Word: scholaritis
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...this line of criticism is equally abstract. It relies on an open competition among ideas and protection of the freedom of people to express them. The university should be insulated from political criteria in the selection of its members and in their choice of topics for research. The scholar should be judged only when he is appointed to the University; thereafter, there should be a minimum of control over his teaching and research...
...have been able to study a wide range of countries and topics ranging from planning models to income distribution and criticism of U.S. Aid Policy from a variety of points of view. In fact, I find it difficult to imagine any subject that would appeal to a serious scholar on which it would not be possible to work because of the sources of our financial support. This would include the functioning of socialist and communist societies, the factors conducive to social revolution and other examples suggested by Burke, MacEwan. and Bowles...
...ideas behind the Association stem from the philosophy of Roscoe Pound, former dean of the Harvard Law School, former editor-in-chief of the Association Journal, and Schwartz said "possibly greatest legal scholar of the last century...
...housed at the Center on 20 Garden Street. The library was moved to the Center under the conditions of Pound's will that it be kept as he had arranged it. Books on botany still are shelved next to his law books, showing the versatile intellect of this legal scholar...
What is true of the university and a critical theory of society is true of the Center for International Affairs and a critical theory of American foreign policy. A conventional scholar need only cross the T of a pre-existing theory; a radical scholar usually must create his own theory. Radical scholarship takes more thought, more time, and more sweat than conventional scholarship, and this makes research support necessary for radical analyses...