Vocabulary
History & Concepts
Famous Figures
Ethics & Modern Issues
Wild Card
100

What is the English term for knowledge based on observed experience and experimentation, not theory?

Empirical Evidence

100

This 1959 lecture by C.P. Snow identified a deep intellectual split between literary intellectuals and scientists.

The Two Cultures

100

This British scientist and novelist first coined the term "The Two Cultures."

C.P. Snow

100

The development of this technology raises urgent questions about consciousness, job displacement, and bias.

 Artificial Intelligence / AI

100

C.P. Snow said the gap between scientists and literary intellectuals was as deep as between these two groups of professionals.

Scientists and Novelists / Physicists and Literary Intellectuals

200

A type of research that deals with numerical data and statistics.

Quantitative Analysis

200

This systematic approach to studying the natural world involves observation, hypothesis, experimentation, and conclusion.

The Scientific Method

200

This ancient Greek philosopher made foundational contributions to both logic (science) and ethics (humanities).

Aristotle

200

Solving this global crisis requires not just climate science, but also international policy, economics, and behavioral change.

 Climate Change

200

This 1818 novel by Mary Shelley is an early warning about the ethical responsibilities of scientific creation.

Frankenstein

300

The opposite of objectivity; a perspective influenced by personal feelings and opinions.

Subjectivity

300

This 18th-century intellectual movement emphasized reason, science, and individual liberty over tradition.

The Enlightenment

300

This Renaissance polymath was both a master artist (humanities) and a brilliant inventor and anatomist (science).

Leonardo da Vinci

300

The collection of this by tech companies is a major issue at the intersection of computer science, law, and privacy rights.

Personal Data

300

This term, coined by Immanuel Kant, describes a fundamental shift in perspective, like realizing the Earth revolves around the Sun.

Copernican Revolution

400

A school of thought in the humanities that seeks to confront the social, historical, and ideological forces that produce culture.

Critical Theory

400

A philosophical system that holds that genuine knowledge is exclusively derived from experience of natural phenomena.

Positivism

400

This pioneering physicist and chemist, who won two Nobel Prizes, also kept a deeply personal notebook that is a humanistic document.

Marie Curie

400

The debate around these organisms involves genetics (science) and concerns about food safety, environmental impact, and corporate control (humanities).

Genetically Modified Organisms

400

Benedict Anderson defined a nation as this, a concept created and sustained through print culture (a humanistic idea).

An Imagined Community

500

The principle that a scientific theory must be able to be proven false. Associated with Karl Popper.

Falsifiability

500

This intellectual stance is skeptical of grand theories and ideologies, emphasizing the relative nature of truth.

 Postmodernism

500

This tech visionary famously connected the liberal arts with technology, stating that "it's in Apple's DNA that technology alone is not enough."

Steve Jobs

500

When an algorithm unfairly discriminates against a group of people, it demonstrates this problem.

Algorithmic Bias

500

This famous documentary and book by Al Gore used science to present evidence and storytelling to persuade, bridging the two cultures.

An Inconvenient Truth