Mr Gumby
Member
My creative question wasn't so bad - I wrote about Dr Johnson's dictionary, which was a bit of a coincidence, actually, since I was talking about that to someone as I walked into the exam room. But it's postmodernism, so you can write just about anything and get away with it. I saw that locket question and thought that was a bit odd, though.
You did finish the ancient exam, didn't you? Oh sorry, you don't want to talk about it. You don't have to answer that.
When I say classics are important, I don't mean that you'll necessarily have to communicate with anyone in Latin or Greek. What I mean is that a good knowledge of the civilisations that gave us democracy and law and human rights and citizenship and all the other concepts that make up western civilisation is important, and that the best way to learn about them is to learn their languages. It's the same rationale as for studying English or History. An awareness of philosophical and cultural heritage is at least as important as the more mechanical skills you learn in maths. And I often think that if we spent more time reading Plato and Vergil and Cicero we might be better off. The Americans like to compare themselves to Rome, but if they read more Vergil, for example, they mightn't be so eager to get themselves into wars. Or perhaps if they read some of Cicero thoughts about republicanism, the exact stuff that inspired their Constitution...wishful thinking.
And sorry to inflict that rant on you. Only two exams left for me (History Ext. and Latin Ext.). I'm guessing only one for you.
You did finish the ancient exam, didn't you? Oh sorry, you don't want to talk about it. You don't have to answer that.
When I say classics are important, I don't mean that you'll necessarily have to communicate with anyone in Latin or Greek. What I mean is that a good knowledge of the civilisations that gave us democracy and law and human rights and citizenship and all the other concepts that make up western civilisation is important, and that the best way to learn about them is to learn their languages. It's the same rationale as for studying English or History. An awareness of philosophical and cultural heritage is at least as important as the more mechanical skills you learn in maths. And I often think that if we spent more time reading Plato and Vergil and Cicero we might be better off. The Americans like to compare themselves to Rome, but if they read more Vergil, for example, they mightn't be so eager to get themselves into wars. Or perhaps if they read some of Cicero thoughts about republicanism, the exact stuff that inspired their Constitution...wishful thinking.
And sorry to inflict that rant on you. Only two exams left for me (History Ext. and Latin Ext.). I'm guessing only one for you.