Showing posts with label bard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bard. Show all posts

Monday, February 1, 2010

classes spring 10

First-Year Seminar

Quaestio mihi factus sum: Self and Society in the Liberal Arts

One of the few common denominators in the history of the arts, humanities, and sciences has been the quest—through creative, rational, scientific, and spiritual approaches—for understanding the relationship between the individual and the larger world. Fittingly, the very root of the word used to describe both the private and public self, identity, has always entailed a tension between “sameness” (in Latin, idem) and “difference” (if I am x, then I am not y). Whether through philosophical inquiry into what constitutes the person, scientific debates about when life begins, theological disquisitions on the nature of the soul, or the literary construction of the autobiographical persona, thinkers and artists throughout history have explored the moral and ethical dimensions of self-representation while gesturing toward its unsolvable mysteries and productive tensions. In the words of the theologian Saint Augustine, “mihi quaestio factus sum” (“I have become a question for myself”; Confessions 10.33.50). The search for the role and purpose of the human being can serve a powerful epistemological function. In “becoming a question for ourselves,” we establish a position of wonder and critical inquiry vis-à-vis the world.

In First-Year Seminar, we will ponder the relationship between private and public narratives and forms of representation in a range of texts and cultural traditions. While it is impossible to reduce a matter of such complexity and breadth to a set of goals and procedures, we will read core texts that, individually and collectively, engage in a vigorous dialogue over such questions as: What are the claims that political and social responsibilities make upon an individual’s quest for self-understanding? At what point should the conscientious citizen sacrifice such a quest in the name of a collective identity? How does scientific inquiry into the nonhuman natural world connect with what are felt to be deeply human issues? How does the link between a private and public understanding of the self also implicate a spiritual exploration, especially the question of the eternity of the soul or the lack thereof? Finally, how do study and close reading, the foundational activities of First-Year Seminar, shape those personal and public narratives that are the focus of our attention? Together, we will explore these and related questions during a yearlong conversation about singularly demanding texts—texts defined as much by their differences as by their common drive toward fathoming how individual narratives can move beyond the self and into the realms of citizenry, community, country, even identification with humankind writ large.

Texts for spring 2010:

Locke, Second Treatise on Government

Rousseau, Social Contract

Shelley, Frankenstein

Marx, Communist Manifesto

Darwin, Origin of the Species

Nietzsche, Genealogy of Morals

Du Bois, Souls of Black Folk

Freud, Three Case Histories

Woolf, To the Lighthouse; or Achebe, Things Fall Apart; or Levi, Periodic Table


PHYS 142 Introduction to Physics II

Part II of a calculus-based survey which will focus on electricity and magnetism, light, electromagnetic radiation, and optics. The course stresses ideas - the unifying principles and characteristic models of physics. Labs develop the critical ability to elicit understanding of our physical world.

MATH 142 A Calculus II

This course, a continuation of Calculus I, reinforces the fundamental ideas of the derivative and the definite integral. Topics covered include L'Hopital's rule, integration techniques, improper integrals, volumes, arc length, sequences and series, power series, continuous random variables, and separable differential equations.

REL 286 Science and the Sacred: Exploring the Intersection between Religion and Rationality

This course will examine a number of important, contemporary issues at the intersection between religion and science. Scientific thinking about God, religious responses to cosmology and evolution, and the writings of both scientists on religion and religionists on science will be included. We will focus on attempts to learn about religion from science, and about science from religion, and on the different methodologies, assumptions, and entailments of the two disciplines.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

class

the class i am most excited about for next semester

Science and the Sacred: Exploring the Intersection between Religion and Rationality
This course will examine a number of important, contemporary issues at the intersection between religion and science. Scientific thinking about God, religious responses to cosmology and evolution, and the writings of both scientists on religion and religionists on science will be included. We will focus on attempts to learn about religion from science, and about science from religion, and on the different methodologies, assumptions, and entailments of the two disciplines.

Friday, November 20, 2009

stargon at night

from the night of the recent meteor shower at around 3AM

Thursday, November 12, 2009

spring course list posted


what should i take next semester

inferno XVI (46-51)

Had I been sheltered from the fire
I would have thrown myself among them,
and I believe my teacher would have let me.

But because I would have burned and baked,
fright overcame the good intentions
that made me hunger to embrace them.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

For those staying on campus over Thanksgiving

i just got this email form the bard dean of students office


FREE THANKSGIVING DINNER
NOVEMBER 26, 2009

The Salvation Army in Kingston will be serving a FREE Thanksgiving dinner on November 26 from 11am to 1pm.

Bard College in conjunction with the Dean of Students office will be providing a shuttle on November 26 leaving from Kline Bus Stop at 10:30am going to the Salvation Army in Kingston.



somehow this seems wrong to me

Sunday, October 25, 2009

frisbee

back from my first frisbee tournament

i have mixed feelings about it

on the whole i am very glad i went but i am also glad that it was only one day long

any longer than that and the lack of intellectual stimulation would have gotten to me

though it was fun i am happy to be back at bard

Monday, September 28, 2009

shoes at bard

i have a new and awesome system for shoes at bard

i have hidden my flip-flops outside the dinning hall

i now don't have to carry them

Thursday, September 24, 2009

conference at bard

The Burden of Our Times: The Intellectual Origins of the Global Financial Crisis will be at bard on october 16th and 17th


it looks amazing

i hope to get to as much of it as i can

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

contra

the bard contra was a mixed experience

it made me appreciate cdny

not many contra dances do that

it was sure good to dance again though

it has been too long