Summary of Roosevelt Montás's Rescuing Socrates
Everest Media
Availability:
Ebook in EPUB format. Available for immediate download after we receive your order
Ebook in EPUB format. Available for immediate download after we receive your order
Publisher:
Everest Media LLC
Everest Media LLC
DRM:
Watermark
Watermark
Publication Year:
2022
2022
ISBN-13:
9798822531680
Description:
Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book.
Sample Book Insights:
#1 I was a freshman at Columbia in 1992, and I was required to take Literature Humanities, which was taught by Wallace Gray. The first book on the syllabus was the Iliad. I had read these lines half a dozen times already, but they still seemed thoroughly strange.
#2 I began to read books on the syllabus, and each one brought new questions and challenges. I was beginning to realize just how much I didn’t know.
#3 The Literature Humanities course was modeled on a course invented by John Erskine in 1919 at Columbia College called General Honors. The course was based on the simple but radical idea that undergraduates would benefit from an intensive, non-disciplinary course consisting of reading, usually in translation, one classic each week.
#4 In 1937, Columbia turned the Colloquium on Important Books, a premier undergraduate course, into a universal first-year requirement. The course raised questions about what Columbia had undertaken to do, and whether it could replace the education of English gentlemen by reading a score of books in translation.
Sample Book Insights:
#1 I was a freshman at Columbia in 1992, and I was required to take Literature Humanities, which was taught by Wallace Gray. The first book on the syllabus was the Iliad. I had read these lines half a dozen times already, but they still seemed thoroughly strange.
#2 I began to read books on the syllabus, and each one brought new questions and challenges. I was beginning to realize just how much I didn’t know.
#3 The Literature Humanities course was modeled on a course invented by John Erskine in 1919 at Columbia College called General Honors. The course was based on the simple but radical idea that undergraduates would benefit from an intensive, non-disciplinary course consisting of reading, usually in translation, one classic each week.
#4 In 1937, Columbia turned the Colloquium on Important Books, a premier undergraduate course, into a universal first-year requirement. The course raised questions about what Columbia had undertaken to do, and whether it could replace the education of English gentlemen by reading a score of books in translation.
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