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/__Since Jan 3, 2004__Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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To: Billthedrill

A classical Liberal Arts education is invaluable in any career. Unfortunately such an education is available only at a very small number of small private colleges such as Thomas More in New Hampshire. Most of what passes for Liberal Arts in American higher education is very shallow politically liberal indoctrination and more concerned with social engineering than educating students in their cultural heritage.


112 posted on 09/03/2009 4:47:47 AM PDT by ThanhPhero (di tray hoi den La Vang)
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To: cornelis
No, no and... NO.

Science Majors should stick to ... (drum roll please)... SCIENCE.

Touchy-feely 'social justice' crap classes have nothing to do with the Sheer Point of a Structural Steel Bolt Connection, or the Heating and/or Cooling Load for a new Building.

And IMO any BS degree is 105 better than any BA degree - whatever the major, including Education. (back off fellow FReepers, my daughter has a BSED).

Case in point:

The University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, has one of THE BEST Engineering Schools in the USA, as they concentrate on .. 'Science'. Yet its 'sister' campus, the UIC (Univ IL Chi) of Bill Ayers 'fame' makes all students, in all Majors, including Engineering, study that 'social justice' junk.

As such, U of I grads with a BSME are off to fame and riches in a few years, (riches anyway), while UIC grads wind up with a job controlling the Oil Temperature for French Fries at McDonald's.

Every BSME grad from the UofI I ever knew/worked with has passed his PE exam (to become a Licensed Professional Engineer) on the first try. While UIC grads still live in momma's basement and post on DU. /s
113 posted on 09/03/2009 5:24:51 AM PDT by Condor51 (The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits)
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To: Condor51

Don’t confuse social justice with liberal arts. That’s what the humanities departments have done. The good news is that you don’t have to make the same mistake.


114 posted on 09/03/2009 6:04:12 AM PDT by cornelis
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To: cornelis
It is not so obvious that physical scientists need a liberal arts education, rooted in the study of language. They themselves assert that they have no time for it.

Nice example of the sweeping generalization ...

115 posted on 09/03/2009 6:07:01 AM PDT by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilization is Aborting, Buggering, and Contracepting itself out of existence.)
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To: cornelis

I’ll make a deal with them. They get to ram “Social Problems” (yes, that was the name of the course I was forced to take) down my throat if I can ram Quantum Mechanics down theirs.

Liberal Arts might have been valuable at one time. Now it’s just a cover for Marxist indoctrination.


116 posted on 09/03/2009 6:10:57 AM PDT by Windcatcher (Obama is a COMMUNIST and the MSM is his armband-wearing propaganda machine.)
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To: cornelis

On the other hand, as I read the thread I see some of my less “well-rounded” fellow engineers and scientists illustrate his point.


117 posted on 09/03/2009 6:10:57 AM PDT by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilization is Aborting, Buggering, and Contracepting itself out of existence.)
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To: billybudd

You get a better “Liberal Arts” education (in the original sense of the word) here on FR.


118 posted on 09/03/2009 6:11:11 AM PDT by PapaBear3625 (Public healthcare looks like it will work as well as public housing did.)
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To: Krafty123; Constantine XIII
I am a Freshman at U. Pitt, looking at either Engineering Physics + Chem, or Physics, Chem, and either MSE or EE.

There's your problem, right there. You're trying to cram your MS and Ph.D. in with your BS. I've seen that done (even in my day) and it's a bad idea. IMO. You'll not likely learn any of that if you try to learn all of it at once. IMO.

Me = B.S. Physics, M.S Electrical Engineering, 20+ years working as an engineer. Or scientist. (Sometimes it's hard to tell which I'm doing.) And I greatly appreciate (now) the philosophy, theology, history, and language courses I was required to take as an undergrad.

119 posted on 09/03/2009 6:20:40 AM PDT by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilization is Aborting, Buggering, and Contracepting itself out of existence.)
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To: Windcatcher

Why do you behave like the Marxist, conflating liberal arts with things like social justice?


120 posted on 09/03/2009 6:46:48 AM PDT by cornelis
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