61传媒

Truth at the Core

By Rachel Morrison
An image with the post's title and a cartoon of a woman in front of abstract rectangle boxes.

In 1965, U.S. diplomat to Taiwan George H. Kerr published Formosa Betrayed, a detailed account of the 2/28 Incident. After Japan鈥檚 surrender at the end of World War II, the Kuomintang-led government of the Republic of China was given control of the island of Taiwan. Government seizure of private property and economic mismanagement led to simmering Taiwanese resentment that erupted into protest on February 28, 1947, when a widow suspected of selling contraband cigarettes was beaten by authorities. Thousands of Taiwanese were massacred in the ensuing violence, and the event marked the beginning of the 38-year period of political suppression and mass imprisonment of the Taiwanese political and intellectual elite known as the White Terror.

Yet it wasn鈥檛 until nearly two decades later, with the release of Formosa Betrayed, that the English-speaking world learned about this atrocity, and it was nearly 10 years after that that the account was published in Chinese. The book was banned in Taiwan until the late 1980s, and possession of it was a treasonable offense.

鈥淪peaking of the incident publicly in Taiwan could result in being 鈥榲anished,鈥欌 explains Winston Ou, Elizabeth Hubert Malott Endowed Chair for the Core Curriculum in Interdisciplinary Humanities and associate professor of mathematics, whose parents left Taiwan to pursue their educations in the U.S. during the long period of martial law after the massacre. 鈥淢y own parents never mentioned this history to me, despite having seen it themselves, until I was in college. So, I have thought about the suppression of truth, how the truth ultimately emerges, and what happens when truth is suppressed for so long.鈥

This history was one of many on Ou鈥檚 mind when he conceived of Histories of the Present: Truth as the theme for the next three years of Scripps鈥 Core Curriculum in Interdisciplinary Humanities Core I program. Core I provides a common academic experience for each entering class of first-year students. Beginning this fall, the program will comprise weekly lectures from diverse disciplines that explore truth from a variety of perspectives as well as discussion sections and writing workshops. For Ou, this interdisciplinary structure is part of the strength of Core.

鈥淎s a faculty participant, one learns a tremendous amount by listening to colleagues give lectures and then leading discussions. Each discipline has its own values and cautions; students learn not just an immense amount of content
but also those many ways of thinking,鈥 says Ou.

He is aware that the notion of universal truth is problematic, which is why exploring the concept of truth itself is built into the curriculum. 鈥淢any of the lectures will be on the problems of imposing truth on others or using truth as a justification to take advantage of people,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hese aren鈥檛 necessarily the questions about truth that arise in mathematics, but these questions are critical. Who has the authority to decide the truth? What if you disagree?鈥

Assistant Professor of Anthropology Gabriela Morales is tackling these questions in a lecture titled 鈥淭ruth and the Colonial Enterprise.鈥 鈥淲e鈥檒l be thinking a lot about the connection between knowledge and power, including in the present day,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檒l be addressing questions such as: Who gets to produce knowledge about others? And on what terms? How do social and historical conditions shape the聽 ways researchers ask questions and interpret data?鈥

Students will be reading an excerpt from Audra Simpson鈥檚 Mohawk Interruptus: Political Life Across the Borders of Settler States, which describes how early-20th-century anthropologists created a narrative about the Kahnaw脿:ke Mohawk鈥攎embers of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy whose territory lies across the border of what is now the U.S. and Canada鈥攁s a native people who were about to disappear. Simpson shows how this framing was tied to a settler colonial project of acquiring indigenous territory. Though anthropologists at the time were convinced they were writing the objective truth, their work was ultimately a projection of their own desires and an effort to fit what they observed into a dominant paradigm of knowledge.

鈥淢y hope is that the lecture will encourage students to think critically鈥攏ot only as consumers of information in class, but also in their daily lives. I hope they鈥檒l be able to better assess the conditions under which knowledge is generated. And, as producers of knowledge themselves, through research papers and senior theses, I鈥檇 like them to reflect on how they frame questions and represent the people and places about which they are writing,鈥 Morales says.

For his Core I lecture, Assistant Professor of German Kevin Vennemann, who also serves as the assistant director of Core, will be lecturing on Art Spiegelman鈥檚 1986 graphic novel Maus, widely considered to be one of the canonical memoirs of Holocaust survival. His lecture will explore the extent to which we can rely on memory as a truthful recording device, especially in the context of trauma, and how veracious an artistic representation of devastating memories could possibly be.

But how do we make inquiries into the nature and forms of truth from a mathematics perspective? 鈥淚n mathematics, one explores truth with intuition; one validates it via proofs. But beyond that, we also use mathematics to model reality. Now, these models are backed by math but do not necessarily contain truth,鈥 explains Ou. To teach this point, his lecture will be based partially on the book Weapons of Math Destruction by Cathy O鈥橬eil, which gives examples and analysis of the misapplication of big data and machine learning in society.

Everything from the targeted ads that populate our computer screens to our ability to get a credit card is governed by big data. But its sheer prevalence and power to make or break lives is not widely known. Many courts, for example, use Correctional Offender Management Profiling for Alternative Sanctions (COMPAS) software to help determine whether incarcerated individuals should be paroled. Information about the individual is entered into the software, and an algorithm estimates a recidivism rate鈥攖he percentage chance that the individual will commit another crime if paroled. Yet, a recent ProPublica investigation revealed that COMPAS has been shown to give a higher probability of re-offense to black individuals than to white individuals, all other things being equal.

鈥淭he problem is that the model was based on data that incorporates certain biases,鈥 says Ou. Similarly, there is the example of Amazon鈥檚 attempt to use machine-learning systems to evaluate candidates for technical positions. Using historical data from previously hired, successful employees to create the algorithms, it was supposed to provide an unbiased evaluation of prospective new hires. You can guess how that went: 鈥淭hat model ended up being chauvinistic. It favored male applicants, because it had been fed a decade鈥檚 worth of data from a real world that is also chauvinistic,鈥 says Ou.

鈥淭here is a difference between understanding and modeling,鈥 he concludes. 鈥淢odeling is replication. Understanding is truth.鈥

A cartoon woman under an abstract drawing of a shape under a cloud with water pouring out of it.

A Brief History of Core

The Core Curriculum has been a hallmark of a 61传媒education since 1926, although it has undergone many transformations since its inception. Its first iteration was a three-year sequence of interdisciplinary courses called the Humanities, constituting half of students鈥 coursework.

By the 1960s, however, the Humanities sequence had been reduced to just one year, due in part to students鈥 desire for more academic flexibility. During the 1970s, faculty began talks to reinstitute the three-year sequence, but because student interest was shifting away from the humanities and toward the social and natural sciences, the effort faltered.

The College responded to this shift by developing an interdisciplinary model with liberal arts at the center. 鈥淚n the future,鈥 prophesied then-president E. Howard Brooks about the change, 鈥61传媒will perhaps be described as a residential liberal arts college for women with a strong central core in the humanities and arts.鈥 Building on momentum that had been growing throughout the 1980s and 鈥90s, 61传媒faculty developed and ran a pilot course for the Class of 1999 and began teaching a full three-semester Core Curriculum in Interdisciplinary Humanities sequence to the Class of 2000.

The sequence, now in its 24th year, is organized around enduring topics such as the role of community, the concept of truth, and the causes and consequences of violence, providing students with a humanistic perspective on the biggest questions of our time. Faculty from across the disciplines introduce students to a number of different methods and ways of knowing, and enable students to work across the disciplines as they connect to the central theme, underscoring how present debates and questions are shaped by rich and complicated histories.

Nearly 30 years later, Brooks鈥 declaration has proven prescient. 鈥淎lthough 61传媒students take classes in and major in a wide array of disciplines, including the humanities, arts, social sciences, and natural sciences, all 61传媒students and alumnae have in common a grounding in and appreciation of the humanities in part because of Core,鈥 says President Lara Tiedens.

With support from a $2 million grant from the Malott Family Foundation to establish the Elizabeth Hubert Malott Endowed Chair for the Core Curriculum in Interdisciplinary Humanities, Core is firmly entrenched as Scripps鈥 signature interdisciplinary approach to learning. Students say the program is one of their most valuable experiences, calling it 鈥渆ye-opening鈥 and 鈥渕ind-expanding.鈥

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