Re: Cornell's Interim President addresses Intelligent Design

2005-10-22 Thread Ed Darrell
You graduated from Cornell, and moved to Kentucky?

Cornell's student paper has had several ID pieces in the last year. Is it a bit of a campus controversy? Rawlings seems eminently rational on the issue. Watch for attacks from the ID camp.

And thanks for the URL.

Ed[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hunter R. Rawlings III, the former President of Cornell University who was recently called back to be its Interim President, devoted most of the annual "State of the University Address" today to the intelligent design controversy. I think the following excerpts capture his central message:I am convinced that the political movement seeking to inject religion into state policy and our schools is serious enough to require our collective time and attention. Cornell’s history, its intellectual scope, and its current commitments position us well to contribute to the national debate on religion and science. . . . This is an issue that should engage not simply our science faculty . . . but, in particular, o!
 ur social
 scientists and humanists. This is above all a cultural issue, not a scientific one. The controversy is about the tensions between science and belief, reason and faith, public policy and private religiosity.Modern research universities have become segmented. We have scientists over here, humanists and social scientists over there. Knowledge is divided into ever-smaller categories; our specialization becomes ever more narrow. I believe it is time to put the disparate parts of the modern research university back together. … Humanists and social scientists, whose expertise lies in understanding cultures and ideas, can – and should -- move us beyond ridiculing or ignoring our opponents or claiming that, at some level, science is good and faith is bad. They can keep us from claiming too much in the sphere of relig!
 ion or in
 the sphere of science and give us the language we need to learn from each other.Consistent with Cornell’s land grant mission, I ask as well that humanists, social scientists, and scientists venture outside the campus to help the American public sort through these complex issues. I ask them to help a wide audience understand what kinds of theories, arguments, and conclusions deserve a place in the academy – and why it isn’t always a good idea to “teach the controversies.” … Cornellians who do will be acting in the great tradition of Cornell’s founders, Ezra Cornell and Andrew Dickson White.The full text can be found at:http://www.cornell.edu/president/announcement_2005_1021.cfmArt Spitzer(Cornell '71) ___To post, send message to Religionlaw@lists.ucla.eduTo subscribe, unsubscribe, change options, or get password, see http://lists.ucla.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/religionlawPlease note that messages sent to this large list cannot be viewed as private. Anyone can subscribe to the list and read messages that are posted; people can read the Web archives; and list members can (rightly or wrongly) forward the messages to others.___
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Re: Cornell's Interim President addresses Intelligent Design

2005-10-22 Thread Ed Darrell
My apologies to the list. Wrong Art. Wrong list. I need more coffee.

Ed DarrellEd Darrell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

You graduated from Cornell, and moved to Kentucky?
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Cornell's Interim President addresses Intelligent Design

2005-10-21 Thread ArtSpitzer
Hunter R. Rawlings III, the former President of Cornell University who was recently called back to be its Interim President, devoted most of the annual "State of the University Address" today to the intelligent design controversy.  

I think the following excerpts capture his central message:

I am convinced that the political movement seeking to inject religion into state policy and our schools is serious enough to require our collective time and attention. Cornell’s history, its intellectual scope, and its current commitments position us well to contribute to the national debate on religion and science. . . .  This is an issue that should engage not simply our science faculty . . . but, in particular, our social scientists and humanists.  This is above all a cultural issue, not a scientific one. The controversy is about the tensions between science and belief, reason and faith, public policy and private religiosity.
Modern research universities have become segmented. We have scientists over here, humanists and social scientists over there. Knowledge is divided into ever-smaller categories; our specialization becomes ever more narrow.  I believe it is time to put the disparate parts of the modern research university back together. …  Humanists and social scientists, whose expertise lies in understanding cultures and ideas, can – and should -- move us beyond ridiculing or ignoring our opponents or claiming that, at some level, science is good and faith is bad. They can keep us from claiming too much in the sphere of religion or in the sphere of science and give us the language we need to learn from each other.
Consistent with Cornell’s land grant mission, I ask as well that humanists, social scientists, and scientists venture outside the campus to help the American public sort through these complex issues. I ask them to help a wide audience understand what kinds of theories, arguments, and conclusions deserve a place in the academy – and why it isn’t always a good idea to “teach the controversies.” …  Cornellians who do will be acting in the great tradition of Cornell’s founders, Ezra Cornell and Andrew Dickson White.

The full text can be found at:

http://www.cornell.edu/president/announcement_2005_1021.cfm


Art Spitzer
(Cornell '71)
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