Such departments are more diversely configured, with humanities departments common and journalism not uncommon in English. |
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What makes the humanities important is that they take the areas where we have insufficient data and try to abstract useful principles from it. |
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Conflicts especially abound in English literature, language arts, social studies, and the humanities. |
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Collini's public celebration of the under-appreciated scholarship of editors and annotators is a service to the humanities. |
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Students also will study mathematics, science, liberal arts and the humanities as part of the curriculum. |
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Through the establishment of courses in humanities, management and economics, we expect to permeate liberal arts into the sciences. |
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Among the most vulnerable programs may be those in the liberal arts, especially the humanities and social sciences. |
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Most offer degrees in law and the humanities and the social, health, and life sciences as well as engineering and the physical sciences. |
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They share this preoccupation with other disciplines and interdisciplinary subject areas in the humanities. |
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This should be a vital component in an arts and humanities education today. |
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I think my sensibilities were running more towards arts and humanities than math and science. |
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Looking ahead, construction will be completed on the new arts and humanities building by October. |
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The courses most frequently offered in distance learning curricula quite clearly materialize the end of the humanities. |
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On 29 August 1530 Mercator matriculated at the University of Louvain, taking the course in the humanities and philosophy. |
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Maybe in the humanities there is no recourse from representation, mediation, story-telling, and social saturation. |
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The refusal of bourgeois conceptions of creativity constitutes a potential difficulty for any humanities subject. |
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That tradition continues into the present day with numerous benefactors who support the arts and humanities. |
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This has led to productive dialogue between medical sociology, bioethics, and the medical humanities. |
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Jack becomes a regular bon vivant, painting tasteful nudes in his California art studio and writing books on ancient humanities. |
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Students at Birkbeck carry out research in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. |
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Undergraduate majors in the arts and humanities, natural sciences, or social sciences can prepare you for law school. |
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The search for the origins of the modern self has been one of the great snipe hunts in the history of the humanities. |
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Proposals from all disciplines of the humanities and social sciences are welcome. |
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The guide will support secondary school curricula in art, English, social studies and humanities. |
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An educated person would be expected to be well versed in both natural science and the humanities. |
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We wanted to develop and share a vocabulary about learning, especially in the humanities. |
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Taylor's one of those crazy people with a humanities minor and is always making obscure references that I don't get. |
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Traditionally, humanities faculty have worked somewhat in isolation, with the library carrel being a second home. |
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True, one does encounter a couple of stray Marxists in humanities departments, but to say they run the show is stretching it a bit. |
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Proper funding to humanities departments in universities would also be a big help. |
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Anglo-American humanities academics has been strip-mining 20th Century European thinkers and writers for the last 30-40 years. |
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I am interested in being a good enough humanities teacher in order to be a conduit between subaltern children and their subaltern teachers. |
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She found it easily, as the humanities area was designed as a large oval, and she just had to keep walking in a circle to find the room. |
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Upon further inquiries, I was told that humanities combines the study of geography and history. |
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Well, like a bad remake of The Paper Chase, I found myself in a required humanities seminar on historiography. |
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At the same time, courses in business studies and the humanities are oversubscribed. |
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Projects in the digital humanities present computer scientists with unique scientific and technological challenges. |
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I'm now teaching internet technologies at UCL, and continuing to do research in digital humanities. |
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Dr. Gill and I are both art historians, so our approach to digital humanities differs from those projects we have heard about today. |
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What value is the humanities to natural history, or natural history to the humanities? |
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She was a warm person, I found out she was into arts, music, literature and humanities. |
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Less easy to state was a possible solution, given both the vast complexity of modern science and the fragmentation of the humanities. |
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This goes to illustrate the academic standards for humanities and social sciences in the past half century. |
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Art is a key to understanding the humanities, the sciences, history and the world. |
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The program could be adapted for use at the high school level for classes in humanities and history. |
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The buildings at the college include a new drama studio, new classrooms for teaching English and the humanities and a new courtyard. |
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We've had people give us scholarships aimed specifically at the social sciences and humanities. |
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Within the humanities, literature is the domain in which beauty is allied to truth. |
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I had an interesting conversation last night comparing this with the humanities. |
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In contrast, applicants for humanities, medicine, arts and sports are ever increasing. |
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Thus there may be a revival in the humanities, having a favourable effect on Australia's cultural level. |
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Casual employment has been the curse of young scholars working in the humanities. |
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Remember that media people are usually educated in the humanities, not in science. |
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Mornings focus on literacy and numeracy, while afternoons are spent on humanities, science and sport. |
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Many of us hold the belief that the true value of an education in the humanities can be measured by the anecdotes it yields over dinner. |
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The Anarchist U is a volunteer-run collective which organizes a variety of courses on social science and the humanities. |
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It covers science, through physical geography and geology, and humanities, through economic and historical geography. |
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The debate between realists and formalists takes a remarkably similar form in the humanities and the sciences. |
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On one hand, they are gradually desensitized by the increasing popularized and professionalized humanities. |
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For an extended look at the dubious value of a humanities education in particular see here. |
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The oversupply of graduate students in the humanities is much, much worse than the oversupply of lawyers. |
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The humanities were once divided administratively and intellectually into discrete disciplines, but they are no longer treated as separate fields of study. |
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They are college seniors now, 22, Jenna an English major at the University of Texas in Austin, and Barbara, like her father a Yalie, majoring in humanities. |
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Those in the humanities may agree to the applicability of complex dynamics and field theory to the study of culture, but the inverse is not typically true. |
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The appointment was unanimous and, given the nature of humanities studies, it is doubtful that the department would overlook something as important as equity policies. |
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In the education of Smith engineers, the study of the humanities and social sciences is just as important as the study of the physical sciences and mathematics. |
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The next trick deals with exploiting the differences between the natural sciences and disciplines like linguistics, properly part of the humanities. |
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Thinking of language as an instinct inverts the popular wisdom, especially as it has been passed down in the canon of the humanities and social sciences. |
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The Hull University humanities students had enrolled in a Yorkshire Studies course and were beginning to take a scholarly journey up hill and down dale. |
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The establishment, which specialises in selling scholarly and antiquarian books on the humanities, cannot afford to pay increased rent rates for the premises. |
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And, of course, public social scientists and those in the humanities are, in some respects, in short supply, in part because their colleagues stigmatize them as popularizers. |
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If there is a tint of humanities in me it's from Underwood family. |
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Barthes, Derrida, Foucault and Lacan were starting to develop the ideas that would revolutionize the humanities. |
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Now, we in the humanities are concerned primarily with the monitoring of the dominant cultural tradition, its preservation and its purveyance, right? |
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In the past two years, the Endowment has made a concerted effort to take a leadership position in exploring the new frontier of the digital humanities. |
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Tenured women in science are twice as likely as tenured men to be single, and more tenured women remain single in the social sciences and humanities, as well. |
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Nevertheless, the viability of digital humanities depends on having tools for automatically extracting the semantic relationships that hold within and between different texts. |
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That kind of thinking is extremely dangerous because it puts the humanities under siege. |
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Only eight percent of American college students now major in the humanities. |
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But on the whole, this is a great book to give to your colleagues in the humanities who think that anyone who does mathematics must be an unlettered philistine. |
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It was hoped that sixth-formers would study four or five AS-levels, mixing the arts, humanities, languages and sciences before narrowing down their choices in the upper-sixth. |
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His mechanical approach to grammar, fiercely denying pragmatics and therefore the main finding of the humanities in the twentieth century, blocks progress. |
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Returning to the main point, I fully agree that for those in the humanities to remain woefully ignorant of the sciences is to remain in the bleachers of an intellectual life. |
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The first crop of students began taking courses in the new major, a cross-disciplinary program that falls under the school of humanities, arts and social sciences. |
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My initial objective of law as well as my interests at the time led me to a curriculum that was heavily weighted in the humanities especially history. |
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Liar-liar works magnificently against the TV rookie, the minor-league humanities professor blinking into the camera from a remote studio in the Midwest. |
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The special flavour of postwar strategic studies came from those who had been working in the physical sciences and engineering rather than the social sciences and humanities. |
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Higher education suffers from a breakdown of the humanities. |
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Thus a cultural climate was created that greatly enhanced the development of the humanities and the sciences. |
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Studies in what once was called philosophy are now classified as sciences and humanities. |
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Licenciatura courses exist mostly in mathematics, humanities, and natural sciences. |
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One unique aspect is that the ancient universities of Scotland issue a Master of Arts as the first degree in humanities. |
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Beyond social science, he has also had a lasting legacy in philosophy, literature, the arts and the humanities. |
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Beside English, French is taught as a third language for the students of the humanities at schools, but for two years only. |
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A liberal education combines an education in the classics, English literature, the humanities, and moral virtues. |
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Study of the Classics and humanities slowly returned in the fourteenth century, which led to increased study of both Ancient Greek and Latin. |
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Unlike science, where timeliness is critically important, humanities publications often take years to write and years more to publish. |
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In July 2009, the University announced it was ending the teaching of over 250 humanities courses at the centre making over 100 staff redundant. |
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He received an education in the humanities and learned to bear arms and fight. |
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Anthropology is a global discipline involving humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. |
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After 1813, other moments marked the development of higher education in Romanian language, regarding both humanities and the technical science. |
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Archaeology can be considered both a social science and a branch of the humanities. |
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Its programmes in the arts, humanities, business, and the social sciences, as well as medicine, are among the best in the country. |
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Its current collection concentrates on the sciences, engineering, business management, social sciences, humanities, and health. |
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My unguided tour through the humanities would likely be unbalanced, but I hoped that this could be made up for by the sheer number of books read. |
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The UCU will expand the current program of the LTA by opening several more departments and institutes in the humanities and social disciplines. |
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The contributors are mostly humanities professors, but include a television producer and independent science and science-fiction historian. |
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No one studies the humanities or fine arts for their practical value. |
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Among those rare exceptions, fortunately, was that coryphaeus of modern thought in the humanities, Professor Roman Jakobson. |
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Yet McEwan's novel does much more when viewed as a consilient reflection of the relationship between the sciences and the humanities. |
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Information design, user experience design, and new product development use methods from both the sciences and the humanities. |
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Moron reasonably excludes the arts from his discussion of the humanities but, mutatis mutandis, similar questions of legitimacy arise in the two fields. |
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Wittgenstein's influence has been felt in nearly every field of the humanities and social sciences, yet there are diverging interpretations of his thought. |
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Leonardo da Vinci was the exemplar, and his drawing of the Vitruvian Man became the symbol of the creativity that flourishes when humanities and science come together. |
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Goldsmiths, University of London, is a public research university in London, England, specialising in the arts, design, humanities, and social sciences. |
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However, if the world-view of the scientist was totally changed, this could not be without an effect upon the view of man in the field of the humanities. |
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Invariably anything Hamletic intimates a large world and major problems, and who could question the rightness of this suggestion for the humanities, in academe or outside? |
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But issues still remain about the use of citations in ranking systems, especially the fact that the arts and humanities generate comparatively few citations. |
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It is the largest collaboration in the history of either university, and its scope has subsequently been extended to the humanities and social sciences. |
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In addition, students in the hard sciences may be more apt to work in groups, or the types of courses they take may allow for more synergies than in the humanities. |
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Small wonder that students in both honors and the humanities are less satisfied by the shallow stream of entertainment media when they have dipped into the Pierian Spring. |
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Three of the five researchers working in natural sciences were women, as were three of the six social scientists and two of the five researchers from the humanities. |
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