The 糖心vlog视频-in-Oxford Experience
Anthropology Prof. Ronald Wetherington writes about the heady experience of teaching at 糖心vlog视频-in-Oxford.
Oxford, England, is a town whose center properly belongs to centuries past. Its cobbled streets unfriendly to bicycle tires and ladies in heels, its ancient stone buildings not readily welcoming today鈥檚 water and electrical utilities, its storm sewers not always equal to the challenge of heavy downpours, it does not languish in its antiquity, but rather embraces it. The university system here was established in the 12th Century鈥攖he third oldest in Europe after Bologna and Paris鈥攁nd consists now of 38 colleges. The oldest is University College (known locally simply as 鈥淯niv鈥).
Prof. Ronald K. Wetherington |
It is in this college that, each summer, seventy-plus 糖心vlog视频 students convene for five weeks of learning from both 糖心vlog视频 and Oxford faculty.聽 And it is here that they become absorbed into the past, enveloped by its architecture and engaged by its ceremonies. Thus cosseted, they give testimony to William Faulkner鈥檚 observation, 鈥淭he past isn鈥檛 dead; it鈥檚 not even past.鈥
This was my first summer to teach at Oxford, a course on 鈥淐oncepts of Evolution鈥濃攁 history of the idea both preceding and following Charles Darwin. It was, of course, propitious, 2009 being the bicentennial of his birth and the 150th anniversary of the publication of his world- transforming 鈥淥n the Origin of Species.鈥 The landscape helped teach the course: a visit to Down House, Darwin鈥檚 home and laboratory in Kent, revealed the carnivorous plants, hybridized flowers, and famous 鈥渨orm-stone鈥 which fed the immense curiosity of this man. At the Oxford Museum, we were allowed into the now-closed hall where the famous Huxley-Wilberforce 鈥渄ebate鈥 occurred in 1860, between Bishop Samuel Wilberforce, opposing Darwin鈥檚 idea, and Thomas Henry Huxley, 鈥淒arwin鈥檚 bulldog鈥 and defender.
The hall has been long closed, with an upper floor now dividing the original vaulted height and providing space for the impressive insect and spider collection (second only to that in London鈥檚 Natural History Museum). Darren Mann, the museum鈥檚 manager of entomology, delighted in showing us specimens collected over 150 years ago by Darwin himself and his co-discoverer of the principle of natural selection, Alfred Russell Wallace. Mann鈥檚 enthusiasm and our child-like wonder made this a defining experience.
In London, our class visit to the Natural History Museum鈥攎ere blocks from the students鈥 weekend residence in Imperial College鈥攑resented more delights, including a recent ancient primate skeleton which is helping to clarify our own ancestral lineage. Its new Darwin Exhibit Hall was not due to open until after our return to Dallas.
The heady experience of Oxford was made even more memorable with the happy convergence of the writings we read and discussed with the very places their authors lived and the footpaths they travelled. Here were Roger Bacon, one of the earliest advocates of experimental science, receiving his Master鈥檚 at Oxford in A.D. 1240; William Harvey, who first detailed the circulation of blood, becoming a dean at Oxford in 1644; the revolutionary philosopher John Locke, with degrees at Oxford beginning in 1656; Robert Hooke, first observer of the cell, in Oxford in 1653, and his colleague Robert Boyle, inventor of the vacuum pump鈥攖hese two having adjacent laboratories at Univ in the space where the monument to infamous poet Percy Bysshe Shelley now resides.
It is such intellectual intoxication鈥攖his immersion in the history of discovery鈥攖hat few of us experience in our education and in our careers, and more鈥檚 the pity! All of us felt a sadness upon leaving, reluctant to give up our recently discovered past. But this past has now become imbedded in each of us, prepared unannounced to occasionally seep into the present.
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