1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910809577803321

Titolo

Who are we? : old, new, and timeless answers from core texts : selected paper from the Fourteenth Annual Conference of the Association for Core Texts and Courses, Plymouth, Massachusetts / / edited by Robert D. Anderson, Molly Brigid Flynn, J. Scott Lee

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Lanham, : University Press of America, 2011

ISBN

1-283-60018-8

9786613912633

0-7618-5372-3

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (243 p.)

Altri autori (Persone)

AndersonRobert D

FlynnMolly Brigid

LeeJ. Scott

Disciplina

128

Soggetti

Curriculum planning - United States

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references.

Nota di contenuto

Cover; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Introduction; The Contemporary Predicament; Paideia in a Post-Darwinian World: Reconnecting Education and Biology; The Great ""Civilized"" Conversation: A Case in Point; Who We Were, Are, and Will Be, Seen Through a Darwinian Lens; Georg Simmers ""The Metropolis and Mental Life"": An Anchor for the First-Year Core; The Woman in the Dunes as a Core Text: Abe Kobo's Search for a New Modern Identity; Descartes and the Existentialists: The Continuing Fruitfulness of the Cogito; We the People: A Noble Experiment

Dark Night of Our Souls' Democratic VistasOld Maps, New Worlds: A Case of Culture and Core; Freedom, Democracy, and Empire: Are We Imperial Athens?; Boiling Down the People: Democratic Reform in Aristophanes' The Knights; Tocquevillian Reflections on Liberal Education and Civic Engagement; The Core and the Core of Persons; Good Cop, Bad Cop: Interrogating Human Nature with Xunzi and Mencius; Aristotle (versus Kant) on Autonomy and Moral Maturity; Two Meditations on the Nature of Self; Montaigne and the Limits of Human



Reason

Othello in Context: Who Are We? Who Do We Think We Are? Who Are They? How Do We Know?Dock - Alles, was dazu mich trieb / Gott! war so gut! ach war so lieb: Pleasure and Obligation in Faust; The Person in Society; Who Are We, Whose Are We? Women as God's Agents of Change in the Hebrew Bible; Who We Are Through Family and Friends; Rethinking Rites-Music Relations in Confucian Tradition; Politics, Principles, and Death in Antigone; Self-Cultivation and the Chinese Epic: Confucian, Taoist, and Buddhist Themes in Journey to the West; The Morality of Makola in Conrad's An Outpost of Progress

H.G. Wells on Being an EngineerWho We Are and the Case for Economics in the Core Curriculum; Reading Texts and Liberal Education; Core Texts, Introspection, and the Recovery of the Renaissance Ideal in Twenty-First-Century Higher Education; Adverbial Play in Plato's Ion; Remembering Ancient Truths: The Four Roots of Plato's Recollection; Dante Is from Mars; Art and Revolution in the Images of Francisco Goya; Incorporating Eastern Texts into a Western Core: Teaching the Tao Te Ching in Conversation with Wallace Stevens

Sommario/riassunto

This book contains essays of literary and philosophical accounts that explain who we are simply as persons, and essays that highlight who we are in light of communal ties. ACTC educators model the intellectual life for students and colleagues by showing how to read texts carefully and with sophistication.