COCO 2
COURSE INFORMATION
SYLLABUS
READING GUIDE
PHOTO ALBUM
LAHR NOTES
PASTOR NOTES
POST A QUESTION
FRIDAY DISCUSSIONS
RESOURCES
PICASSO'S "THREE MUSICIANS"
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COURSE DESCRIPTION Everybody knows
about time. Our everyday language bears witness to the centrality of time with
scores of words and expressions that refer to it as a measure, a frame of
reference, or an ordering factor for our lives, feelings, dreams, and histories.
For the Aztecs time was a series of 52-year cycles. At the end of each cycle, the
sun would set and for three days and nights the universe was up for grabs before
the beginning of a new cycle. The Bible, on the other hand, inscribed another
concept of time, linear and chronological in the seven days of creation and the
detailed chronicles of endless genealogies. Playing with time has been a favorite
game in works of high culture--from the Greek sophists to cubism--and in popular
culture--from H.G. Wells to Monty Python. And time is at the center of one of the
most revolutionary scientific theories of all time: Einstein's Theory of
Relativity. In this course we will use mathematics, literature, and the arts to
travel through history, to explore and understand Time as a key concept and
reality in the development of Western culture and in our own twentieth century
view of ourselves and of the world.
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