Find out more about how The Lecture List works.
Coronavirus situation updateOur lecture organisers may or may not have had time to update their events with cancellation notices. Clearly social gatherings are to be avoided and that includes lectures. STAY AT HOME FOLKS, PLEASE. |
Find out what you can do to keep The Lecture List online
|
Course examining the development of humanist ideas and changing notion of progress from the Scientific Revolution to the present.
This 10 week course will examine the development of humanist ideas and the changing notion of progress from the Scientific Revolution through to the present. Copernicus, Galileo, Bacon, Descartes, Kepler and Newton, who shunned the authority of the past and established the scientific method will be studied along with Enlightenment thinkers such as Locke, Voltaire and Condorcet who elevated humanity and established the notion of progress. Positivism will be examined, focusing on how the ideas of social and technological progress were divorced. The work of Darwin and Mendel, which placed humanity firmly in nature once and for all, will be investigated and its consequences discussed.
The last part of the course will consist of a study of the 20th Century, moving from modernist thought and modern humanism through to Postmodernism, the end of history and the rise of the Greens. Parallels between theories developed across disciplines and reasons for their similarities will be investigated.
Speaker(s): |
|
|
|
Date and Time: |
6 October 2005 at 7:00 pm |
Duration: | 2 hours |
|
|
Venue: |
Centre for Lifelong Learning |
Organised by: |
The Great Debate |
|
|
Tickets: |
£55.00/£45.00/£25.00 |
Available from: |
Tel: 0191 515 2800 |
Additional Information: |
Ten week course |
Register to tell a friend about this lecture.
If you would like to comment about this lecture, please register here.
Any ad revenue is entirely reinvested into the Lecture List's operating fund