by MargaritaMc » Tue Jan 22, 2013 8:31 pm
JohnD wrote:Or if Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics are missing.
The fact that you are here, Margarita, tells me that you are not one of the PPE (Philosophy, Politics and Economics) or Arts graduates, who think that they dirty their minds with an understanding of any science based subject. The Two Cultures was the subject of CP Snow's book "The Two Cultures" fifty years ago and we still have not resolved the problem he encapsulated.
JOhn
Oh absolutely, John! I am using my retirement to fill up the woeful lacunae in my education caused by an almost total absence of scientific subjects. (However, it must be said that as I missed so much of my education by being hospitalised as a child, I had a woeful lack of education, full stop.) For me, learning about, say, Physics and Biochemistry (my husband is research immunologist, so I am ahead of the game there) is gloriously stimulating and enthralling - the same level of delight and joy that, for example, is given by watching the Royal Shakespeare Theatre performing Hamlet, or the Opera North 1992 production of Carmen.
Astronomy is the best of both worlds for me: What painting by Cezanne or Turner can be more gasp- makingly beautiful than the Apod of the Fornax Cluster? Or statue more impressive a piece of work than the Antikythera Mechanism?
Margarita
[quote="JohnD"]Or if Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics are missing.
The fact that you are here, Margarita, tells me that you are not one of the PPE (Philosophy, Politics and Economics) or Arts graduates, who think that they dirty their minds with an understanding of any science based subject. The Two Cultures was the subject of CP Snow's book "The Two Cultures" fifty years ago and we still have not resolved the problem he encapsulated.
JOhn[/quote]
Oh absolutely, John! I am using my retirement to fill up the woeful lacunae in my education caused by an almost total absence of scientific subjects. (However, it must be said that as I missed so much of my education by being hospitalised as a child, I had a woeful lack of education, full stop.) For me, learning about, say, Physics and Biochemistry (my husband is research immunologist, so I am ahead of the game there) is gloriously stimulating and enthralling - the same level of delight and joy that, for example, is given by watching the Royal Shakespeare Theatre performing Hamlet, or the Opera North 1992 production of Carmen.
Astronomy is the best of both worlds for me: What painting by Cezanne or Turner can be more gasp- makingly beautiful than the Apod of the Fornax Cluster? Or statue more impressive a piece of work than the Antikythera Mechanism?
Margarita