For the right of those who submit to authority and have a voice in their own governments, the right and liberties of small nations, universal dominion of rights for such a concert of free people, as shall bring peace and safety to all nations and make the world itself at last free. We can dedicate our lives and we have, everything with the pride to know the day has come when america privileged to spend her blood in her might for the privilege see of her birth and happiness and peace that she has treasured. She can do no other. This is a panel on Woodrow Wilsons legacy. Together by the society of historians in the gilded age and progressive area death era. Continue thish to or any other conversation, for the reception occurring this evening from 5 00 to 7 00 on the fourth floor. I am an historian at Duke University and ill injured is the panel in the order of presentation, the order of the program. First, mary, professor and chair at the History Department where she was also the foundin
We have four scholars here today well placed to pick up these themes from, intriguingly, different kinds of angles and backgrounds. Let me go ahead and introduce them. To my left is henry cole, an assistant professor at yale where he holds appointments in the medical school and History Department. He is also on the faculty of cognitive science. He is working on what will be a terrific book on the history of mind and Brain Science in the late 19th century currently titled other mines other minds. David is the author of storytelling and science, rewriting oppenheimer and the nuclear age. Just out, his attitudes towards he studies attitudes towards studying science in the modern united states, he is interested in nuclear history, environmental history, and the history of energy. He is currently working on a book about the way that Rachel Carson and other in other contemporary authors have shaped views on environmentalism. Andrew is a professor at harvard. He is especially interested in en
At in the History Department vanderbilt university. We are here today to talk about a number of things. Im sure that more will come out in the discussions. The intellectual work of inence, the place of science intellectual history and the relations between science and intellectual history. Many other threads as well. We have four scholars here today well placed to pick up these themes from, intriguingly, different kinds of angles and backgrounds. Let me go ahead and introduce them. To my left is henry cole, an assistant professor at yale where he holds appointments in the medical school and History Department. He is also on the faculty of cognitive science. He is working on what will be a terrific book on the history of mind and Brain Science in the late 19th century currently titled other mines other ds. David is the author of storytelling and science, rewriting oppenheimer and the nuclear age. Just out, his attitudes towards studying science in the modern united states, he is interes
The first woman to be named chair of the History Department, Ross's research focused on historical writing in the social sciences, revealing insights that transformed scholars' understanding of the past
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