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Posts by saluranjha [Suspended]
Name: Salman Ranjha
Joined: Nov 13, 2016
Last Post: Dec 21, 2016
Threads: 2
Posts: 2  
From: Pakistan
School: Pakturk

Displayed posts: 4
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saluranjha   
Nov 15, 2016
Essays / Wesleyan University Supplement on the pragmatic nature of liberal arts. [5]

@Holt
Thankyou for your help.
I wrote a prompt please review it and lemme know about the changes I should make.

In his book, The Selfish Gene, Richard Dawkins made links between the propagation of trends and ideas to the propagation of genes, calling memes replicators, just like our earliest ancestors, in a pool of our minds. Reading it, the synapses in my brain started firing, questions rising in my mind. How could Dawkins make comparisons and show relationships between two seemingly discrete fields of study `when he studied Ethology? Looking into this matter further, I realized the answer; Dawkins believed in interdisciplinary studies. Examples of such feats were obvious in the works of other prominent minds, and it was this belief that I wanted to continue.

I realized that the latest discoveries both in and out of the world of science were the combination of multiple disciplines. An example is between psychology and engineering, through which more human like Artificial Intelligence can be made that can even solve social dilemmas such as the trolley scenario. I delved further from the sciences now. Economics and psychology are now juxtaposed when dealing with many situations such as the comparison of city demographics with mental issues, or vice versa. It seems Liberal Arts education share my beliefs of interdisciplinary study. It was here that such research is encouraged, while evaluative and critical thinking skills help articulate the empirical substance obtained from the research. Although, I have certain specific interests I want to pursue, I don't want to be restricted in them, not being able to explore more.

Maybe, while studying in a Liberal Arts environment, I can create a link between Sociology and Geology? Or between Chemistry and International Relations? Who knows? I certainly don't, but I will try to find out.
saluranjha   
Nov 15, 2016
Essays / Wesleyan University Supplement on the pragmatic nature of liberal arts. [5]

l

so you want to say that i should submit my supplement like this (i will change it into past tense)

I realized that the latest discoveries both in and out of the world of science were the combination of multiple disciplines. An example is between psychology and engineering, through which more human like Artificial Intelligence can be made that can even solve social dilemmas such as the trolley scenario. I delved further from the sciences now. Economics and psychology are now juxtaposed when dealing with many situations such as the comparison of city demographics with mental issues, or vice versa. It seems Liberal Arts education share my beliefs of interdisciplinary study. It was here that such research is encouraged, while evaluative and critical thinking skills help articulate the empirical substance obtained from the research. Although, I have certain specific interests I want to pursue, I don't want to be restricted in them, not being able to explore more.

Maybe, while studying in a Liberal Arts environment, I can create a link between Sociology and Geology? Or between Chemistry and International Relations? Who knows? I certainly don't, but I will try to find out.
saluranjha   
Dec 21, 2016
Undergraduate / Raising questions about the workings of the cosmos [5]

HI Guys I am writing of common app's first prompt..Can you review it and lemme know

Watching the stars



"Where is heaven, Dado (grandmother)?''
She paused, and pointed towards the visible band of the Milky Way.
"There, I think." She turned towards me and smiled.
As her first grandchild, I used to spend a lot of time with her. Often, we would just talk - about life, and how we saw the world, with her chuckling at the narrow scope of what I perceived as problems at the time.

Laying outside on a charpoy, gazing at the uncountable stars, she would tell me stories about my grandfather. An old myth in Pakistani culture is that after people pass away, their sprits adorn the night sky, their legacies forever twinkling as stars. My grandmother seemed to believe devoutly in this, as she pointed at the same spot in the sky every night - the tail end of Pleiades, I know now - telling me how my dada was looking at us. "He's probably smiling and saying I should let you sleep now." I would stay up, and ask her questions about stars and the universe, and she would try to use knowledge and imagination to come up with answers - but she always did answer them, and that's what mattered.

Soon, I began to focus more on the science of astronomy. Every time we had library class, I would go through the stacks to find any books remotely related to the subject. A senior noticed my interest and let me borrow one of his favorite books, titled "The Milky Way." I was elated. After merely getting through the preface, I realized that the Milky Way is our address in an ever-expanding cosmos. It wasn't heaven, as my grandmother had described it, but I found it just as mesmerizing.

After poring over books by Sagan, and individually going over the Feynmann lectures, I sought a more practical take on astronomy. With this in mind, I joined Lahore Astronomical Society, which is the country's only one of its kind. I was thus able to attend lectures from people ranging from amateur astronomers to some of Pakistan's leading physicists.

Every time I came back home after spending months at boarding school, I would tell Dado about the things I learned about astronomy.
"So, tell me how far is this Milky Way from us?"
"The light we're seeing right now left it 26,000 years ago."

Together, we raised new questions about the workings of the cosmos, but now, I was the one who was expected to have the answers.
I soon began to delve deeper, by joining Zed's Astronomical Observatory, where, I first started using telescopes to explore the sky. I started by learning how to navigate Celestron and Galelioscopes, and soon moved on to conduct spectrometry of planets and stars. The observatory was over 20 miles away from my house, so the first few times I left for the bus station at midnight, my parents were quite hesitant. However, after a few conversations about my passion for astronomy, they understood why I found this important. After about a year of conducting spectroscopy of planets and stars, I received my first telescope, as a token of appreciation by the observatory's owner.

My grandmother now lives at our ancestral village, so I don't get to see her as often. However, I went back to meet her this summer, and for a moment, it felt like nothing had changed. I took my telescope with me to show her the stars and planets I had analyzed. Visibly excited, she asked me what I found out about their composition. I began to realize that when she talked about my Dada, she didn't actually rationalize the folktale about people forming stars. It just gave her comfort. And sometimes, that can be enough.

Turning the telescope towards the Pleiades, she paused for a moment.
"And what is there, son?"
I smiled.
"That one, I'm not sure of yet, Dado."
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