Still Life

With four guide ropes attached to it, the east-side clock face is raised into position. While it didn't seem that windy on the ground on Saturday, Jan. 28, winds higher up were strong, requiring extra guidance to bring the clock face safely to the Old Main bell tower.

Old Main clock faces installed

Ben White of New Vibrations Audio and Video works on a ledge of the Old Main bell tower, to remove the speakers from the old chime system. The company installed a new carillon system today (Jan. 27) that will play a digital recording made of the original Old Main bell that now sits adjacent to Old Main and other bells of comparable sizes.

New carillon, restored clocks being installed

The funeral procession for Joe Paterno made its way past Beaver Stadium and down Porter Road as crowds applauded on Jan. 25. Thousands lined the procession route through the University Park campus and downtown State College to bid a last farewell to Joe Paterno.

Joe Paterno's funeral procession

Coach Joe Paterno was on the field for the first half of the Nittany Lions' football game. Penn State beat the Iowa Hawkeyes 13-3 on Oct. 8, 2011, in front of an enthusiastic crowd at Beaver Stadium.

Joe Paterno through the years

Katie Knobloch and Andrew Adamietz, members of the a capella group Blue in the Face, shared a candle at the vigil held Sunday, Jan. 22, to mourn the death of Penn State football coach Joe Paterno, who passed away earlier in the day. Several thousand members of the Penn State and State College community came out to the Old Main lawn on Penn State's University Park campus for the vigil.

Thousands mourn Paterno's passing

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Associate professor creates new podcast series on Socratic politics

Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Chris Long.
Chris Long.

Christopher Long, associate professor of philosophy at Penn State, has created a podcast series, blog and video to open up dialogue on Socratic politics among colleagues and students inside and outside Penn State. This semester, he will use these tools to encourage debate, inspire discourse and create a marketplace for ideas, just as Socrates did many years ago.

Long completed the first phase of this work during his term as an Information Technology Services (ITS) Teaching and Learning with Technology Faculty Fellow with the intention of building a scholarly community with an atmosphere of openness. The podcast series can be accessed at Long’s blog titled "Socratic Politics in Digital Dialogue" at http://www.personal.psu.edu/cpl2/blogs/digitaldialogue/blog/. In each episode, Long, along with one or more guests, including ITS staff, graduate students, and participants from Penn State and other universities, addresses specific elements required in creating "excellent" dialogue and then relates these topics to the Socratic practice of politics.

According to Long’s blog, "Socrates haunted the public places in Athens looking for young people with whom he could converse. During these discussions, Socrates was intent on turning the attention of those he encountered toward the question of the good and the just."

The blog and podcasts provide a way to create a similar kind of public forum digitally. Some of the themes of the podcasts are openness, sincerity, identity and attentive listening. Long explained that he chose to use digital media to open up his research and academic work to a broader audience.

"By deciding to do a podcast, it liberated me to be more fluid with some of my ideas and to have a dynamic discussion where ideas were free-floating and not rigid."

Although investigating the excellences to strive for in dialogue is important to Long, he is not trying to produce a fixed, comprehensive list of those excellences. However, he stresses that one very important requirement is "a certain kind of openness to new ideas, a willingness to listen attentively, and to imagine our way into the perspective of the other person." He adds that the excellences of dialogue are not merely the subject matter of his podcast series, but that he is also trying to model the qualities of excellent dialogue in the process of discussing them with his guests. He is now drawing on the podcast series for course content and his colleagues at other universities have also expressed interest in referencing the series in their courses.

This fall, Long will ask students in his undergraduate ancient philosophy course to create entries and share their own podcasts on his blog, according to specific rubrics. Since he also is teaching a graduate-level ancient philosophy course, he is considering ways to integrate the graduate students into this discussion, to give it a more substantive intellectual dimension. Long additionally plans to use a specialized commenting tool during the discussions called Intense Debate. The tool allows readers to give comments a "thumbs up" or "thumbs down." Periodically, Long can look at a person’s Intense Debate profile and see all the comments that individual has made in one place, which can help him with student assessment.

Lastly, with assistance from the Teaching and Learning with Technology staff, Long is creating a video that will take a passage from Plato's Republic and animate it in a compelling way in order to draw a more popular audience into a discussion of the question of what justice is. According to Long, the passage is one in which Socrates states, “Although we’ve been looking for justice all along as something beyond us, maybe it in fact appears between us, as we attempt to say and hear what justice is.”

"We'll use this theme to link to historical figures who have stood for justice -- people like Harriet Tubman, Susan B. Anthony, Eleanor Roosevelt and Martin Luther King," he said. Long said this will help him explore what a visual medium like video adds to or subtracts from thinking about and articulating philosophical ideas.