Miami selects summer reading book to focus on science, active inquiry
Casi McClellan
Issue date: 4/15/08 Section: Campus
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Rosalyn Erat Benson, chair of the summer reading committee, said Bennett's book was chosen for its focus on the philosophy of science. She said the committee also wanted to choose a scientific book that was not dogmatic and was written by a scientist.
Benson said she hopes it will help students become more outwardly focused.
"The way Bennett describes science in his book makes the reader realize it's not all about them," Benson said. "This book really makes you realize that what you do on this planet doesn't just affect you."
Benson said that Miami President David Hodge asked the committee to choose a book focused on science for this year's summer reading book. She added the committee sought recommendations from science faculty and chairs of departments.
As the recommendations kept coming in, Benson said it was hard to choose a book for the program. As the deadline for choosing a book quickly approached, Benson said the committee ordered copies of Bennett's book to assess it for incoming first-year students.
"At first, the title of the book sounded weird and far out," Benson said. "However, after the committee members read the book, they realized that it was very understandable."
Senior Amanda Hazenfield, a student member on the summer reading committee, agreed with Benson that the book was clear and easily understood.
"Everything was put into terms that even a non-science major could understand," Hazenfield said. "The pictures that I formed in my head from the images and the (images) Bennett provides in the book opened up my mind to all the possibilities that are out there in the universe."
Author Jeffrey Bennett is an astrophysicist and professor at the University of Colorado-Boulder. He also worked for two years at NASA, where he was the senior scientist.
Bennett's book explores the possibility of both human life and technological discovery on other planets. Bennett argues that due to the nature of science, humans must take the discussion "beyond UFOs" to know whether other intelligent beings exist in the universe, according to Benson.
Senior Brett Barbour, also a student member on the summer reading committee, said he believes Bennett's book will be valuable to incoming first-year students.
2008 Woodie Awards


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