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C. P. Snow’s The Two Cultures

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by S. N. Arseculeratne

This topic has interested me for many years. In our junior school education, science was restricted to the bare substance of science but seldom its methodology or history. In senior school, it had greater depth and was eclectic and covered the various branches of science – biology, chemistry, physics, geology with a little astronomy. University education gave us the methods and attention to its branches but historical and detailed aspects of special areas which led to graduate degree were left for graduate years.. We resorted to our private reading for detailed coverage.

As for the general public without a science education, there was a large gap. In these times of Covid, immunization and diseases in general, there are hugely deficient areas. Further areas of insufficient knowledge are in nutrition, and disease. This lack gives us what is called scientific illiteracy, especially in the public which is not exposed to the depth of the sciences. It seems to me that our British-based education has much to blame for this lack, while I think the US has much less of scientific illiteracy in the general public.

Charles Percival Snow from England did much to close this gap between the Two Cultures. The book The Two Cultures by C. P. Snow 1928, Cambridge University Press, states “It was noticeable that nearly all his honours came from foreign universities.. … His Rede Lecture (1959) on The two Cultures was the first and by a long way, the most famous of his pronouncements…:. Snow said that intellectual life in Western society is polarized into literary intellectuals at one pole and scientists at the other, and that the world view of persons on one side is incomprehensible to persons o the other”. Snow’s thesis has three components . Firstly that there is a cultural dichotomy between the arts and the sciences; secondly that this is damaging and thirdly that something can be done about it.

This idea of a cultural dichotomy had occurred to previous writers. Thomas Huxley in 1880 wrote of it in “Science and Culture”, Mathew Arnold on “Literature and Sciences” in 1882, and later in essays by Lionel Trilling and by Jacob Brunowski. Peter Medawar in 1894, restated Snow’s view that …”educated and reflective people subsist on diets of very different kinds; one having to do with scientific theories and ideas, the other more literary and more overly imaginative in character”. Medawar considered this as “…being a straight forwardly objective observation” but he used the words ‘idiotic’ and ‘futile’ to describe this debate, though he did not explicitly say why he used those descriptions but what could be concluded is that he referred to the debate itself about this so-called divide but not the existence of it.

The Evidence Is there really a divide between the two cultures?

To lighten this discussion are the views of an editor, probably of a scientific journal, who, having read in Shakespeare’s submission Macbeth, “Thrice to thine and thrice to mine and thrice again to make up nine” replied that ” the fact that 3 + 3 + 3 make 9 has been well established by many authors and could be omitted entirely”. A reviewer of a performance of Schubert’s unfinished Symphony, probably a scientist, wrote that “All twelve violins were playing identical notes. This seems unnecessary duplication. If a large volume of sound in really required, this could be obtained through the use of an amplifier”.

Some serious statements that imply that a gulf exists between these two areas, can now be considered. Snow, (1965 ) thought poorly of a person who couldn’t recall the Second Law of Thermodynamics while he equated this ignorance with that of a person on the other side of this divide who has not read a work by Shakespeare.

R. W. Livingstone on the side of literature wrote in his book (1973) “Education and the spirit of the age” “What do we miss when we analyse perfectly a poem, a historical event, a human character, a flower, a piece of music, a work of art and stop there, resting content in our analysis.”. Livingstone argued from the literary viewpoint; “Natural science seems so all-embracing, that we do not notice the vast regions of life and these the most important, do not come within this view, and a mind dominated by it would be naturally inclined to ignore or under-estimate them . It has little to say about those creations of the human spirit which alone are immortal, great literature or great art. When we read Homer or Dante or Shakespeare, or listen to a symphony of Beethoven, gaze at the Parthenon, or the paintings in the Sistine Chapel, natural science has little light to throw on what we feel or why we feel it….It is dumb if we ask it to explain the greatest human works or emotions or experiences”.

Sir James Frazer, author of The Golden Bough named the British Association for the Advancement of Science, the British Ass. The most telling comment on this divide is by Arthur Koestler (1964): “In the Index to the six hundred odd pages of Arnold Toynbee’s A study of history, abridged version, the names of Copernicus, Galileo, Descartes and Newton do not occur”. It was Cardinal Newman’s view that ” … in mathematics indeed we should arrive at certitude by rigid demonstration but in religious enquiry we should arrive at certitude by accumulated probabilities”.

Louis Pasteur had relevant views; “There are two ends in each one of us, the scientists who start with a clear field and desire to rise to the knowledge of Nature through observation, experimentation, and reasoning and the man of sentiment, the man of belief , the man who mourns his dead children, and who cannot, alas, prove that he will see them again but who believes that he will and lives in that hope…..The two domains are distinct, and woe to him who tries to let them trespass on each other in the so imperfect state of human knowledge” (Vallery Radot, 1948)..

What are the stated views that deny a gulf between The Two Cultures? Mosey (1990) noted that literary people were as much concerned with the events of the Scientific and Industrial Revolutions which were good examples of materialistic science and technology of Revolutions of that time. Mosey added “By the post world war II period, it was becoming an accepted axiom among literary critics that the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle applied, in all its implications , as well as to the world of poetry as it did to that of physics”. Both Einstein the epitome of a scientist , and T. S. Eliot the poet dealt with Time.

(The writer is emeritus Professor of Microbiology of the University of Peradeniya)



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Oscars 2025: The list of winners from the 97th Academy Awards

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[pic BBC]

Anora, a screwball comedy-drama about a sex worker who marries a Russian oligarch’s son, walked away with the biggest prizes at the 97th annual Academy Awards. The film won the awards for Best Picture, Best Actress, Best Director, Best Editing and Best Original Screenplay.

The musical Emilia Perez, which had the highest total nominations with 13 nods,  scooped up wins for Best Original Song and Best Supporting Actress on Sunday night.

Adrien Brody won Best Actor for The Brutalist – his second Oscar. In 2003, Brody became the youngest person to win the Best Actor award for The Pianist at the age of 29. Mikey Madison won Best Actress for Anora.

Kieran Culkin bagged the Best Supporting Actor award for A Real Pain, and Paul Tazewell became the first Black man to win the award for Best Costume Design for Wicked.

No Other Land nabbed Best Documentary Feature for its stark portrayal of Israeli settler violence against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank.

Best picture

  • Anora – Winner
  • The Brutalist
  • A Complete Unknown
  • Conclave
  • Dune: Part Two
  • Emilia Perez
  • I’m Still Here
  • Nickel Boys
  • The Substance
  • Wicked

Best Actor

  • Adrien Brody, for The Brutalist – Winner
  • Timothee Chalamet, for A Complete Unknown
  • Colman Domingo, for Sing Sing
  • Ralph Fiennes, for Conclave
  • Sebastian Stan, for The Apprentice

Best Actress

  • Mikey Madison, for Anora – Winner 
  • Cynthia Erivo, for Wicked
  • Karla Sofia Gascon, for Emilia Perez
  • Demi Moore, for The Substance
  • Fernanda Torres, for I’m Still Here

Best Supporting Actress

  • Zoe Saldana for Emilia Perez – Winner
  • Ariana Grande, for Wicked
  • Monica Barbaro, for A Complete Unknown
  • Felicity Jones, for The Brutalist
  • Isabella Rossellini, for Conclave

Best Supporting Actor

  • Kieran Culkin for A Real Pain – Winner 
  • Yura Borisov, for Anora
  • Edward Norton, for A Complete Unknown
  • Guy Pearce, for The Brutalist
  • Jeremy Strong, for The Apprentice

International Feature Film

  • I’m Still Here – Winner 
  • The Girl with the Needle
  • Emilia Perez
  • The Seed of the Sacred Fig
  • Flow

Documentary Feature

  • No Other Land – Winner 
  • Black Box Diaries
  • Porcelain War
  • Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat
  • Sugarcane

Original Song

  • El Mal from Emilia Perez – Winner
  • Never Too Late from Elton John: Never Too Late
  • Mi Camino from Emilia Perez
  • Like A Bird from Sing Sing
  • The Journey from The Six Triple Eight

Original Screenplay

  • Sean Baker for Anora – Winner
  •  Brady Corbet and Mona Fastvold for The Brutalist
  • Jesse Eisenberg for A Real Pain
  • Moritz Binder, Tim Fehlbaum, Alex David for September 5
  • Coralie Fargeat for The Substance

Adapted Screenplay

  • Peter Straughan for Conclave – Winner
  • Jay Cocks and James Mangold for A Complete Unknown
  • Jacques Audiard for Emilia Perez
  • RaMell Ross and Joslyn Barnes for Nickel Boys
  • Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar for Sing Sing

Animated Feature Film

  • Flow – Winner
  • Inside Out 2
  • Memoir of a Snail
  • Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl
  • The Wild Robot

Visual Effects

  • Dune: Part Two – Winner 
  • Alien: Romulus
  • Better Man
  • Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes
  • Wicked

Costume Design

  • Paul Tazewell for Wicked – Winner 
  • Linda Muir for Nosferatu
  • Arianne Phillips for A Complete Unknown
  • Lisy Christl for Conclave
  • Janty Yates and Dave Crossman for Gladiator II

Cinematography

  • The Brutalist – Winner
  • Dune: Part Two
  • Emilia Perez
  • Maria
  • Nosferatu

Documentary Short Film

  • The Only Girl in the Orchestra – Winner 
  • Death by Numbers
  • I Am Ready, Warden
  • Incident
  • Instruments of a Beating Heart

Best Sound

  • Dune: Part Two – Winner
  • A Complete Unknown
  • Emilia Perez
  • Wicked
  • The Wild Robot

Production Design

  • Wicked – Winner 
  • The Brutalist
  • Dune: Part Two
  • Nosferatu
  • Conclave

Makeup and Hairstyling

  • The Substance – Winner
  • A Different Man
  • Emilia Perez
  • Nosferatu
  • Wicked

Film Editing

  • Sean Baker for Anora – Winner
  • David Jancso for The Brutalist
  • Nick Emerson for Conclave
  • Juliette Welfling for Emilia Perez
  • Myron Kerstein for Wicked

Live Action Short Film

  • I’m Not a Robot – Winner 
  • Anuja
  • The Last Ranger
  • A Lien
  • The Man Who Could Not Remain Silent

Animated Short Film

  • In the Shadow of the Cypress – Winner 
  • Beautiful Men
  • Magic Candies
  • Wander to Wonder
  • Yuck!

[Aljazeera]

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Nawaz Commission report holds key to government response at UNHRC

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Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath at the UNHRC

by Jehan Perera

The United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) sessions in Geneva have regularly been a focal point of controversy for Sri Lanka. Since 2009, the year the thirty-year internal war ended, the country has been the subject of multiple resolutions aimed at addressing human rights violations and war crimes committed during and after the war. These resolutions have been met with strong resistance from successive Sri Lankan governments, which have accused the UNHRC of double standards and external interference in the country’s internal affairs. Nationalist political factions have often used the UNHRC’s actions as a rallying point to stir anger against the international community and ethnic minorities within Sri Lanka, further deepening divisions within the country.

However, the ongoing UNHRC sessions have seen a notable shift in Sri Lanka’s approach. Unlike in previous years, where government delegations clashed openly with UNHRC representatives, the government representatives delivered speeches that emphasised Sri Lanka’s commitment to international human rights norms. Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath reaffirmed Sri Lanka’s commitment to independent and credible domestic mechanisms within the constitutional framework to address post-war issues of national reconciliation. He emphasised that institutions such as the Office on Missing Persons (OMP), Office for Reparations (OR), and Office for National Unity and Reconciliation (ONUR) will be strengthened.

Foreign Minister Herath also said, “The Government led by President Anura Kumara Disanayaka is firmly and sincerely committed to working towards a unified Sri Lanka that respects and celebrates the diversity of its people with no division or discrimination based on race, religion, class and caste. We will not leave room for a resurgence of divisive racism or religious extremism in our country. The fundamental and longstanding principles of democracy and freedom enshrined in our Constitution will be fully respected and safeguarded while protecting the human rights of all citizens. Every citizen should feel free to practice their religion, speak their language, and live according to their cultural values without fear or discrimination. No one should feel that their beliefs, culture, or political affiliations will make them targets of undue pressure or prejudice.”

NAWAZ COMMISSION

However, while the speech did Sri Lanka proud, it largely revolved around broad commitments to human rights rather than addressing specific allegations of war crimes, enforced disappearances, and militarisation in the North and East of the country.  For instance, UNHRC Resolution 25/1, adopted in 2014, mandated the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) to conduct an independent investigation into allegations of human rights violations during the final phases of the war. More recently, in 2021, a resolution was passed that granted the UN human rights office a mandate to collect and preserve evidence of war crimes for potential future prosecutions. Successive Sri Lankan governments have rejected these resolutions, viewing them as politically motivated and unfairly targeted at the country’s military and political leadership.

 Despite these criticisms, the international community has continued to push for accountability. The extension of the OHCHR’s Sri Lanka Accountability Project in October 2024 highlighted the international perception that Sri Lanka has not done enough to ascertain the truth of what happened in the past and to take action against those who perpetrated war crimes and gross human rights violations during the war period.  Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath’s response to this was to say in Geneva, “The contours of a truth and reconciliation framework, will be further discussed with the broadest possible cross section of stakeholders, before operationalization to ensure a process that has the trust of all Sri Lankans.”

The solution of a truth and reconciliation commission is a concept that has taken root and evolved from within the country. The recommendations of the Presidential Commission to Investigate Findings of Previous Commissions of Inquiry on Human Rights chaired by Supreme Court Justice A.H.M.D. Nawaz makes this clear.  This Commission was entrusted with the huge task of evaluating the findings of previous Presidential Commissions of Inquiry and assessing their implementation. The Commission’s interim reports, published in 2022 and 2023, and its final report, submitted in January 2024, provide a comprehensive analysis of Sri Lanka’s human rights landscape. The report provides a clear answer—Sri Lanka must establish a Truth and Reconciliation Commission to formally address past injustices, provide justice for victims, and prevent future conflict.

OVERCOMING MISTRUST

The pivotal recommendation from the Nawaz Commission is the formation of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. As articulated in paragraph 1043 of the report: “Undoubtedly, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission can provide a historical record of serious violations of human rights and international humanitarian law, and influence institutional reforms in law and practice to promote and protect human rights. Critically, they assist in ensuring accountability for serious violations, which is fundamental in order to prevent potential violations, promote compliance with the law, and provide avenues of justice and redress for victims.” By establishing an authoritative historical record, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission can dispel misinformation, acknowledge the suffering of victims, and pave the way for meaningful reforms.

Sri Lanka’s history is replete with numerous commissions of inquiry, each established with the intent to investigate specific incidents or periods of unrest. The Nawaz report goes painstakingly into them. Notable among these are the Three Presidential Commissions of 1994, which investigated violations from 1987 to 1990 but were prematurely halted; the All-Island Presidential Commission of 1998, which built on the earlier inquiries and issued a report in 2002, calling for judicial action; The 2001 Presidential Truth Commission on Ethnic Violence (1981-84), which investigated the 1983 riots. While some victims received compensation in 2004, there was no accountability for perpetrators; The 2006 Udalagama Commission, which investigated cases like the Trincomalee five students and the 17 ACF humanitarian workers but lacked follow-through; The 2010 Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), which reviewed events from 2002 to 2009 and made many recommendations that were not implemented; The 2013 Paranagama Commission, which examined missing persons and civilian casualties during the final years of the war and led to the setting up of the Office on Missing Persons (OMP) in 2016.

 The recurring theme across these commissions is a pervasive sense of disillusionment among victims and the broader populace. As the Nawaz Commission which went through them in detail poignantly observes, “Our island nation has had a surfeit of commissions. Many witnesses who testified before this commission narrated their disappointment of going before previous commissions and achieving nothing in return.”  This sentiment highlights the critical need for a Truth and Reconciliation Commission that not only investigates but also ensures the implementation of its recommendations, thereby restoring public trust in transitional justice mechanisms. The Nawaz commission being an internal one, entirely funded and supported by the Sri Lankan government, documented and analysed material that was also gathered by other national commissions. This would dispel any notion of an international conspiracy behind it.

IMMEDIATE ACTIONS

The government’s recent approach at the UNHRC suggests a willingness to engage diplomatically. However, for its credibility to grow and for trust to develop, this engagement must be backed by concrete action and be more inclusive in its scope to include key stakeholder groups. The government also needs to move beyond general statements and take tangible steps to address the concerns raised by the international community. Key steps could include Returning Land to Displaced Communities.  Many communities in the Northern and Eastern provinces remain displaced due to land occupied by the military. The government should expedite the process of returning these lands to their rightful owners to restore livelihoods and promote reconciliation.

This needs to be buttressed by Releasing Long-Term Detainees.  A significant number of individuals remain in detention under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), some without formal charges. Ensuring due process and releasing those against whom there is no credible evidence would demonstrate a genuine commitment to justice and human rights.  Finally, the government also needs to set about Reducing Military Presence in the North and East. The continued military presence in civilian areas fuels tensions and undermines reconciliation efforts. Demilitarization, along with empowering local governance structures, would be a crucial step toward normalizing life in these regions.

The government needs to back up its diplomatic engagement with the UNHRC and other international and national stakeholders with real, measurable actions. Addressing core issues such as land restitution, the release of detainees, and demilitarisation would not only help rebuild trust with the international community but also contribute internally to national unity and reconciliation.  This needs to be followed by the establishment of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission that is established in consultation with all stakeholders and is genuinely implemented.

Usually, stakeholders are limited to victims and survivor groups and some government institutions. Ideally, stakeholders should also include, the media and journalists, judiciary and legal institutions, CSOs, NGOs and religious and community leaders, who recognise the need for a Truth and Reconciliation process.  The Nawaz Commission Report has laid the groundwork for this vital initiative, and it is up to all of them to ensure its success. Sri Lanka has the potential to be the voice of conscience in a world that is increasingly troubled by the breakdown of international norms. Sri Lanka can do its part to contribute to healing processes in the world.

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Bassist Benjy…no more with Mirage

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Benjy Ranabahu is known for his bass playing prowess and is a drawcard wherever he performs.

I know of several who wait with great expectation, whenever they see Benjy, on stage, knowing that the moment he moves into action, he would light up the stage with his dynamism.

Yes, Benjy is no more with the group Mirage. The scene changed for him after he returned from the Seychelles, last month.

He hasn’t quit the music scene, he said, adding that at the moment he would like to take a break from the showbiz setup.

“I’m taking things easy at the moment…just need to relax and then decide what my future plans would be.

“I’ve already had offers coming my way but it would take a while before I finally decide whether my future would be as a member of another band or … I put together my own outfit.”

Where Benjy is concerned ‘practice makes perfect’ and he says if he decides to have his own outfit he would make sure that what he gives the public would be nothing short of ‘perfect.’

In fact, Benjy had his own band, not too long ago, and I’m sure music lovers would remember Aquarius.

Aquarius was extremely popular in the scene here, and overseas, as well.

They had contracts in the Middle East and were also seen in action in Europe.

Benjy’s own band Aquarius

Towards the latter stages, Aquarius had female vocalists, from the Philippines, doing the needful as upfront singers, and, together with Benjy, they certainly did mesmerize the audience.

Benjy loves to interact with the audience and is seen very often, down from the stage, and moving from table to table, entertaining, with his booming bass playing.

There have also been occasions where Benjy uses pyrotechnics (kind of fireworks emanating from his guitar) and the audience go ga-ga over such happenings.

Sadly, music lovers are going to miss this dynamic bassist … hopefully, for a short while.

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