Adsos Letter
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Thu Jun-28-07 12:01 AM
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Re: "The Teaching Company"... |
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Edited on Thu Jun-28-07 12:11 AM by adsosletter
Has anyone had experience with the series of college-level lectures produced by "The Teaching Company"?
They cover a whole range of subjects; from History to Philosophy, Science, Religion, etc.
I have purchased many of these series of lectures, and I have a question for anyone else who may have experienced them:
Do you notice a certain consistent bias in their Historical and Religious lectures? If so, what? I have my own view on this, but I would first like to hear what others think.
:D
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Kiouni
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Thu Jun-28-07 03:01 AM
Response to Original message |
1. MIT offers their courses free online: |
Adsos Letter
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Thu Jun-28-07 11:21 AM
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3. Thanks for the link Kiouni! |
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Why pay for it, indeed! It also looks as if the MIT site has a much broader range of material to offer.
Thanks.
:hi:
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Jim__
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Thu Jun-28-07 10:36 AM
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2. I've never taken their History or Religion courses |
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Edited on Thu Jun-28-07 10:36 AM by Jim__
I did take a (I think) Literary Criticism course from them. It was pretty good; but when we got up to modern critics, the course definitely did not give a legitimate analysis. The professor was somewhat right wing, and definitely religious in his outlook. That wasn't a problem though most of the course; but, when we got to modern and contemporary critics, the treatment was terrible; basically dismissing most views as irrelevant.
I've also noticed they have a Linguistics course given by (I think) John McWhorter. I tried to read a book on linguistics by him once and had to give it up because it was largely right-wing talking points.
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Adsos Letter
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Thu Jun-28-07 11:26 AM
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4. Thanks for your feedback Jim! |
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Many of their courses in the area of Religion or History (especially when it comes to the history of American political ideas) seemed to me to be taking a definite swing to the Right.
I wondered if I was the only one to sense that...
:D :hi:
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MountainLaurel
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Wed Aug-01-07 10:37 AM
Response to Reply #4 |
7. This is a great discussion |
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I'm a librarian and just got a catalog from them recently. This is the kind of info that I need in order to make an informed decision about purchasing things.
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artemisia1
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Sat Aug-04-07 04:58 AM
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8. Don't Decide Too Quickly... |
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Their best courses are in the sciences. The Modern Physics (for non-scientists) course I have from them is EXCELLENT. Also, the instructor was a strong believer in Climate Change (Global Warming) before it became fashionable. Their Astronomy course is a classic. I've never purchased from their Humanities collection, although I have friends who have, so I can't speak to any bias there, but the science courses, in my experience, are taught by open minded, probably liberal, instructors. Recommended with the caveat that they are PRICEY!
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MountainLaurel
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Sun Aug-05-07 02:39 PM
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9. That last point is the largest problem. |
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And the biggest obstacle: My monthly budget for audiobooks is about $150.
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Adsos Letter
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Mon Aug-06-07 12:31 AM
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10. Their courses are offered at significant discounts... |
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regularly, and on a rotating basis. That is the only way I'll buy them; otherwise, they are too costly.
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Retrograde
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Wed Jul-04-07 04:18 PM
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5. McWhorter acknowledges his political differences with Chomsky |
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but I thought he tried to be fair when discussing his linguistic contributions. I didn't think the lectures themselves were particularly political.
My library carries a lot of their courses - most of them seem to be about classical music, which doesn't interest me that much. I'm thinking of trying some of their history courses: I like listening to spoken word when I walk or garden, so I may as well learn something in the process!
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ramapo
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Thu Jul-05-07 09:46 AM
Response to Original message |
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After getting samples CDs from Teaching Company for a couple of years, which had very impressive presentations, I broke down and ordered a few courses; jazz history, Hitler, and the development of language. The Hitler course was the best of the bunch, the jazz course a bit lame, and the language course still waits for me to finish it. It was interesting but is long and I lost the inspiration to listen to the rest.
What amazes me is the number of catalogs that I've received since I placed my order. Within a week I got offers to order more courses. I hadn't even had a chance to finish one yet. It seems I get something in the mail weekly, which I now just dump into the recycling.
Thanks for the pointer to the MIT courses. I stumbled upon that long ago and forgot about it. I'm going to give them a try. Can't argue with free either. I only bought the Teaching Company courses that were on sale. Some are rather pricey.
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Mon Oct 06th 2025, 08:57 AM
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