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Clay Burell's Library tagged philosophy   View Popular

26 Sep 09

Ali A. Rizvi: Are Evolution-Deniers any Different from Holocaust-Deniers, Birthers, or Truthers?

Great and timely anecdote about a history teacher being shouted down by Holocaust-denying parents -- analogy for trying to teach science in some cultures, including America's.

www.huffingtonpost.com/...tion-deniers-any_b_295254.html - Preview

evolution holocaust history culture usa creationism intelligentdesign science religion philosophy truth

  • "Imagine you are a teacher of recent history, and your lessons on 20th-century Europe are boycotted, heckled or otherwise disrupted by well-organised, well-financed and politically muscular groups of Holocaust-deniers...

    Holocaust deniers really exist. They are vocal, superficially plausible and adept at seeming learned. They are supported by the president of at least one currently powerful state, and they include at least one bishop of the Roman Catholic Church.



    Imagine that, as a teacher of European history, you are continually faced with belligerent demands to 'teach the controversy', and to give 'equal time' to the 'alternative theory' that the Holocaust never happened but was invented by a bunch of Zionist fabricators.



    ...Fashionably relativist intellectuals chime in to insist that there is no absolute truth: whether the Holocaust happened is a matter of personal belief; all points of view are equally valid and should be equally 'respected'."

22 Sep 09

Chinese Cultural Studies: Zhuangzi Chuang-tse

My all-time favorite sage. Understands laughter is next to godliness, and calls rubbish rubbish with indifference.

acc6.its.brooklyn.cuny.edu/...chuangtz.html - Preview

china primarysource philosophy taoism chuangtse

23 May 09

Matthew Crawford's Shop Class as Soul Craft. - By Michael Agger - Slate Magazine

  • While doing the work of a mechanic provides intellectual challenges and the intrinsic satisfactions of completing problems from start to finish, Crawford knows that working in the trades is seen as déclassé and too limiting for a college graduate. And then he goes on to show how stupid that viewpoint is.

  • The first piece of evidence to consider is a quote from the Princeton economist Alan Blinder about how the labor market of the next decades won't necessarily be divided between the highly educated and the less-educated: "The critical divide in the future may instead be between those types of work that are easily deliverable through a wire (or via wireless connections) with little or no diminution in quality and those that are not." Binder goes on to summarize his own take: "You can't hammer a nail over the Internet." Learning a trade is not limiting but, rather, liberating. If you are in possession of a skill that cannot be exported overseas, done with an algorithm, or downloaded, you will always stand a decent chance of finding work. Even rarer, you will probably be a master of your own domain, something the thousands of employed but bored people in the service industries can only dream of.
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18 Nov 08

Dear Dudely #1 | The Dudespaper

How to Live a Life of Leisure for Virtually No Money

dudespaper.com/dear-dudely-1.html - Preview

humor philosophy morality religion

19 Jul 07

Full text of DESCHOOLING SOCIETY by Ivan Illich courtesy of Paul Knatz

  • Most learning happens casually, and even most intentional learning is
    not the result of programmed instruction. Normal children learn their first
    language casually, although faster if their parents pay attention to them.
    Most people who learn a second language well do so as a result of odd
    circumstances and not of sequential teaching. They go to live with their
    grandparents, they travel, or they fall in love with a foreigner. Fluency
    in reading is also more often than not a result of such extracurricular
    activities. Most people who read widely, and with pleasure, merely believe
    that they learned to do so in school; when challenged, they easily discard
    this illusion.



    But the fact that a great deal of learning even now seems to happen
    casually and as a by-product of some other activity defined as work or
    leisure does not mean that planned learning does not benefit from planned
    instruction and that both do not stand in need of improvement. The strongly
    motivated student who is faced with the task of acquiring a new and complex
    skill may benefit greatly from the discipline now associated with the
    old-fashioned schoolmaster who taught reading, Hebrew, catechism, or
    multiplication by rote. School has now made this kind of drill teaching
    rare and disreputable, yet there are many skills which a motivated student
    with normal aptitude can master in a matter of a few months if taught in
    this traditional way. This is as true of codes as of their encipherment; of
    second and third languages as of reading and writing; and equally of
    special languages such as algebra, computer programming, chemical analysis,
    or of manual skills like typing, watchmaking, plumbing, wiring, TV repair;
    or for that matter dancing, driving, and diving.

  • Schools are even less efficient in the arrangement of the circumstances
    which encourage the open-ended, exploratory use of acquired skills, for
    which I will reserve the term "liberal education." The main reason for this
    is that school is obligatory and becomes schooling for schooling's sake: an
    enforced stay in the company of teachers, which pays off in the doubtful
    privilege of more such company. Just as skill instruction must be freed
    from curricular restraints, so must liberal education be dissociated from
    obligatory attendance. Both skill-learning and education for inventive and
    creative behavior can be aided by institutional arrangement, but they are
    of a different, frequently opposed nature.
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11 Jul 07

Borderland » Blog Archive » Teaching the Controversy

  • Note the "habits of mind" approach to 'teaching the controversy" instead of "indoctrinating."
    - cburell on 2007-07-11

Logical Fallacies with References

  • Stephen's Guide overview, better than the other one due to it's TOC/hyperlinked index at the top of the page. - cburell on 2006-12-29
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