08 March, 2005

The value of the collegiate bull session

One of the better classes in a while happened last week when my class on terrorism got onto a series of interesting side issues, including
  • autonomus robot soldiers
  • artificial intelligence
  • the nature of consciousness
  • the connections between neural networks and spontaneous social orders
  • the prospects for evolution of software at computer speeds
  • the assumptions about human nature common to tragic and utopian views of politics
  • the difficulty of transcending the fact/values divide (and Hume's Law)
  • the difficulty of having a discussion about politics when dealing with contested concepts
  • the relevance of the most recent research on evolutionary psychology for political philosophy
  • (and other stuff)

We never did get to the original topic for the day, but who cares? I suspect everyone learned more that day than we would have ever covered in the "prepared" class. Sometimes the best thing a teacher can do is get out of the way. It can be more fun, too.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm sort of hurt. Don't you like us? It was our Foreign Policy class, not Terrorism.

Anonymous said...

I agree with Rob, as hard as that may be to beleive.