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FGM's avatar

As undergrad I read Plato. I didn't read Confucius. I never encountered the names Harun al-Rashid, Ibn Battuta, or Saladin. In high school I learned of the Medicis, Marco Polo, and a little about the crusades. Back in college I enjoyed reading Bentham, JS Mill, and Rawls and their conversations.

As an adult an anime led me to a short story by the Japanese author Motojirō Kajii - it's a standard in Japanese high schools. Over at X Kamil Galeev has referenced the Volga: maybe I could situate it on a map now +/- 1000 miles.

There's a huge reservoir of great stuff in translation, but not quite part of the Anglosphere.

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Yes of Course's avatar

It's a tough one, but I would focus more on exposing students to different styles of thinking than any particular content. Statistical reasoning, legal argumentation and formal logic, close textual study of a complex work, problem solving in engineering, testing hypotheses by experiment, finding originality in the visual arts, tracing the flow of ideas through time and how society and thought influence each other, thinking big in macro history, then going really narrow into one period and seeing contingency and complexity.

And of course, they should get all of this in a curriculum designed around econ, queen of the social sciences.

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