I recall similar conversations we had with Lauren et al at a local Lowell watering hole, CSM dinners, or when I audited your class in prep to teach lab. I think this is a great idea
I have very fond memories of both those conversations and you sitting back there in the Weed Hall lecture hall taking it all in! Whenever I recommend the book: “How to Read a Book” by Adler; I follow it up with - “You probably won’t actually read it, only few have actually read it.” - - and you’re on that short list! Looking forward to catching up on a podcast. You’re my case example of a first rate scholar that stayed in the clinical setting and forged a path for himself that was rare at the time, and is now growing in large part because of the trail you’ve left!
There is more to learn from a journey than from a destination. I remember in my time at PSU feeling that I truly identified with many of your perspectives. While goals are met along the way the journey continues. Any other way would be boring.
An excellent genesis for your peripatetic meanderings through the elysium fields (the Greek, albeit uninformed, view of Eden) of intellectual curiosity. If by some chance you come to believe you've finally arrived, that means you took a wrong turn along the way.
I recall similar conversations we had with Lauren et al at a local Lowell watering hole, CSM dinners, or when I audited your class in prep to teach lab. I think this is a great idea
I have very fond memories of both those conversations and you sitting back there in the Weed Hall lecture hall taking it all in! Whenever I recommend the book: “How to Read a Book” by Adler; I follow it up with - “You probably won’t actually read it, only few have actually read it.” - - and you’re on that short list! Looking forward to catching up on a podcast. You’re my case example of a first rate scholar that stayed in the clinical setting and forged a path for himself that was rare at the time, and is now growing in large part because of the trail you’ve left!
There is more to learn from a journey than from a destination. I remember in my time at PSU feeling that I truly identified with many of your perspectives. While goals are met along the way the journey continues. Any other way would be boring.
An excellent genesis for your peripatetic meanderings through the elysium fields (the Greek, albeit uninformed, view of Eden) of intellectual curiosity. If by some chance you come to believe you've finally arrived, that means you took a wrong turn along the way.