A letter from an alum about the new science curriculum May 11, 2004  No sequence of courses can ever embrace the whole of science, but the traditional reductionist principles of physics, chemistry, and molecular biology that the proposed sequence emphasizes provide a fundamentally incomplete account of the complex phenomena that draw most of us into science. Holistic principles, which describe interactions among parts and which lead to the emergence of evolution, economic systems (including ecosystems), tectonics, and societies must have a standing equal to the laws governing matter and energy as quantitatively laid out in the so-called hard sciences. People in industrialized countries, including the United States, have 
        in recent years increasingly turned away from science, the most powerful 
        way of knowing humans have devised. They perceive science as alien and 
        unapproachable, as failing to connect everyday phenomena with coherent 
        theories of explanation. This trend will continue if we persist in teaching 
        science with a heavy emphasis on reductionist theory. I therefore hope 
        that my impressions are wrong, and that Princeton and other institutions 
        will see the virtue of teaching science not just by breaking down complex 
        structures into simpler parts, but also by building up complexity and 
        emergent properties from elementary components and interactions.  
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