Thread:Lt. Gonzague/@comment-27749027-20160222023405/@comment-27749027-20160228191815

You're correct. The American schools here do advocate students being well-rounded. For instance, I'm taking a history course that studies the Cold War era, which is useful on understanding the government's folly mistakes in general. In my college, the mathematics department has integrated itself with the liberal arts, so I have to associate with philosophy, literature, and political science students through a capstone experience. I'd love to study literature at my spare time because it could help me comprehend information and evaluate my subtext or interpretations of a given text efficiently. Just like analyzing a writer's/reader's argument on some literacy work, I have to get use to observing mathematicians' proofs on some given proposition and check whether their argument is valid. So being meticuluous in literature is a plus for mathematicians! ;)  I'm a firm believer that any one can learn a discipline as long as they have the good work ethics and feedback. You may think that you have no skills in mathematics; however, I beg to differ. When you think about it, we are using mathematical skills in our life subconsciously. For example, every day we have to follow some daily routine, and this process correlates to our need to schedule in an efficient manner (algorithm complexity). Being good in mathematics is not natural though. Even prodigies have difficult time in understanding Euclidean geometry, so they have to persevere on understanding the concepts until they can recall what they have learned.

^ lol sorry for the long paragraph, but I enjoy talking about education in my own perspective

The recent chapter is mind-boggling. I don't fully understand what Eto has in mind, but it seems that she wants to lead Kaneki to the "virtuous" direction (know thy enemy). I'm having obscure thoughts whether this One-Eyed King is either an actual person or some implicit idea. I don't know. What do you think about her current intentions?