0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
like... nothing new, nothing special, this whole year is just absolutely miserable. I've been falling behind in my schoolwork because I'm prioritizing my job because I have an immediate sense of external accountability to it. Honestly, my job is a million times easier than my courses, because it's a team effort and I have supervisors putting our deadlines up on the shared calendar so that I get reminder pings automatically. For class, it's more like... motivation? in MY me?? it's less likely than you think!

but then, also, so - this morning I had to take care of some house things so I missed breakfast before my 9h call to class, and I came so close to just saying fuck it, today's not happening. And then instead, professor had reorganised things so that we could spend the whole first hour of seminar getting things off our chests, starting with the death of RBG (zt"l), and like. the first person who was gonna speak up changed his mind because he just got so choked up in the span of just like three seconds, he had to pass.

I actually don't think I've managed to cry this out since spring, either. It's like I don't have a right to spend time indulging myself, when the problems are so much bigger than me. My family needs me, I have too many obligations to waste time getting caught up in how terrible everything is. I have too many obligations to myself, too - I promised myself to my academic and professional careers, I've found myself a creative outlet, I didn't put a breakdown on the schedule. And I know that's obviously not fair or feasible but it's also true that this year is so full of horrors that are so much bigger than us, that if we let it, they would consume us. 

But it's also true that I'm also about three seconds from crying 24/7 and just maybe that's a sign that things aren't going great on planet eric, either. 

So when we were slowly peeling ourselves open, finally I could also talk about how losing RBG is reminding me of when we lost Dr MedEth (zt"l too). I came to this campus for her, I was gonna be her intern at SFGH, she was our mentor and friend and when she passed it was like the ground fell out from under my feet. The sense of oh God, what do I do now? just like we're all feeling again now. Where do we go? What can we do? Our country is a fascist catastrophe in action, our state is literally on fire, our cities are closed, I haven't been able to spend time with friends who I love in months; the only way I see people I'm not living with is saying thank you to the cashier and sanitation monitor at safeway. No wonder we're so utterly delicate right now, and if anything is a blow, it's the loss of such a key leader like her. 

But it still took hearing my professor say it first, that this is just a truly miserable year, for me to let myself say it too. It's been seven months, of course I know that this an impeccably shitty time, but it's such a huge truth that it hasn't needed me saying it for a while. 2020 is the pits, water is wet, I'm sad, who isn't.

So she asked us to think about what we were doing there, in class. In the philosophy department, in the MA program, as students, to remember what brought us here. And we started chewing on the point that we're all here, one way another, because we do believe in the possibility of change, that we as individuals have come together because as a community we are here to learn how to use tools that we do believe can make a difference. So and so is here and working to dismantle the carceral state. So and so is here and in a decolonialisation program. So and so is here and in reproductive justice. So and so is here and countering toxic parenting. And I'm here and in nonprofit civil law. We are so isolated this year, physically and emotionally, but we can still be part of an intellectual community. We really do feel like this is just the red queen's race, but we still do have agency. And when we can't believe it in ourselves, we can remember it in each other.

The world is making us raw. It's a paradox, it's funny, but we've become more honest over zoom. We're further from each other, and have less between ourselves. A year ago, I absolutely don't believe that most of us would've been brave enough to get so emotional in class, but the world is pulling us down and leaving us with only ourselves to hold up. This year is fucking awful, and we all know it, and we don't need to hide a misery that everyone is sharing in. Professor said it was like she used to be able to plug in to the world, but now it's just an endless deluge. it's not an IV any more, it's a port. And it's doube-edged, because we're so receptive to the world but we're also so much more present to it. I'm exhausted and miserable and not alone in it. None of us are. I hate this year, but at least we're going through it together.
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  • new: 
    • got a free copy of Clausewitz! Not my main field, but I can't say no to the free libraries and I'll send it back on its way whenever I decide I'm done
      • when I found it, I immediately exclamed 'aha! This fucker!' and sister didn't miss a beat and sighed, 'you're gonna read it, aren't you' because she knows me too well lmao
      • the only way I've been able to moderate my free library intake is that I can only pick up on days that we're adding. apparently the exchange rate is two manga for one political theory lmao
  • reading: 
    • Saffle, Michael. Self-Publishing and Musicology: Historical Perspectives, Problems, and Possibilities. Notes, vol. 66, no. 4, 2010, pp. 726-738. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40856221.
    • Dorfman, Ben, ed. Dissent! Refracted: Histories, Aesthetics and Cultures of Dissent. Peter Lang AG, 2016. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv2t4dpq.
      • this one's open access, yall!
  • writing on: 
    • Rachel McKinnon: Allies behaving badly: Gaslighting as epistemic injustice
      • https://www.academia.edu/8423524/_Allies_behaving_badly_Gaslighting_as_epistemic_injustice_ !
  • :( missing out on:
    • Wrestling with Torah has a great High Holidays series planned, but it's a whole package and I won't be able sit in the lectures unfortunately. I miss sharing campus for lectures from other organisations.
      • https://www.wrestlingwithtorah.org/high-holidays-2020 
      • listen, 5781 - no pressure, but 2020's really been dropping the ball on us, so any pep would be appreciated!!
    • I unfortunately haven't been able to vibe with the Newman center's programming lately. I'd like to, but it just doesn't feel right and the missing is just a bit sad :(
  • charming, tho!
    • when sister and I went for boba drinks, they had a new special on the online menu called Mikrokosmos, and when we got there to pick up, they had a set of Jungkook and RM posters up that people were waiting in line to take pictures with 😂 I guess they were supposed to be touring here this week, so the tea shop was celebrating anyway, and it was really sweet seeing everyone lowkey showing up :D
      • kinda wish I'd gotten one just to see what it was all about lol
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Someone just reminded me, but I can't believe I didn't already have The World Turns Madly On on my 2020 playlist! it's not that the transition to classes will really be so abrupt, but on principle, every time I'm hit with the surreality of the new normal, I can still barely believe it. 

I am looking forward to the semester, though. I know tomorrow'll just mean more reasons to fight with the bursars, but I think I've got some cool courses lined up, and I'll have some real competence in the materials. Am I finally shaking some of that imposter syndrome?? I mean I know it'll come back in something else, but I'm really glad it hasn't got hooks in me for this at least! My goals for academia are pretty solid, then, it'll more be a question of being a person who is good at achieving them online. I'm also a bit anxious about keeping up with my professors online; I can do client emails and supervisor emails and staff emails, but professor emails still turn me into a mess of terrified exclamaition points lmao. Where's that post about how using too many exclamation points is like an animal showing off false eyes in a fear display?? It's also awkward because I've been friends with two of my professors without being their students before - other mutual friends, and some work with my student org - so now I've got to wonder about meshing those positions without being an entire kissass. I know I'm a classic Pleasure To Have In Class sort, but I don't actually try to be such a square! Communicating virtually is just the woooooooorst. I guess who needs more mental self-sabotage when the year is like this! 

Anyway, the weekend before the semester is traditionally a nightmare of turning my life into something that can support 4 hours of daily commute, but instead this past few days I've ...watched old movies? and done art? I can't post pics yet bc I want the author to see them first, but I've finished binding a series!! I just need to do the spines and I can send them out as well as another one - spines are such an intimidating step lmao, they're the first thing anyone's going to see so the design has to be on Point, and I can't screw up a finished book either! This series has been in the works for literal years though, so it'll be great to finally show the author how much I've appreciated the works :D

Next up, I wish I could bind again, but my ID access runs out soon, so I'm gonna have to marathon the scripts I want to set with it. aaagh, shakes fist at Adobe! They're both starting as PDFs too, so :| what can I say, I love pain. 
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3312 words, 22 footnotes, 18 citations, and 13 pages later, I have finished the World's Most Depressing Paper!
  • Becasen, Jeffrey S., et al. “Estimating the Prevalence of HIV and Sexual Behaviors Among the US Transgender Population: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis, 2006–2017.” American Journal of Public Health, vol. 109, no. 1, American Public Health Association, Jan. 2019, pp. e1–e8. Crossref, doi:10.2105/ajph.2018.304727.
  • Clark, M. (1988) Pastoral Instruction on the AIDS Crisis. New York, Diocese of Rochester, February 29. 
  • Feldman, Jamie, et al. “HIV Risk Behaviors in the U.S. Transgender Population: Prevalence and Predictors in a Large Internet Sample.” Journal of Homosexuality, vol. 61, no. 11, Informa UK Limited, Sept. 2014, pp. 1558–1588. Crossref, doi:10.1080/00918369.2014.944048.
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. HIV Surveillance Report, 2016; vol. 28. http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/library/reports/hiv-surveillance.html. Published November 2017. Accessed 1 May 2020.
  • Hunt, Jerome. “Why the Gay and Transgender Population Experiences Higher Rates of Substance Use.” The Center for American Progress. 9 March 2012. https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/lgbtq-rights/reports/2012/03/09/11228/why-the-gay-and-transgender-population-experiences-higher-rates-of-substance-use/
  • Lee, Yi-Hui, et al. “Recruiting Chinese American Adolescents to HIV/AIDS-Related Research: A Lesson Learned from a Cross-Sectional Study.” Applied Nursing Research, vol. 25, no. 1, Elsevier BV, Feb. 2012, pp. 40–46. Crossref, doi:10.1016/j.apnr.2010.02.001.
  • “In U.S., Decline of Christianity Continues at Rapid Pace.” Pew Research Center, Washington, DC. (17 October 2019). https://www.pewforum.org/2019/10/17/in-u-s-decline-of-christianity-continues-at-rapid-pace/
  • Cater, Lauren. “Vatican says 'no' to transsexual godparents amid Spain controversy”. Catholicnewsagency.com. Catholic News Agency. 2 September 2015. https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/vatican-says-no-to-transsexual-godparents-amid-spain-controversy-54280
  • Koh, Howard. “Ten Reasons to Address HIV/AIDS in Asian American and Pacific Islander Communities.” obamawhitehouse.archives.gov. The White House. 19 May 2014. https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/blog/2014/05/19/ten-reasons-address-hivaids-asian-american-and-pacific-islander-communities
  • Larsen, Nella. Passing. New York: Penguin Books, 1997. Print.
  • James, S. E., Herman, J. L., Rankin, S., Keisling, M., Mottet, L., & Anafi, M. (2016). The report of the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey. Retrieved from the National Center for Transgender Equality: https://www.transequality.org/sites/default/files/doc s/USTS-Full-Report-FINAL.PDF
  • Ray, Stuart C., and Thomas C. Quinn. “Sex and the Genetic Diversity of HIV-1.” Nature Medicine, vol. 6, no. 1, Springer Science and Business Media LLC, Jan. 2000, pp. 23–25. Crossref, doi:10.1038/71487.
  • “The Social Impact of AIDS in the United States.” National Academies Press, 1993. Crossref, doi:10.17226/1881.
  • Toomey, Russell B., et al. “Transgender Adolescent Suicide Behavior.” Pediatrics, vol. 142, no. 4, American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), Sept. 2018, p. e20174218. Crossref, doi:10.1542/peds.2017-4218.
  • Sharma, Akshay, et al. “Variations in Testing for HIV and Other Sexually Transmitted Infections Across Gender Identity Among Transgender Youth.” Transgender Health, vol. 4, no. 1, Mary Ann Liebert Inc, May 2019, pp. 46–57. Crossref, doi:10.1089/trgh.2018.0047.
  • “HIV Among Asians in the United States.” Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 9 May 2017.  Accessed 2 May 2020. Accessed from https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/group/racialethnic/asians/
  • Thompson, Beth, et al. Healthy Bodies, Safer Sex. Tallahassee: Florida State University, 2016. https://www.plu.edu/gender-equity/wp-content/uploads/sites/219/2014/11/safersexbooklet_national.pdf
  • “Multiracial in America: Chapter 4: The Multiracial Experience.” Pew Research Center, Washington, D.C. (11 June 2015) https://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2015/06/11/chapter-4-the-multiracial-experience/
    • yanked off of my bib doc because I'm not opening the final thing again, I've stared at it too much today 
I may be an inveterate humanities student, but I will write the fuck out of a bio research paper too.


Also, we got back to the panta rhei campaign! we spent about six months between meetups :_D with our dragonborn locked in hold person and our warlock an iota away from having to fight one of our npc teammates over an artifact from her patron. But they talked it out today and she can complete her debt! Ethereal plane and an undead naga later, we made it out of the dungeon we spent the last like five sessions in. Telim has had his parochial bubble quite shattered and was just thinking he should make this team-up official, when it turns out that a) they've been gone for a whole week, not the three-ish days they percieved, and b) his republic has declared war in the meantime. He's an Auxiliary who levelled up twice in that dungeon - if the Republic is at war, there's good odds that he's supposed to have already reported in. He's questioned the Republic before, but that was idle talk next to this. As soon as they reach an outpost, he won't have any more reasonable excuses not to be AWOL. There was a hot sec on the wrong side of the ethereal plane where it seemed like he might not make it home at all, and that was a low moment. He does love his city-state! But also he's just really found out that there are bigger issues out there than the politics he had known.

I know it's going to be much more fun to play together if he doesn't report back to the army that barely wanted him in any case, but he has spent a long time with the kool-aid. It would be so easy to slip back into the class he was raised in (that would chew him up and spit him out) (and always know he was a coward for not trying harder to make a difference), rather than desert and see the world as it really is (and hang up his identity as Good Auxiliary of the Republic). I think if he learns some of the things that his teammates haven't been able to tell him yet, he'll have the motivation to stay with them. 

Everyone already knows but him, though. I need to step up my rp game and be more inquisitive. He's got more potential than I've been using -I've got work cut out for next session!

0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
so I've had a sample of the semester's courses, and, well. Bad news.

I do not and can not make myself care about AI. 

I don’t care about it. I know that it’s an emerging industry and that it’s vital to stay on top of these things, and the department is making a huge effort to be intersectional and raise awareness of ethical concerns surrounding the AI biz, but -

I don’t care. And I have been trying to make myself interested, I have been trying so hard, but last semester was awful and it honestly made me not enjoy philosophy. And I can’t do that, not if I want to get my MA here. But I couldn’t write a thesis on AI. 
 
And this all is unfortunate because I’m in the SF bay area, and tech is so wildly popular here. It makes sense to stay on the cutting edge! According to my principle of ‘know everything about everything’ I should be psyched about this! But I hate it! I hate it. The technology itself, I don’t really care about, I’m ambivalent on it, yay innovation, but I fucking hate the culture around it, and I can not stand it. I would be atrocious in that community.
 
This really sucks because it’s the department’s new baby. The department is slowly pivoting towards epistemology and moderns and like, the postmoderns, and even though I think we’re still technically more continental than not, the style is moving and I feel like I’m being left behind. 
 
I know epistemology is important. I would go ham on epistemic injustice, if I could! But the ethics offerings are drying up and I came to this campus to do ethics. I wanted to study medical ethics, specifically, and then that professor died last year, and I’ve been struggling on, but I can’t make an MA out of dragging myself through readings and papers I do not care about. I know it’s whiny, aww, I just wanna do things I like! But I would not pass an MA by half-assing this, and I swear I have been trying to convince myself to enjoy AI, and it isn’t working. 
 
I hate this feeling of apathy and dismotivation. I know that I can love philosophy, and I miss that. I need to find it again. 
 
And also, I’m taking a bio course for fun this semester, on AIDS as an epidemic, and I swear, there is a very very close parallel universe where I stuck with the bio track and went into labs. I thought I was going to go into medical research all my life until I switched to philosophy, and I’m not switching back now, but damn. There really was a reason I thought I would stick it out. I love science, and I hadn’t realised how much I missed it! I stayed back to introduce myself to the professor with the whole pronoun spiel and ask for some recommended readings, because I’ve read France and Shilts, but like, the way Shilts treats Dugas? Kramer’s whole self?? Opinions are fascinating but I don’t want to actually pick up misinformation, and so he pointed me to Jon Cohen and after we talked for a while, he was disappointed that I won’t be joining the bio department. And like man, call me whatever kissass nerd you want, but I get so excited about this. God, what I wouldn’t do to work in public health.  
 
And being absolutely walloped in the face with that passion all over again threw my dissatisfaction with AI into such sharp contrast - it’s easier to do something unpleasant when you don’t know alternatives, etc! 
 
I don’t know what I’m going to do. Talk to the department, first. See what they say. Finish my first round of degrees, because I’m dual-tracking like a maniac, and then, shit. I don’t know. I might just knock on doors at SFGH. What Would Dr MedEth Do. 



Also, today someone I had thought was chill busted some hilaaaaaaaaaaarious comments about asian accents and food and damn. tastes bad. 'S real bad, my dudes. tbh I hate looking so white, it makes white people think I'm one of them and they can just Say Shit and I hate how I freeze up when it blindsides me and I don't speak up in a timely manner. I'll say something next time I run into that person, but it feels bad, it feels real bad. 
 
 
eeeeeuuuuugggggghhhhhhhhhhhggggghhh. I’ll stew on things. Tonight, dinner and case briefs. and yes, I fucking will eat my dumplings.

3 down!!!

Dec. 19th, 2019 12:07 am
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Paper for seminar in AI is in!!! 2.2kish words on the way that siri / cortana / alexa are artificial programs being sold as gendered labor, including but not limited to citations on: 
  • Chalmers, David. (2018). The Virtual and the Real. Disputatio. 9. Pp.309-352. 10.1515/disp-2017-0009.  
  • Criado Perez, Caroline. Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men. New York: 
  • Abrams Press, 2019. 
  • Hooks, Bell. Feminist theory: from margin to center. New York London: Routledge, 2015. 
  • Manne, Kate. Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny. Oxford UP, 2018. 
  • Wodehouse, P. G. The world of Jeeves. New York: Perennial Library, 1988.
 
Yeah, I've been using Invisible Women and Down Girl a lot this semester, but listen, they're a really good combo. Manne's breakdown of misogynistic processes lays a fantastic foundation for further analyses, and even when Criado Perez is being gender essentialist and frankly transphobic as hell, her research on sex discrimination is a great tool. TBH Invisible Women just isn't a philosophical text; it's really not presenting compelling arguments. But it does provide productive evidence for the basic existence of misogynistic discrepancies. It's best when aimed at a recalcitrant person who keeps trying to ignore evidence, but not really adept at furthering particularly involved discussions on its own. It's baby food feminism. But it's very good at what it does. It all goes in the toolkit, right?

ALSO
HOWSABOUT THOSE HEADLINES WHEN I GOT BACK FROM THE OFFICE

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 come on

0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
So I had a nice nap on the bus back from the office, which means I've got wind back in my sails to get writing again! It's gonna be a 2k word night :_D But presenting my work to myself in text rather than more piles of notes-to-self gives me a much better sense of accomplishment, and I need every bit of positive reinforcement I can find, so without further ado!
  1. Feminist ethics: DONE
    1. epistemic injustice vs trans people in ostentiably feminist spaces
    2. 3296 words
      1. “All-Gender Restrooms.” [university webpage], pd April 2017, ad December 2019, [url]
      2. Criado-Perez, Caroline. Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men. New York: Abrams Press, 2019.
      3. Fricker, Miranda. “Epistemic Justice as a Condition of Political Freedom?” Synthese, vol. 190, no. 7, Springer Science and Business Media LLC, Dec. 2012, pp. 1317–1332. Crossref, DOI:10.1007/s11229-012-0227-3.
      4. “INVISIBLE WOMEN DATA BIAS IN A WORLD DESIGNED FOR MEN By Caroline Criado Perez” Abramsbooks.com, Abrams. ND. ad 13 December 2019. https://www.abramsbooks.com/product/invisible-women_9781419729072/
      5. Manne, Kate. Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny. Oxford UP, 2018.
      6. Pal, Lubna. Polycystic ovary syndrome: current and emerging concepts. New York: Springer, 2013.
      7. Perry, Stephen. “Risk, Harm, Interests, and Rights” Risk: Philosophical Perspectives. Ed. Tim Lewens. New York: Routledge, 2017. Pp 190-209
      8. “Students.” [university webpage], 2019, [url]
      9. ‘Word of the Year: They’. Merriam-Webster Dictionary. ad 10 December 2019, https://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/word-of-the-year/they
  2. ToK: NOT DONE YET
    1. RE the epistemic objection to torture
  3. MBC: DONE
    1. exam
  4. Seminar: NOT DONE YET
    1. RE the way Siri and Cortona and Alexa are being marketed as female assistants is actually really fucked up, not surprising but still fucked up
0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
So I'm writing my final on cognition and impact of technology on consciousness and so on, and there are so many thought experiments like "what if you woke up and part of you was a machine! How would you feel then? Who would you be!' with this gotcha attitude turning on the presumption of identity being dependent on physical attributes. And I'm like ... this isn't actually revelatory? Like, people are going around every day with pacemakers and cochlear implants and prosthetic limbs, and they're cogitating just fine, pal. We don't actually need to look far to find cyborgs. 

Also, when the thought experiment is about the extent to which ones consciousness can inhabit a body it doesn't perfectly match? Buddy I am trans as the day is long, and I'm just trucking along here. That's dysmorphia you're describing. It's not new. We get by. We're making it work. 

There are good arguments out there, there are so many experiments that are actually interesting. I'm enjoying my papers, and getting the work done. But the prevalence of these low-investment arguments is a grind. 



Also, cylons are Swamp People and I am GONNA make that point somewhere in one of these papers so help me lmao
0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
finals are turning me into an Entire hot mess but this morning on the train I was trying to make heads and tails of my reliabilism vs virtue epistemology reading, and it was putting me through the wringer until I realized it all comes together if I frame it in telos and skopos

So sometimes my brain does work
0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
ya boy is DONE WITH HIS FINALS!!!

This latest one was on epistemic injustice, and how resistance to counter-evidence is a consistent factor but not a sufficient motivation to the whole issue, clocking in at 1730 words
  • Fricker, Miranda. “Epistemic Justice as a Condition of Political Freedom?” Synthese, vol. 190, no. 7, 2013, pp. 1317–1332.
  • Lenzer, Jeanne. "FDA Bars Own Expert from Evaluating Risks of Painkillers." British Medical Journal 329.7476 (2004): 1203
  • Maitra, Ishani. “The Nature of Epistemic Injustice” Philosophical Books Vol. 51 No. 4 October 2010 pp. 195–211
  • Nabel, Elizabeth G. “Coronary Heart Disease in Women — An Ounce of Prevention.” New England Journal of Medicine, vol. 343, no. 8, Massachusetts Medical Society, Aug. 2000, pp. 572–574.
  • Perry, Stephen. “Risk, Harm, Interests, and Rights” Risk: Philosophical Perspectives. Ed. Tim Lewens. New York: Routledge, 2017. Pp 190-209
I put out 9952 words, including a few short answer sections to the finals. I can't believe that's nearly 40 pages! Looking at it in those figures, I'm quite proud of myself, but the real takeaway is that I can't do this again. This was my first semester in the master's program, as well as working in a legal clinic. Along with commuting and my own baseline, that's too much to have taken on all at once, and now I know why the department was making those faces at my schedule. 
I'm still working on the application, but if I get the Directorship at the office, tptb have the funding to keep us working over the summer, and I've got already got Law And Society on the calendar. It's a 300-level, and knocking one out early will let me do just 3 undergrads and 1 grad course in the fall. With working and commuting, that should be more humane. I'm glad I'm done with this semester, let's not do it again.
On the upside, I've also done something I hadn't managed to do since back on the east coast - I've made a friend! Phil's a rad guy and I'm so glad my mental health is in the place where I can keep up with interpersonal things, it's def a change for the better. Breaking news, folks: things are better when you've got friends to do them with. 

Congrats on the semester, everyone! Here's to summer! :DDD
0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
not out of my hands, still need to turn these in, but real quick I've got the hart-dworkin ethics one done at 2064 words! 

works cited: 
  • Dworkin, Ronald. Law's Empire. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press, 1986. Print.
  • Guest, Stephen. “How to Criticize Ronald Dworkin's Theory of Law.” Analysis, vol. 69, no. 2, 2009, pp. 352–364. JSTOR
  • Hart, H L. A. The Concept of Law. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1961. Print.
  • Mahoney, Jon. “Objectivity, Interpretation, and Rights: A Critique of Dworkin.” Law and Philosophy, vol. 23, no. 2, 2004, pp. 187–222. JSTOR
  • Ozcan, Mehmet. “Ethics and Law: Reassessment on the Legal Positivism.” Philosophy Study, vol 4, 2014, pp. 75-96. 
  • Shapiro, Scott. “The “Hart-Dworkin” Debate: A Short Guide For The Perplexed.” University of Michigan Law School: Public Law And Legal Theory Working Paper Series, no. 77, 2017

halp

May. 23rd, 2019 04:01 am
0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
I'm so past done with Nietzsche; I've got 2062 words on him and Aristotle and pathways towards whateveronearth they each think a good life is, and every single one of them is Bull

Works cited: 
  • Abegg, Edmund. Political Morality in a Disenchanted World, UPA, New York, 2013.
  • Aristotle. Politics, 384-322 BC. Trans. CDC Reeve. Cambridge:Hackett, 1998. Print.
  • Aristotle. Nicomachean Ethics, 384-322 BC. Trans. T Irwin. Cambridge: Hackett, 1985. Print.
  • Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, 1975. Trans. A. Sheridan. New York: Vintage Books, 1977. Print.
  • Haldane, John. “Is Every Action Morally Significant?” Philosophy, vol. 86, no. 337, 2011, pp. 375–404.
  • Nietzsche, Foucault. On the Genealogy of Morals. 1887. Trans. W Kaufmann. New York: Random House, 1967. Print.


I'm supposed to have another 2k to turn in tomorrow/this afternoon and :___________D we'll see what happens, I don't grok Dworkin enough to riff anything off at this level of brain, but this what I've got to work with after the anxiety's had it's say!!
5 hours before I need to head back out, we'll just see!!!
0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
I have now turned in 2/5 finals, clocking in at just over 4k words fed to turnitin. The other three courses are much lighter in volume, and I've got two more days to finish before going back in to hand them over. 

selected works cited: 
  • Cole, Daniel. “Regulatory Cost-Benefit Analysis and Collective Action.” Institute for Policy Integrity, 2009
  • Cranor, Carl. “Toward a Non-Consequentialist Approach to Acceptable Risks.” Risk: Philosophical Perspectives, ed Tim Lewens, Routledge, 2007, 36-53
  • Gibson, Kevin. “Rethinking the Discourse” Philosophy Now, vol 88, 2012.  
  • Montzka, Stephen. “Hydrochlorofluorocarbon measurements in the Chlorofluorocarbon Alternatives Measurement Project” Earth System Research Laboratory: Global Monitoring Division. NOAA. https://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/hats/about/hcfc.html accessed 18 May 2019.
  • Our Common Future. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987.
  • Prather, Michael J., and Robert T. Watson. “Stratospheric Ozone Depletion and Future Levels of Atmospheric Chlorine and Bromine.” Nature, vol. 344, no. 6268, Springer Nature, Apr. 1990, pp. 729–734
 

apologies for liveblogging finals, I just need some sort of benchmark of productivity, and progress looks a lot better typed up than the 'how many words to go' post-it note I've got hanging on the wall next to me
I crave that sweet sweet validation
0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
So when I went to upload my final paper for the seminar, I checked the assignment and for a second I misread "15-20 pages, double-spaced" as 15-20 double-sided pages and I swear I nearly just put my head down and cried

I hate this paper, I should've picked nietzsche's slave morality and the tech bros, I would've been miserable writing about nietzsche too but at least it wouldn't've dealt with trying to explain john calvin's relation to the modern day, I can't do this, my one upshot is that I know not to pick anything like this for my thesis when it comes up

Well, it's over, at least

selected works cited:
  • Bible. Authorized King James Version, Oxford UP, 1998
  • Bulwa, D. “BART admits 77 percent of train cameras are fake or don’t work” SF Gate. Feb 9, 2016
  • Calvin, John.  Institutes of the Christian Religion, 1536. Trans. H. Beveridge. Peabody: Hendrickson, 2008
  • Foucault, Michel. The Birth of the Clinic: An Archaeology of Medical Perception, 1963. Trans. A. Sheridan. London: Routledge, 2003
  • Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, 1975. Trans. A. Sheridan. New York: Vintage Books, 1977
  • Franklin, Benjamin. The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin. Philadelphia: Altemus, 1895
  • Johnson, Dominic. God Is Watching You: How the Fear of God Makes Us Human. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016
  • Keeling, B. “BART replaces all fake security cameras with real ones” SF Curbed. June 28, 2017
  • Lattimore, Kayla. “When Black Hair Violates The Dress Code” NPRED, from National Public Radio, 17 July 2017
  • Noll, Mark. “Interview Mark Noll.” PBS Frontline: The Jesus Factor, Public Broadcast Service, 10 Dec. 2003
  • Smith, Gregory et. al. “America’s Changing Religious Landscape” Pew Research Center, Washington, D.C., 2015
  • Weber, Max. The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, 1958. Trans. T. Parsons. Mineola: Dover Books, 2003

and another thousand words on ethics and economics tonight, just give me a minute to eat something first
0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
I'm supposed to be writing about this paper, not blogging about writing about it, but may I direct everyone's attention to The Extended Mind by Andy Clark & David Chalmers1, one of the absolutely most entertaining defenses of extelligence out there
Stewart and Cohen talked about cultural capitol in terms of extrapersonally situated but individually empowering resources, Clark and Chalmers are going on about active externalism with regards to epistemic credit; look, if we allow for a certain blending of these positions, then it generally follows that the internet is our hive-mind, according to epistemic function and allowing for accessibility!!
which is the most hilarious thing to consider seriously, I love it!!!! 



1 Authors are listed in order of degree of belief in the central thesis
^^^this is the actual footnote I love this paper
0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
the semester is winding up to sock me in the face and I'm scrambling to stay above water

this week I: 
  • did that interview I mentioned, with the basic needs advocacy campaign
  • got sick :(
  • picked out my fall courseload
    • at least 3 undergrad and 1 master's, bc they're all high numbers and I'll be working, and every advisor has had this pained look on their face when I try to mention doing 5 courses +  working + commuting
    • the lecturer I liked last semester will actually be going on to her phd program in the fall, so I have an alternate in case the class I was gonna trust her to teach doesn't actually pan out
      • look, ethics is hard, feminist ethics is harder, you really gotta trust your teachers for these ones
    • also I ran into a system glitch that my whole program is gonna be hitting, so the department didn't realise it would be an issue and we all spent a very anxious afternoon pouring over my student profile
    • also I got to run it all by our department chair and he's hard to catch but very reassuring once you find him, so when he approved my plan it was Good
  • picked a summer class
  • confirmed that I'll be working over the summer
  • scheduled a review with my boss's boss, she's nice but it's terrifying on principle
  • jumped through finaid hoops
  • spat out my first actual paper on legal metaethics - it's short, but as a project, it's gonna grow

I still have like two and a half weeks total, for: (some of which are due earlier) (not all of these are starting from scratch, I've got good work going, but as a list)
  • like 7 metaphysics and/or epistemology short essays
    • like, they're short, it's more that there's 7 of them
  • like another 7 responses that I'm behind on, on various readings on power
    • hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahelp
  • a regular paper on metaethics and dworkin
    • I picked this topic back before spring break, and then the latest short essay we did for this class was on like, dworkin and hart and legal realism, so I basically already handed in my bare-bones thoughts on this. I'll be expanding them a lot; I hope professor doesn't mind that I'm talking about the same thing twice
      • metaethics is like, my Thing this semester tho, he can live with my special interest
  • a regular paper on something about nietzsche and roles/responsibilities in/to society
    • spoilers: fuck nietzsche, man
  • a bigass terrifying paper on foucault and the panopticon and christianity in america
      • hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahafuck
  • probably a final on virtue epistemology, hasn't been formally assigned yet
    • I really liked the paper I wrote last semester on ignorance as prerequisite to any knowledge, I'll probably do something similar. Again with 'I hope professor doesn't mind that I'm repeating myself, but I've got a bee in my bonnet'
    • basically, it's: ignorance to concious ignorance to confusion to curiosity to epistemic growth
      • humility is the linchpin
    • really not unlike the attitude in XKCD 1053
  • probably a final on cost-benefit analysis with a social/ethical angle, hasn't been formally assigned yet
    • I had to cut the angry socialist paragraph out of my last paper for this class bc of wordcount, so you bet it's going back in this one

but in good news: 
  • Dnd campaign is starting this weekend! 
    • I'm never not laughing about the fact that we're starting a collaborative storytelling event in a setting inspired by the Republic, aka one of the most famous thought experiments in all of history, God I love being part of this nerdiest of traditions
  • Changeling is ongoing!
    • I thought I was gonna be playing a ravenclaw here, by temperament; turns out I can't turn off the slytherdor and I really really wanna take my ex-keeper to court lmao
    • class action suit time, I'm gonna make it happen!!!
  • it's my birthday next week!
    • when did this happen, time keeps happening so fast
    • I'm not old, I'm def in the youngest tier of my master's classmates, but oh man do I feel it in the gen eds with the traditional undergrad kids

and tonight I will: 
  • eat dinner
  • make up my mind between lavender and chrysanthemum to steam my face/sinuses with as I: 
  • watch another episode of Disguiser
also, I started watching Disguiser last weekend and I def don't have the time to spare to binge it like I did NiF but I'm really liking it too. Yeah, it's absolutely much more intense - NiF has high stakes but is essentially fantasy, for how much the politics hit me. Disguiser is the occupation is still viscerally present in my family. But Hu Ge is an amazing actor and I'm so worried about this family. I mean, everyone's doing excellent jobs and Jin Dong has a great presence, but seeing Hu Ge go from immaculate Su Zhe/Mei Changsu/Lin Shu to an ingénu is frankly boggling, I'm very impressed. 
0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
A pile of books: Nietzsche, The Gay Science. St Thomas Aquinas On Politics and Ethics. Lynch; True to Life. Plato: The Republic. Nietzsche: Geneaology of Morals. Foucault: Discipline and Punish. Sheleff: The Bystander. Reeves: Citizen Spies. The Confluence of Philosophy and Law in Applied Ethics. Guest on Dworkin. Hart: The Concept of Law. Dondi: Legal Ethics. Weber: The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. Arendt: Totalitarianism. Dworkin: Law's Empire DW's turned my pic sideways, but I think you get the general attitude!
Pictured: my conservative estimate of the hard copies of the works I'll be writing with and/or on in the next weeks. 

When I got the most recent handful out of the library, I had to pause and text some folks: Guys I think I turned into a law student when my own back was turned 

and I mean.....
I work in a civil clinic. Yesterday, I was interviewed as a student leader for a basic needs initiative on campus with specific attention to the homeless/housing insecure problems we have. I am dual enrolled in the batchelor's and master's programs. I actively enjoy writing about metaethics and legal theory. 


Guys, I think I'm a (pre)law student
0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
Love feeling less like trash after talking to a professor
Especially my seminar professor, I'm straight-up terrified of this class and she's so so kind
0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
 So, this semester's plan: 
  • 4 lower division gen eds, bc even as an upper divisions transfer, grad reqs are grad reqs. At least they're in my department, even if my classmates are half a decade younger than me.
  • 1 grad seminar!!! I'm terrified, it's amazing!!! My classmates there are all so much more sure of themselves, they've had real jobs and life experiences, a lot have published already
  • Campus job, decide if I wanna go for the promotion, or take a good hard look at the returning interns, to find someone to nominate to jump in
  • Weekend job, bc commuting doesn't pay for itself
Also,
  • Change my name in the system
  • Join a professional skills fellowship? I've got a window in my schedule right when it meets, but also I'm gonna go crazy this semester, I know it. Maybe wait till fall?
  • Find someone to give me a certificate for being on the dean's list last semester
  • Stay on the dean's list 

0dense: a mottled blue foreground fading into cold white; hail covering a light (Default)
 screenshot of a small table reading My Applications, with details of both Undergraduate and Graduate programs in Philosophy
I GOT INTO THE PROGRAM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
on the first day of the semester no less, so now I need to go through some hoops to actually enroll in my seminar, but that's ok! I'm on track!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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