The Death of Liberal Arts Response The value for a complete, effective education has decreased over the years. Important courses in liberal arts have been eliminated from a numerous amount of collages causing their students to be less prepared for the working world. In the novel Fahrenheit 451 where it’s characters live in a dystopian society that does not value books at all they in fact are burned due to the threat it holds relates to the death of liberal arts in today’s society. This supports why Centenary College should not cut their courses in the humanities. To begin, Centenary College has made the decision to cut multiple courses in the humanities depriving their students of the important life and critical thinking skills they will need in the working world. By cutting these programs students will never learn all the human rights basic as well as other skills they will need for …show more content…
Don't give them any slippery stuff like philosophy or sociology to tie things up with…. and equate the universe..." relates to the article “The Death of Liberal Arts” by Nancy Cook (Bradbury). Throughout the novel Guy Montag, the protagonist, believes that everyone has the right to read books and learn as much information as they want to, although the dystopian society they live in does not allow them too. He strongly supports the choice people should have to learn and wants to absorb as much information as he can to make better decisions for himself. This relates to the article by how the act of Centenary College removing the liberal arts program takes away a variety of important learning courses that will better the lives and knowledge of their students. All in all, the dystopian society in Fahrenheit 451 relates to the issues in today’s world surrounding schools seizing students of their opportunity to learn as much as they can in college, specifically human life