Welcome to the Melbourne Community Daily Discussion Thread.

  • Kudra :maybe_verified:@aus.social
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    1 year ago

    @wscholermann @bot001 well given the origins were for rich people (and the children of rich people) to do something with their spare time, it explains why quite a few degrees aren’t much use. But they do help you understand why things are the way they are. Just tough titties if you don’t have independent wealth to sustain you after you work this out.

    • Seagoon_
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      1 year ago

      Pretty sure universities were originally started by religious orders to be a place of learning. For them learning was a form of worship. This applies to both xian and Muslim universities.

      • Kudra :maybe_verified:@aus.social
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        1 year ago

        @Seagoon_ there seems to be conflicting information online but most universities seem to exist separate to religious orders, despite historically being very heavily influenced by them at times.

        • Seagoon_
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          1 year ago

          the origin of universities per se, I’m talking 1000 years ago

          But each university that exists today was founded for a unique reason

          but to call universities places where rich people could do hobbies is insulting to both universities and to scholars and scientists.

          For example, Darwin was a gentleman scientist. It wasn’t just something he did in his spare time. It was his vocation.

          • Kudra :maybe_verified:@aus.social
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            1 year ago

            @Seagoon_ yes, but he could only afford science to become a vocation because he was the son of a wealthy financier.

            “The world’s first university, The University of Al Qarawiynn, was founded in 895 CE by a woman named Fatima al-Fihri. She used her inheritance to form a large mosque with an associated school”

            … so the world’s first university apparently started by a woman of leisure who assumedly had a hefty inheritance if she could afford to start a University.

            Even Siddhartha Gautama was a nobleman.

            The luxury to spend time thinking and learning has traditionally been afforded to the wealthy, not the working class, and so when young folks now go to uni and feel like it was a scam, it’s worth noting this history.