Today’s TED blog asks “What is dark matter and what does it have to do with stars?” and it is a typically clear review of what we think we know about the dark matter (and also the dark energy) that make up 96% of the universe. We’ve all heard of ‘Physics for Poets‘ as the stereotypical class for the quantitatively challenged, but what about ‘Poetry for Physicists’? Specifically, pre-atomic, pre-industrial poetry. In Latin.
Category Archives: Latin
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Learning from struggle and failure
This morning Alix Spiegel had an interesting story on NPR’s Morning Edition concerning differing attitudes about the value of struggle in education. It said that parents and teachers in ‘Western’ countries see intelligence as the cause of a positive outcome (like a good grade), whereas parents and teachers in ‘Eastern’ countries such as China and Japan value the role of struggle in the learning process. This recalled a conversation about parenting that I once had with a colleague at DePauw, Matt Hertenstein, a professor in the Psychology Department. Continue reading
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Ovid’s title
Ovid is to credit for the title; he is not to blame for the content, a place for which was the purpose of this site.The two lines in his Metamorphoses that precede the title words read:
Ante mare et terras et quod tegit omnia caelum
unus erat toto naturae vultus in orbe“Before the sea, the earth, and the sky that touches all
there was one countenance upon all of the world” …quem dixere chaos: “which they call chaos” Continue reading

