|
|
|
|
|
by mulmen
3061 days ago
|
|
This is an idea that seems to be common among technically (STEM) educated people, among others, and it scares me. I believe we end up with a healthier society if we teach people diverse topics and introduce them to new ideas in an intellectually safe environment. Contrast this with going to school to double down on whatever you thought in high school and I hope you can see a benefit beyond pure economic gain. In a democracy everyone should think about the "big questions". If we optimize for brainless robot workers then why ask them for input on how to run our society? |
|
I do not think that means what you wrote. I've seen "intellectually safe", and it gets converted to "I accept nothing outside of my bubble". Worse yet, students get actively hostile to foreign ideas.
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/safe-spaces-college-int...
I think the better term is "intellectually rigorous". Let people have opposing views, but instead challenge them on logos, ethos, and pathos. That discussion is where the truth lies.