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I started off as a physics major but kept signing up for history courses because of all the cool stories. One day the VP for Academic Affairs called me into his office and said it was time for me to file a degree-plan sheet. âBut, John,â I said (weâd long been on a first-name basis), âIâve still only got 28 credits in my major, and I need 36, but you guys wouldnât give me any for advance-placing my freshman year, so I canât graduate until you add more physics courses to the curriculum.â
âBut you already have 42 in history.â
âI do?â
Thus my noble college career came to an ignominious and premature conclusion. My chem and math minors were already in the books, tho, so Iâm one of the few history majors with a BS instead of a BA.
âMaking up theoriesâ? You donât just make up (real) theories â you might form a hypothesis (an âeducated guessâ based on observations and research). Then you would find a a way to test your hypothesis though experimentation and additional research. You would study it and test it again (in other ways) and again and have others repeat and critically examine the results. Through this a theory might develop.
Or ⊠you could make some biased or wild speculations and jump to conclusions. You might be able to convince some that you have a real valid âtheoryâ (especially if you can add the illusion of guilt to those who do not accept the âtheoryâ). This is a part of my hypothesis of what seems to be involved in something called âCritical Race Theoryâ.
My granddaughter hated history until she was moved to an accelerated class. Her regular history class was about memorizing events, names, and dates. Her accelerated class was about causes and patterns. It became her favorite class.
I do like Ms Olsen. Partly because sheâs absolutely a Swede, but also because of comments like this one. Sheâs right, and this is exactly why history is so important.
And Caulfield isnât going to get that degree in history if he thinks itâs just a matter of making stuff up. If his professors are any good, heâll be disabused of this notion. ;-) You can make up all the theories you want, but if you canât support them with evidence, they wonât be worth the paper theyâre written on.
Oh, and I see the single most blatantly ignorant thing Iâve ever read in the comments section up there, but Iâll leave it to you, gentle reader, to find it. rolling eyes
âYou might form a hypothesis (an âeducated guessâ based on observations and research). Then you would find a a way to test your hypothesis though experimentation and additional research. You would study it and test it again (in other ways) and again and have others repeat and critically examine the results. Through this a theory might develop.
Or ⊠you could make some biased or wild speculations and jump to conclusions."
In your discourse about critical race theory, you have done the latter rather than the former. I wonder if you are able to ask yourself what your motivation for doing that could be.
RAGs over 3 years ago
Experience is wonderful. It lets you recognize a mistake when you make it again.
Concretionist over 3 years ago
Mrs. Olsen nails it!
Richard S Russell Premium Member over 3 years ago
I started off as a physics major but kept signing up for history courses because of all the cool stories. One day the VP for Academic Affairs called me into his office and said it was time for me to file a degree-plan sheet. âBut, John,â I said (weâd long been on a first-name basis), âIâve still only got 28 credits in my major, and I need 36, but you guys wouldnât give me any for advance-placing my freshman year, so I canât graduate until you add more physics courses to the curriculum.â
âBut you already have 42 in history.â
âI do?â
Thus my noble college career came to an ignominious and premature conclusion. My chem and math minors were already in the books, tho, so Iâm one of the few history majors with a BS instead of a BA.
Doug K over 3 years ago
âMaking up theoriesâ? You donât just make up (real) theories â you might form a hypothesis (an âeducated guessâ based on observations and research). Then you would find a a way to test your hypothesis though experimentation and additional research. You would study it and test it again (in other ways) and again and have others repeat and critically examine the results. Through this a theory might develop.
Or ⊠you could make some biased or wild speculations and jump to conclusions. You might be able to convince some that you have a real valid âtheoryâ (especially if you can add the illusion of guilt to those who do not accept the âtheoryâ). This is a part of my hypothesis of what seems to be involved in something called âCritical Race Theoryâ.
MS72 over 3 years ago
Oops, there goes another rubber tree plant
grocks over 3 years ago
Big point for Mrs.Olsen!
DM2860 over 3 years ago
My granddaughter hated history until she was moved to an accelerated class. Her regular history class was about memorizing events, names, and dates. Her accelerated class was about causes and patterns. It became her favorite class.
calliarcale over 3 years ago
I do like Ms Olsen. Partly because sheâs absolutely a Swede, but also because of comments like this one. Sheâs right, and this is exactly why history is so important.
And Caulfield isnât going to get that degree in history if he thinks itâs just a matter of making stuff up. If his professors are any good, heâll be disabused of this notion. ;-) You can make up all the theories you want, but if you canât support them with evidence, they wonât be worth the paper theyâre written on.
poppacapsmokeblower over 3 years ago
I emphasize with Caufield. I am studying how the Civil War started to avoid the upcoming Civil War.
Cozmik Cowboy over 3 years ago
Caulfield is absolutely correct â for 3 panels. 4th panel, she nails it. That is why we study history!
ArtisticArtemis over 3 years ago
I have a theory that half the people commenting today donât know half of what theyâre talking about. =^_____^=
whistling quietly
ArtisticArtemis over 3 years ago
Oh, and I see the single most blatantly ignorant thing Iâve ever read in the comments section up there, but Iâll leave it to you, gentle reader, to find it. rolling eyes
evilsofa over 3 years ago
âYou might form a hypothesis (an âeducated guessâ based on observations and research). Then you would find a a way to test your hypothesis though experimentation and additional research. You would study it and test it again (in other ways) and again and have others repeat and critically examine the results. Through this a theory might develop.
Or ⊠you could make some biased or wild speculations and jump to conclusions."
In your discourse about critical race theory, you have done the latter rather than the former. I wonder if you are able to ask yourself what your motivation for doing that could be.
falcon_370f over 3 years ago
Those who cannot remember the past are doomed to repeat it.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] over 3 years ago
You may make up hypotheses but if they have real value they can become theories.