Brian Boyd’s essay on the interaction of evolution and creativity, “Purpose-Driven Life”--which appeared in the Spring issue of The American Scholar-- has been selected by the eminent physicist (and frequent contributor to The New York Review of Books), Freeman Dyson,  for 2010 inclusion in The Best American Science and Nature Writing.

 

Hats off to Brian!

Ellen Pifer

 

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March 2010                    THE SCHOLAR'S CONNECTION

      Vol. 2, Issue 3

Welcome to The Scholar's Connection, a monthly e-mail newsletter that keeps you informed about The American Scholar.

 

BIRKERTS ON TECHNOLOGY: A WIN-LOSS ANALYSIS

STUDENTS WITH MACS

In "Reading in a Digital Age" in the Scholar's Spring issue, Sven Birkerts writes about his students taking notes on laptops during lectures, saying he wouldn't be surprised to learn that they are trolling the Internet while listening. Then last week we learned from The Washington Post that a professor at Georgetown Law has banished laptops from his lectures to minimize potential diversions. With that in mind, we asked Birkerts what aspects of technology he can endorse, or at least live with.


"Too late, I think, to regard technologies as something one is for or against (except for purposes of abstract argument)," he replied. "For me it comes down to degrees of use, or acquiescence, and having an awareness of what is changed, compromised, or put at risk in exchange for what benefits." He is most suspicious of technologies that alter our fundamental sense of the basic time/space categories, he said, either by making things that need to be known through effort or resistance too easy or, as with GPS, giving the illusion that we never don't know where we are. "The opposite is metaphysically truer," he said, because "we never have a clue.


"Also, technologies that abridge social chasms too readily create communities without effort or stress--these are to be watched carefully. Again, it's all a matter of degrees, and if we are not ready to dig in our heels every so often, we ought to at least have an active awareness of how we are being changed, and what we are being changed from."

 

SCHOLARSHIP REPRISED 

 

We congratulate two more writers whose work in our pages last year will be republished in year-end "best of" anthologies. Brian Boyd's piece from the Spring issue, "Purpose-Driven Life," exploring the interaction between evolution and creativity, has been selected by physicist Freeman Dyson for inclusion in the 2010 edition of The Best American Science and Nature Writing. And Joel E. Cohen's "A Mindful Beauty," from our Autumn issue, will appear in The Best Spiritual Writing 2011. Cohen wrote about what poetry and applied mathematics have in common, and it's more than you might think.

 

THE OTHER COSTS OF HEALTHCARE 

 

medical symbol

Also in the Spring issue, Richard Rapport, M.D., delivers a firsthand account of the financial and emotional costs of sustaining older patients who are critically ill. As the long national debate, with its allusions last year to "death panels," lumbers toward a vote in Congress, Rapport's analysis, "To Die of Having Lived," offers a dose of reality: "When the organs have failed, when the mind has dissolved, when the body that has faithfully housed us for our lifetime has abandoned us, what's wrong with giving up?"

 

 The American Scholar

 

spring 2010 cover

Since 1932, our readers (including members of Phi Beta Kappa, which sponsors the magazine) have looked to the Scholar for serious and elegantly written articles, essays, reviews, short stories, and poetry by the country's best writers and thinkers. The result has been a lively forum about literature, the arts and sciences, history, society, politics, and public affairs. You are a part of this ongoing national conversation, one that is occurring not only in our print edition but, more and more, on our Web site,

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