Conceptual Math I: Basic Arithmetic

From Glen Woiceshyn at Powerful Minds.com:

We just added a new math text and exercise book—Conceptual Math I: Basic Arithmetic—to the Math section of our store (plus a corresponding teacher's version.) Intended for grades 4-6, this 170-page book is designed to give the student clear understanding and proficiency in basic arithmetic, including addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. The book teaches math inductively by integrating math to its historical development and showing how each new idea flows logically from the existing knowledge. Many exercises in the form of numerical calculations, word problems, and short essay-type questions are found in the book.

Unveiling the Danish Cartoons at UCLA: A Discussion on Free Speech and World Reaction

Who: Ayn Rand Institute president Yaron Brook and additional panelists.

What: (1). A display of the controversial Danish cartoons depicting Mohammed.
(2). A panel discussion and Q&A on the meaning of the worldwide reaction to the cartoons.

Where: Los Angeles, CA, UCLA Campus: Dodd 147

When: Friday, March 10, 2006, at 7 PM

Priority seating for members of the media, UCLA students, faculty, and staff begins at 6:30 PM. Please check in at the front door. General seating is available only by RSVP and begins at 6:45 PM. Please email Events@ClubLogic.org to be placed on the list. A state-or-federally-issued ID is required for admittance. Seating will be limited. Attendees may be required to go through a security checkpoint.

Summary: ARI's Yaron Brook will participate in a panel discussion on the Mohammed cartoon controversy. He will explain: Why the eruption of violence and the issuance of death threats make completely irrelevant the question of whether the cartoons are in bad taste. Why the idea that freedom of the press must be "coupled with press responsibility" means that free speech is not a right, but a fleeting permission. Why every Western newspaper and media outlet should have immediately re-published or shown the cartoons in solidarity with the cartoonists. Why the cowardly and appeasing response of many Western governments--including our own--will only invite further aggression. Other panelists will present their own views.

All For One

Good stuff from Amit Ghate:
In reacting to the Islamists' ongoing cartoon Jihad, most commentators have focused on the issue of free speech. This is natural, and necessary, since eradication of free speech is the most immediate risk; and certainly without free speech there can be no defending other values. Nevertheless it is also vital to take a step back and to view the events as part of a larger pattern, a pattern which poses a grave threat to our core Western values and system of government –- and to their primary consequence and beneficiary: the free individual.

To see why, and to appreciate what we stand to lose, we must begin by understanding what is meant by "Western". Let us be clear that "Western" refers to a set of ideas -- it is not a racial or ethnic epithet. Anyone can embrace the ideas, just as anyone can reject them, regardless of his race, country of birth, or upbringing. Thus we can speak of Japan and Hong Kong having adopted "Western" principles as accurately as we can speak of Canada having done so.

In the broadest and most essentialized sense, the term "Western" denotes a set of fundamental ideas first discovered and adopted by the ancient Greeks. It was they who, for the first time in history, challenged the age-old notion that only the life of a society's rulers and/or priests was important -- to instead assert that every man's life is of crucial value. It was they who turned their focus from an obsession with death and the after-life -- to instead seek success and joy in this life. It was they who dispensed with all-encompassing superstition and from cowering before the supernatural –- to instead assert that the world was knowable, that no question was off-limits, and that the questioning mind was among the most revered of attributes. Finally, and as a consequence of all the others, it was they who cast away the resignation of living as unhappy subjects in an unknowable world -- to instead realize that with freedom to live, happiness on earth was possible for every man. Read the rest

Danish Cartoons at UCI

From Debi Ghate of the Ayn Rand Institute:

Although I was unable to get into the February 28th University of California, Irvine (UCI) event to watch the unveiling of the Danish cartoons and the panel discussion on terrorism (I was told by security that the hall was filled to capacity), I did have an opportunity to closely observe the mob of protestors demonstrating against the event.  Amongst those chanting "Allah Aqubar" and holding signs such as "Mohammed Protector of Women" and "Young Republicans = the new KKK", were a noticeable number of people wearing green arm bands nearly identical to those worn by Hamas suicide bombers in the Middle East. Apparently this is not the first time these armbands have been worn by students on the UCI campus.  To learn that there are people right here in my own backyard who openly display support for a terrorist organization like Hamas was a real wake up call. 

I'd gone to the event in defense of my right to free speech, and my right to see the Danish cartoonists' message without fear of violence or intimidation.  What I came away with was the realization that my right to free speech and my right to life were under a much more immediate threat.

The Right to Immigrate: The Case for Absolute Open Entry into the U.S.

The USC Objectivist Club is pleased to announce: The Right to Immigrate: The Case for Absolute Open Entry into the U.S. By Harry Binswanger, Ph.D.

Since at least the 1920s, the U.S. has imposed restrictions on immigration. Today, many people on both sides of the political spectrum are calling for expanded controls over our borders. In this informal talk, Dr. Binswanger will make the case for open immigration: the removal of all limitations on entry into, and legal residence within, the United States. He will explain why immigration is a right, why it is a practical benefit to Americans, and how properly to deal with the threat of terrorists entering the country.

Dr. Binswanger, a longtime associate of Ayn Rand, taught philosophy at Hunter College (City University of New York) from 1972 to 1979, and at the University of Texas, Austin, Spring 2002. During the 1980s, he was editor of The Objectivist Forum, a bimonthly journal devoted to Ayn Rand's philosophy. Since 1994, he has been professor of philosophy at the Objectivist Academic Center of the Ayn Rand Institute. He is the author of The Biological Basis of Teleological Concepts (ARI Press, 1990) and editor of The Ayn Rand Lexicon (New American Library) and of the second edition of Ayn Rand's Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology (New American Library). A regular speaker at universities, he has given more than 70 talks at some 40 universities on a wide variety of topics in philosophy and politics, from "The Primacy of Existence" to "'Buy American' Is Un-American." Dr. Binswanger is currently writing a book on the causal nature of consciousness. Dr. Binswanger received his B.A from MIT and his Ph.D. from Columbia University.

Thursday, March 2nd 7PM SLH-200 (Stauffer Science Lecture Hall) University of Southern California. One hour lecture followed by Q and A. For more information please visit www.uscobjectivistclub.com.

Voice of Capitalism

Capitalism news delivered every Monday to your email inbox.

Subscribed. Check your email box for confirmation.

Pin It on Pinterest