Elaine Huang, Lafayette
College Essay Title: «Doomed to Digital Dependence?
Not exact matches
Bernard Coughlin, S.J.,
title this collection of
essays «Letters to Young People,» because it would inform and challenge
college - aged students who are grappling with philosophical, spiritual, political, and ethical questions for the first time.
The 1995 publication of expanded and annotated notes from Merleau - Ponty's courses at the
College de France, 1956 - 1960, contains a 13 - page
essay titled «The Idea of Nature for Whitehead.»
Miriam Aczel, Imperial
College London
Essay Title: «Fracking and Human Rights: Using a Rights - Based Framework to Regulate a New Technology»
Priyanka Menon, Harvard University
Essay Title: «Mathematics and the Question of Human Rights» Priyanka Menon graduated from Harvard
College in 2016 with a B.A. in Mathematics and a secondary in History.
In an
essay titled «School Choice through a Foucauldian Lens,» published last year, Stacy Smith, a professor of education at Bates
College, seized on the ideas of Michel Foucault to dispute the notion that supporting charter schools means supporting market - based education reforms.
The
title of the exhibition is taken from an unpublished
essay by economist John Maynard Keynes entitled «Can we consume our surplus or the influence of furniture on love», a handwritten copy of which is held in the archives of King's
College at the University of Cambridge.
Brash, dispersed, hyperassociative yet precise, New York — based artist Rachel Harrison's work exacts virtuosity from cultural excess with wit and elegance to spare; one can see why her first major survey (starting at the Hessel Museum of Art at Bard
College, then reconfigured for Portikus, Frankfurt, and the Whitechapel, London) was initially
titled «Consider the Lobster,» which comes from an
essay by the late David Foster Wallace.
Note: The following
essay was originally published in «Jack Tworkov: Accident of Choice, The Artist at Black Mountain
College 1952,» which coincided with an exhibition of the same
title held at Black Mountain
College Museum and Arts Center, Asheville, NC, June 17 - September 17, 2011.
I've become a huge fan of David H. Freedman's writings, starting with his stunning article in The Atlantic about the level of noise in today's medical science literature («Lies, Damn Lies, and Medical Science «-RSB-, and even better, his
essay last month in Discover
titled, «Are
College Lectures Ruining Education?»
Remember, just as with those
college admissions
essays many of us wrote, you are more than a list of job
titles and sales numbers.