Dr. Don Salisbury Dr.
Hank Gibson Dr. Dan Nuckols
Office Hours: M 10:00-10:50, Office
Hours: M,Th 4:00-5:00 Office
Hours: MW 4:30-5:25
Tu 2:00-2:50, W 2:00-2:50, F
1:30 – 2:30 TTh 3:30-4:30 (other
F 9:00-9:50 (other times by (other times by
appointment) time
by appointment)
appointment)
Office: Moody Sci. 107 Office:
Moody Sci. 212 Office:
Hopkins 119
Phone: Ext. 2480 Phone:
Ext.. 2344 Phone:
Ext. 2529
dsalisbury@austincollege.edu hgibson@austincollege.edu dnuckols@austincollege.edu
METAPHORS AND
SCIENTIFIC
WORLD VIEWS
HERITAGE OF WESTERN CULTURE 201
– SPRING 2007
The theme of this course is the
changing and often conflicting metaphor we use to understand phenomena in the
physical and social sciences. The
most comprehensive metaphors are called world views; they establish a framework
in which one can interrelate the widest range of human experience. Metaphors are drawn from human
experience and they are used to interpret newly discovered phenomena. Since they are arguments by analogy,
they are necessarily inadequate.
If pushed too far are they can lead to misunderstanding or outright
error. However, they do appear to
constitute the best tool we have available both to consolidate our individual
understanding and to communicate this understanding to others. They have frequently over the ages
suggested new lines of inquiry, some of which were errant. Perhaps more frequently they have
suggested new useful ways of interpreting observations and new fruitful
experiments. It is important to
realize that since our common understanding of physical and social phenomena
has changed over the ages, the message of the metaphor itself is continually
being altered.
We shall start with competing
ancient Greek world views that are characterized as organic versus magical,
Aristotelian versus Platonic. The
former attained dominance through the Middle Ages, while the latter gained
ascendancy in the Renaissance.
Some elements of both were incorporated into a mechanical view
championed by Galileo, and later by Newton. The Neo-Platonic view rejoined heaven and earth, presenting
a similar task to Renaissance artists who sought to emphasize the union by
projecting the viewer into paintings, and to the medical doctor William Harvey
who modeled the human body after the cosmos. Similar channeling of cosmic vitality motivated the failed
search for phlogiston. The
argument has been made that belief in divine law promoted by the Protestant
Reformation might have been the stimulus that led Newton to discover the first
comprehensive physical laws. A new
metaphor emerged of the material mechanistic clockwork subject to changeless
law, but bereft of transcendental content. Though this model has evolved over the centuries, it still
influences both friend and foe of the sciences today. It formed the basis of BoyleÕs attempt to explain everything
on the basis of simple rearrangement of material parts, and it became an
organizing principle of SmithÕs interaction of economic entities.
Yet, metaphors are only analogies,
and no metaphor can accurately and exhaustively explain something that it is
not. Thus, world views are
frequently revived in altered form.
Law, harmony, and progress are ancient ideas. The interplay amongst them reappeared in eighteenth and
nineteenth century social and economic models. Unresolved tensions amongst competing world views found
expression in the physical sciences in the past century in EinsteinÕs idea of
an evolving spacetime arena for human existence, and a fundamental quantum
indeterminacy underlying physical phenomena. This offered a fresh perspective on mechanism and being,
suggesting to many in philosophy and the physical and social sciences models
for self-organization and emergence of new unexpected phenomena.
Lectures will be held from 11:00
to 12:50 MWF in Hoxie Thompson Auditorium in Sherman Hall. Small Discussion classes will be held
in Moody Science 10 (Salisbury), Ida Green 112 (Gibson), Hopkins 114 (Nuckols). All reading assignments should be
completed for the class for which they are assigned. The student is expected to bring to class the readings for
that day. Unless otherwise specified, the student is required to read
the entire text of listed material.
At times, films may be shown.
TEXTS:
Heinrich Kleist The
Marquise of O
Thomas Mann Death
in Venice
Scott
Gordon The
History and Philosophy of Social Science
Sigmund
Freud Civilization
and Its Discontents
Thomas
Kuhn The
Copernican Revolution
Peter
Barry Beginning
Theory: An Introduction to Literary and
Cultural Theory
Michio
Kaku EinsteinÕs
Cosmos: How Albert EinsteinÕs
Vision
Transformed our Understanding of Space Time
Drake/Galileo Discoveries
and Opinions of Galileo
OTHER OUTSIDE READING: The student
will be expected to electronically access some outside readings—such
outside material will be placed on electronic reserve at the beginning of the
semester, while others as the semester progresses. Some web-site articles may be used. Moreover, as the course
evolves, the student may be given hard-copies of other readings—material
that the professor unexpectedly uncovers and feels appropriate for the course.
EXAMS and GRADING POLICY: The exams
will include questions of varying format:
short answer, identification, and brief discussion. Thus, the focus of the exams will be
directed toward a studentÕs ability to understand the material rather than
memorizing information. In an
effort to prepare the student for course exams and discussion periods, the
faculty will provide, through the use of class handouts, some topics to be
considered both within their lectures and assigned readings, along with some
leading questions.
Grades
will be dependent upon Participation
(19%) and Exam Grades (81%). Participation will be based upon class
attendance and active involvement in class discussions. There will be three scheduled exams
during the normal semester. In
addition, there will be an optional Cumulative
Final Exam administered during final exam
week. Every student must take all
three semester exams, but also has the option of taking the Cumulative Final
Exam for purposes of replacing a prior
exam score, or for taking the place of an exam that the student missed. This assumes the student has missed an
exam for an excused reason; a reason ruled to be legitimate by the
instructors. If the professors
rule that the student has missed an exam for a legitimate reason, then the
missed exam will count as the dropped score and the student will be permitted to
take the Comprehensive Final in order
to replace the zero. However, if the student misses an exam for an unexcused
reason, an automatic grade of zero will be recorded for one of the three
recorded exams, with no opportunity to take the Comprehensive Final Exam to
replace the zero. Barring a missed exam without an
excused reason, this leaves the student with three scored exams, weighted 27%
each. The student should note
there are NO Make-Up Exams administered in this course for ANY REASON! In summary:
Class Participation: 19%
Three
Recorded Exam Scores @ 27% each: 81%
100%
The dates for the exams are on the
course syllabus. The grades will
be computed by using your three highest test grades along with your
Participation grade.
Use of the 11:00-12:20 Class
Period: When viewing the ÒTopics & Reading AssignmentsÓ portion
of the syllabus, the student will notice that approximately two-thirds of the
classes will be lectures (with some discussion/Q&A). All lectures will be held in Hoxie
Thompson Auditorium in Sherman Hall.
However, the remaining classes will consist of small group
discussions. There will be three
small-groups, each with its own instructor and classroom. These smaller class sessions will allow
more time for quality discussions and review, plus give the student an
opportunity to ask clarifying questions over previously covered material. Moreover, the smaller classes will
enable the student to sometimes better exhibit their understanding of course
material, generating an enhanced opportunity to score well on the Participation grade, which, again, is weighted 19%.
ATTENDANCE: Regular
attendance is expected at lectures, discussions, and any video airing and will
be recorded at the beginning of all meetings. It is your responsibility to ensure that your attendance is
accurately recorded. If you miss
class, or know you are going to miss a future class, do not offer the
instructors an explanation or excuse; we trust you have a good reason. However, if you plan to be away from
class for an extended period (more than three consecutive classes), please
inform us well in advance.
1-4
Missed Classes: No
Penalty
5th Missed Class: Final Grade will be
reduced by 10%
6th Missed Class: Final Grade will be
reduced by 20%
7th Missed Class: Final Grade will be reduced
by 30%
Note: Repeating, the first four classes are Òfree,Ó in the
sense there is no grade reduction.
ÒSpendÓ your ÒfreeÓ absences how you see fit, e.g., school field trips,
school team trips, job interviews, funerals, recovering from an illness, etc. These
absences are NOT IN ADDITION to
any days missed due to the above events, or any other events, school sanctioned
or otherwise. For example, if
you miss four classes for health reasons or school sanctioned trips, or for any
other reason, you cannot then take more in-class hours to travel,
hypothetically, with the Model UN group, school sports team, illness, etc., and
not expect to pay the consequences.
Take care of your Òfree absencesÓ and they will take care of you!Ó You may
inquire about the number of recorded absences at any time during the
course. There will be no
alteration of our attendance records at the end of the course.
TAPE RECORDINGS OF LECTURES: Tape recordings of lectures will not be provided, nor is
the student permitted to tape lectures.
ACADEMIC INTEGRITY POLICY: This course will be run on the basis of the Austin
College Academic Integrity Policies.
Group studying is accepted and even encouraged. But all students are required to do
their own work on papers and tests.
By being enrolled in this course, each student agrees to abide by the
Academic Integrity principles found in the most recent version of ENVIRONMENT
or in other official college publications. All sources in the preparation of papers must be
appropriately acknowledged. (See
attached for Academic Integrity General Definitions, Procedures, Penalties, and
Faculty Responsibility.)
STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES: Austin
College seeks to provide reasonable accommodations for all individuals with
disabilities. Austin College will
comply with all applicable federal, state, and local laws, regulations and
guidelines, specifically Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), with respect to providing appropriate
academic adjustments to afford equal educational opportunity. It is the responsibility of the
student to register with and provide verification of academic accommodation
needs to the Director of Academic Skills Center as soon as possible. This verification/documentation must be handed to the
studentÕs professors. The student
also must contact the faculty member in a timely manner (at least one week
before exam date) for reasonable academic accommodations. For further information regarding
learning disability issues or to register for assistance, please contact the
office at 903-813-2454 or visit the Academic Skills Center.
CLASS ETIQUETTE &
CONDUCT :
A. Do not bring Cell Phones or tape
recorders to class.
B. Come to class on time.
C. Do not leave the classroom during lectures/discussions.
D. Complete reading assignments before their
discussion.
E. Respect the rights of others by refraining from talking
(unless
recognized by the instructors) while class is in session, or reading
extemporaneous material, e.g., newspapers, magazines, mail, and other course
material.
F. Bring textbooks, syllabus, and readings to class at
all
times.
G. Inform
instructors before bringing visitors to class.
H. Do not eat
during class session. However, beverages are permitted.
I.
Sit near the classroom door and be as quiet as possible, if necessary to
leave class early.
Jan. 29 Monday
Introductory
PresentationsÉ A Physicist, Chemist, and Economist briefly discuss their
role, discipline, and practice as it pertains to the course.
Topic: Aristotle
& PlatoÕ s Worldview: Forms, Causality, Regularity, and Movement Dan
Nuckols
Brian S.
Baigrie Scientific
Revolutions Chap. I
To
ÒknowÓ was by means of ÒcausesÓ. But it is ÒformsÓ that explains, is even cause of, those particular things at the phenomenal level, and
exist independently. ÒÉAristotleÕs dominant conception of science—the
understanding of the way in which Nature, which resembles a master in having ends
at which it aims, imposes its will on matter, which sometimes resists those
ends, and, like the slave, can achieve nothing except under the direction of a
superior will.Ó
Jan. 31 Wednesday
Topic:
Naked-eye Astronomy and the Ptolemaic World System
Don Salisbury
Thomas Kuhn, "The Ancient Two-Sphere Universe"
and "The Problem of
the Planets," The Copernican Revolution, pp. 1-76
The
Earth-centered Ptolemaic world system admirably explains the observed daily
motion of the sun and stars, and the longer-term motion of the sun and planets
relative to the stars. Terrestrial
and celestial realms are subject to different laws.
Feb. 2 Friday
Topic: Renaissance
Philosophy, Theology, Art, and Mathematics and its Relevance to the Emergence
of Modern Science Don Salisbury
Thomas
Kuhn, "The two-sphere universe in Aristotelian thought" and
"Recasting
the tradition: Aristotle to the Copernicans," The Copernican Revolution, pp. 77-132
Early
Renaissance humanism led to a fusion of pagan Aristotelianism and Christian
theology. But coupled with the
interests and activities of a rising European merchant class the rediscoveries
and reinterpretations of ancient knowledge led to artisanal, artistic,
engineering, mathematical, and philosophical challenges to the dominant world
system.
Feb. 5 Mon.
Discussion (students attend small group session)
Feb. 7 Wed.
Topic: The Copernican World System and
GalileoÕs Evidence
Don
Salisbury
Thomas
Kuhn, "Copernicus' innovation," in The Copernican Revolution,
pp. 133-170 and
Galileo Galilei and Stilman Drake, "Introduction:
First Part" and "The
Starry Messenger" in Discoveries and Opinions of Galileo, pp. 1-58
The
sun-centered Copernican world system is esthetically appealing, but before
GalileoÕs telescopic observations and mechanical discoveries lacked supporting
experimental and theoretical evidence.
Feb. 9 Fri.
Topic: Galileo
and the Church Don Salisbury
Galileo Galilei and Stilman Drake, "Introduction:
Third Part" and "Letter
to the Grand Duchess Christina" in Discoveries and Opinions of Galileo, pp. 145-216
Galileo
was brought before the Roman Inquisition for defending the claim that the earth
moved. But the issues at stake
were much more complex, as was the political, social, and scientific context in
which this charge was made.
Feb. 12 Mon.
Topic: The Merton Thesis: the Sociology
of Science in 17th
Century England Hank Gibson
G.
Basalla, The Rise of Modern Science: Internal or External Facotrs,
ÒIntroduction,Ó pp vii-xiv.
A.B.
Arons & A.M. Bork, Science and Ideas, ÒPuritanism, Pietism, and
Science,Ó by Robert
K. Merton
R. Hooykaas, Religion
and the Rise of Modern Science, Chapter V,
"Science and the Reformation," pp 98-114.
Strongly
believing that external factors have affected the rise of modern science,
Robert Merton considers the sociology of science within 17th century England
and includes religion (namely, Puritanism) within his analysis.
Feb. 14 Wed.
Discussion (students attend small group session)
Feb. 16 Fri.
Topic:
Blood, Art, and Anatomy Hank Gibson
Brian S.
Baigrie, Scientific
Revolutions: Primary Texts in the History
of Science, Chapter 9, "The Sun of the Microcosm,"
by William Harvey
Hugh
Kearney, Science and Change:
1500-1700, "The World as Organism,"
pp77-88.
Herbert
Butterfield, The Origins of Modern Science, Revised Edition,
Chapter 3, "The Study of the Heart Down to
William Harvey"
Jole
Shackelford,
William
Harvey and the Mechanics of the Heart,
ÒHarveyÕs
Discovery
and the Abandonment of Ancient Medical Theory,Ó pp 128-129.
William
Harvey made a very decisive contribution to the Scientific Revolution by his
discovery of blood circulation. In
his work we see developments in anatomy and in the art of 15th century Italy come
together in one of the most important discoveries in the history of medicine.
Feb. 19 Mon.
Topic:
Phlogiston: How Can A Wrong Theory Be Useful?
Hank
Gibson
H.M. Leicester and H. S. Klickstein, A Source Book in Chemistry
1400-1900, a. "Zymotechnia
fundamentalis...;" "Zufallige
Gedanken
and nutzliche Bedencken...;" "Fundamenta
chymiae..." by Georg E. Stahl
b. "Memoir
on Combustion in General," Memoirs de l'Academie des Sciences 1777,
592-600, by Antoine L. Lavoisier
(http:web.lemoyne.edu/~giunta/papers.html#combustion)
Herbert Butterfield, The Origins of Modern Science,
Revised Edition,
Chapter 11, "The Postponed Scientific Revolution
in
Chemistry"
Most of
us smile knowingly when we hear the term phlogiston because we know it was overthrown by Lavoisier and his
understanding of gases and elements.
A deeper look suggests that the phlogiston theory may have facilitated
the development of modern chemistry.
Feb. 21 Wed.
Discussion (students attend small group session)
Feb. 23 Fri.
Exam I
Feb. 26 Mon.
Minisymposium
on the Nature of Time
Feb. 28 Wed.
Topic: NewtonÕs
Laws,Gravity, and the Clockwork Universe
Don Salisbury
James
Gleick, Isaac Newton, ÒFirst
Principles, pp. 114-125, and
ÒEvery
Body PerseveresÓ, pp. 125-140
Newton
presupposes a fixed spatial and temporal physical arena subject to immutable
laws of mechanics and gravitation.
It seems that with the initial conditions given the universe will evolve
in a manner that can be precisely predicted—just like a mechanical clock.
March 2 Fri.
Topic:
Mechanical Chemistry: Robert Boyle
Hank Gibson
Herbert
Butterfield, The Origins of
Modern Science, Chapter 6, ÒThe
Non-Mechanical Sciences,Ó pp 138-150
Hugh Kearney, Science and Change, 1500-1700, ÒRobert Boyle and
English MechanismÓ, pp 171-178
Robert
Boyle was the most important figure in transforming chemistry from a purely
organic science to one that was mechanistic in outlook. An avid experimentalist, he made use of
an air pump to show that air had weight and made use of the concept of
Òparticles in motionÓ in formulating BoyleÕs law, a quantitative relationship
between volume and pressure
March 5 Mon.
Discussion (students attend small group session)
March 7 Wed.
Topic: The Scottish EnlightenmentÉDavid Hume
& Adam SmithÉBirth of the Social Sciences Dan Nuckols
Scott Gordon The
History and Philosophy of Social Science (Chapter
SevenÉÓThe Scottish Enlightenment of the Eighteenth CenturyÓ)
The main
source of inspiration for the eighteenth-century thinker was the
accomplishments of the natural sciences.
The Newtonian system was especially admired as a model of what scholars
should aspire to achieve.
March 9 Fri.
Topic: The Argument for Capitalism: Adam SmithÕs Argument for
Decentralization in the Economy Dan Nuckols
E. Ray
Canterbery The Making of
Economics (Chapter Three, ÒThe
Nature
of Science and the Economics ParadigmÓ and
Chapter Four, ÒAdam Smith and
the Market EconomyÓ)
Concentrates
on key aspects of Adam Smith paradigm; with emphasis on how his economic
framework emulates Newtonian mechanics, supposedly resulting in order and
harmony.
March 12 Mon.
Discussion (students
attend small group session)
March 14 Wed.
Topic: The
Idea of Progress, Harmony, and
Perfection
in the Social Order Dan Nuckols
Scott
Gordon The History and
Philosophy of Social
Science. Chaps. 8 & 10
The idea
that the world is a harmonious order, with strong progressive currents, despite
the manifest appearances of conflict, muddle, and formless happenstance, has a
long history, going back to the great Greek thinkers of the classical era. The 17th and 18th
centuries see debate over whether this ÒprogressÓ and ÒharmonyÓ was Òpre-establishedÓ via a Ògreat chain of beingÓ, or instead non-static, in the sense that progress and
harmony ÒevolveÓ—the western
intellect enters in evolutionist era.
March 16 Fri. Noon
Spring Break
March 26 Mon.
Topic: The
ÒCrisisÓ of Uncertainty Dan Nuckols
Heinrich
Von Kleist The
Marquise of O
ÒThe
Love Affair with WilhelmineÓ
(KleistÕs
letter to Wilhelmine)
A look
at one manÕs inability to believe in the idealistic humanism of his day, and
who sees human nature as irrational, ambiguous and bafflingÉ.the loss of faith,
together with his vulnerability and disequilibrium.
March 28 Wed.
Discussion (students attend small group session)
March 30 Fri.
Exam II
April 2 Mon.
Topic: Reductionism
and Emergence Hank Gibson
Reductionism
versus Emergence: Definitions and History
The Dactyl Foundation, Oct. 2005 <http://www.dactyl.org/thought/motivations.htm>
Ian Barbour, Religion and Science: Historical and
Contemporary Issues "A
Hierarchy of Levels," pp 230-235.
Gregory
Peterson, Zygon, vol. 41,no. 3
(September 2006), 689-712, ÒSpecies of Emergence.Ó
One of
the most compelling features of the physical universe is the phenomenon of
emergence: the development of new things, new features, new properties, which
are much more than the sum of their parts. This approach is to be contrasted
with the reductionist-mechanistic view within which complex systems are like
any other system and can be analyzed using linear equations because they are
merely the additive consequence of multiple independent processes. Various types of emergence will be
discussed along with its applications within a number of fields of study.
April 4 Wed.
Topic: Biology, Social Sciences, and Social PolicyÉThe
Reduction
of Sociology to Biology Dan Nuckols
Scott
Gordon The History and
Philosophy of Social
Science.
Chap. 16
Early
social scientists, one of which being Adam Smith, conceived of themselves as
examining social phenomena in the spirit of Ònatural philosophyÓ, as
exemplified in the fields of astronomy, physics, biology, and chemistry. Later social scientists, like Herbert
Spencer and Emile Durkheim, felt both theoretical and empirical biology
profoundly influenced the social sciences. Today, much has been held over and expanded, with
implications for how biology affects social policy.
April 6 Fri.
Discussion (students attend small group session)
April 9 Mon.
Topic: EinsteinÕs Dynamic Spacetime Don Salisbury
Michio
Kaku, ÔSpecial Relativity and the Miracle YearÓ and
ÒWarped
SpacetimeÓ in EinsteinÕs Cosmos: How Albert EinsteinÕs Vision Transformed
our Understanding of Space and Time, pp.
59-112
The
relativity principle was recognized first by Galileo, but it was called into
question toward the end of the nineteenth century. EinsteinÕs special relativity resurrected the principle by
demonstrating that space and time did not have the properties assumed by Isaac
Newton. The rate of passage of
time depends on the observer, as does the length of objects. Yet that was not the full story. EinsteinÕs general theory of relativity
shows that spacetime geometry itself is evolving in time.
April 11 Wed.
Topic: The Big Bang and Evidence for
Physical and Biological
Evolution
Don Salisbury
Michio
Kaku, ÒThe Big Bang and Black HolesÓ, pp. 131-144 and
ÒEinsteinÕs
Prophetic LegacyÓ, pp. 201-233 in EinsteinÕs Cosmos: How Albert EinsteinÕs
Vision Transformed Our Understanding of Space and Time.
Today we
have abundant evidence from a variety of sources that our universe is
expanding, and roughly fifteen billion years ago all matter in the universe was
so tightly packed together that the huge resulting temperatures rendered even
atomic and molecular structures unstable.
Present theory is now able to fill in many details of the evolution of
the cosmos from the hot Big Bang through the physical evolution of stars and
planets and culminating roughly two billion years ago in the emergence on earth
of biological organisms.
April 13 Fri.
Discussion (students
attend small group session)
April 16 Mon.
Topic: What IsnÕt This
Thing Called Science:
Benzene
as a Case Study Hank
Gibson
A.F.
Chalmers, What is this thing
called Science?, Introduction –
Chapter
3, pp ix-40.
Jerome
Berson, Chemical Discovery and the LogiciansÕ Program,
ÒRefutation
by Internal Contradiction. KekuleÕs ÔHypothesis of EmbarrassmentÕ and the
Theory of BenzeneÓ, pp 47-67
A. F.
Chalmers raises and answers many questions about the distinctiveness of
scientific knowledge as opposed to other kinds of knowledge. After discussing the Òfacts of
experience,Õ the nature of observation, and the significance of experiment, he
considers the topic of falsification as proposed by Karl Popper. Berson provides a nice case study that
calls into serious question some of the fundamental precepts of PopperÕs
falsification theory.
April 18 Wed.
Topic: Science and Religion Don
Salisbury
ÒEinstein
on Religion and ScienceÓ, online at http: //www.sacred-
Texts.com/aor/Einstein/einsci.htm
Ian
Barbour, ÒGod and NatureÓ in Religion and Science: Historical
and Contemporary Issues, pp. 305-332
Is there
a fundamental conflict between science and religion? There are probably as many variations of responses to this
question as there are scientists and theologians. We will look at the reasoned opinions of several respected
experts in both disciplines.
April 20 Fri.
Discussion (students attend small group session)
April 23 Mon.
Topic: Artificial Intelligence: Human
Intelligence
Hank Gibson
Alan
Turing, Computing Machinery and Intelligence, Journal of
the
Mind Association, vol. LIX, no. 236, pp. 433-60, 1950.
Selected
reading from the American Association of Artificial
Intelligence,
October, 2005 <http://www.aaai.org/AITopics/newstopics/philosophy.html>
Since
its conceptual beginning in antiquity and modern development since the Turing
Test in 1950, the study of Artificial Intelligence (AI) has raised fundamental
questions about consciousness, the mind-brain relationship, and what it means
to be human. With AI we are faced with the ultimate metaphor: machine as
man. These and other issues will
be addressed within this presentation.
April 25 Wed.
Topic: Imposed Harmony Dan Nuckols
Thomas
Mann Death In Venice
Sigmund
Freud Civilization and
Its Discontents
Modern
societyÕs imposed curbs and prohibitions, nurtured by scienceÕs quest for
ÒexplanationÓ, have man renouncing his instincts and appetites in order for
ÒcivilizationÓ to exist; consequences ensue.
April 27 Fri.
Topic: Imposed Harmony (cont.), Plus, The Modernist & Post-
Modern Movement Dan Nuckols
Peter Barry Beginning
Theory: An Introduction to
Literary
and Cultural Theory. Chaps. 2, 3, & 4
A look
at how literary figures and artists of the 20th century (mostly)
battle against the strictures, techniques, and ÒobjectivityÓ supplied by the
natural sciences. An argument that
some types of ÒknowingÓ are impressionistic and subjective, leading to a need
to study how we see/understand rather
than what we see; a new liking for
fragmented forms, discontinuous narrative and random-seeing collages of
disparate materials.
April 30 Mon
Discussion (students attend small group session)
May 2 Wed.
Exam III
May 4 Fri.
Panel Discussion
May 7 Mon.
Review
May 10 Thursday
Final Exam 9:00-11:00