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your arms = tired!
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I am drowning at school. taking a 500-level paper in a subject that I have not studied at 100-level or any other level...was a really bad choice.
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i'm surprised there weren't prerequisites for that. good luck?
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Thanks. It’s social science, rather than quantum mechanics....so I guess they figure anyone can pass. Which is true. It’s just passing with good grades that is a problem :(
Have you given any more thought to further study? |
I'm sure you'll manage a better grade than you think. And the tot will start preschool in fall 2020, so I think that's when I'm either doing work or school, or both. There's a few things going on that require me to be there with her 100% of the time right now anyway, so if things go well everything should get rolling at the same time. I'm sure working for it! :)
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Actually, my entire family is planning on moving out of here around that time, so it really should be a dynamic year. I'm cautiously optimistic.
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Ah that's exciting...do you know where you'll be moving to, yet?
Sounds complicated about being with her 100%, but she will be a really good age to start preschool then, I reckon. I am really not sure about the grade. All social sciences seem to boil down to the history of the discipline, and learning the ins and outs of that particular shitshow before abandoning all those methodologies because of all the flaws that were pointed out about them I mean cripes, can we not just skip that part and start with just drawing the most reliable inferences we can, now? Do I really have to memorise the names of people who got it wrong, decades ago? ugh |
i handed in two major assignments, one three weeks ago, and one a month ago, and they still haven't been marked
I am slowly losing my mind. is this a slow turnaround or is it normal? in geology we would sit a test at 5pm and they'd tell us to come back and check the noticeboard in a couple of hours, we'd all go to the student pub and then come back and see our results. this to me is a good system |
in philosophy, it would be more like a week, maximum two weeks. A month?!??! seriously?!!?
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ask your professors why you should buy into the current social science theories when all youve been learning about is the ways in which the old theories were wrong
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sounds like she would be the perfect person to deliver that line
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if you don't learn these based on the person(s) who came up with the ideas, you'll indirectly learn them in other ways, which will be harder to assimilate into concrete ideas and might lead to "discovering" things which aren't really new at all and could have been learned more easily. now i agree if it's an applied class or a class only on a very specific topic you don't need to know any history. but i understand why they teach it |
Just spent six hours in the hospital with one of my kids who fell and fractured both wrists and an elbow. He’s still in a lot of pain so it’s going to be a long night and then we have to go back tomorrow.
So now the schoolwork seems less important. I’ll just learn the stupid names, whatever |
:( sorry. how the fuck did that happen?
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ouch.
what are the consequences of breaking both wrists? will someone need to feed him? wash? etc.? |
more importantly, how is he going to, you know, take care of himself?
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freud knows what's up tho, largely because his method isn't really scientific but historical and analytical and philosophical. i don't think you can say he "was wrong" any more than you can say Plato or George Eliot or Foucault are "wrong"; they just present different ways of interpreting and valuing the experience of life that resonate more or less strongly with different people at different times. i guess i just don't see much value in the "insights" of the social sciences. their primary purpose seems to be serving as conduits for the legitimization and reproduction of the upper-middle class. we'd certainly be better off without those bastard "economists." i'm feeling very reflective this morning. |
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Guessing he didn't medal in his X Games competition as a result, so, double whammy |
i gave your dad a double whammy, if you know what i mean!
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:D
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sounds like something i'd read about in a Michael Campbell classic
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I assume you refer to his seminal dissertation The 1919 Bible Conference and its Significance for Seventh-day Adventist History and Theology? (Andrews University, 2008).
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yes, lot of juicy "DWs" & "DPs" in that one if i recall correctly
Campbell you dirty DOG! |
Hope your kiddo heals quickly, Em. What a nightmare. The whole world screeches to a halt when something happens to your kid. I hate that feeling.
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there once was a man, sigmund freud
who thought kids get off when they void thought nipples were rad and dad's dick not so bad which he shamefully toyed and enjoyed |
There was a bro-dude named ovary
who read Madame Bovary he stuffed his hole with my father's poll and blew his wad all over me! |
Got invited to something called a Diaper Party Cookout by a new father-to-be
Time to willfully misunderstand the intent and let my freak flag fly |
there once was a took of a fool
ran a posh and select grammar school but he went to prison for drugs sold his pupils fine nugs how the syntax of justice is cruel! |
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if one possible outcome of philosophy/psychology is to reduce suffering, that's great. but it isn't much different than anything that can do that, such as religion, exercise, etc. i just have an undergrad degree in psychology, but i did do some higher level work including an undergrad thesis. there are just so many theories in psychology and many of them are unfalsifiable. but there are certain things that can predict outcomes, for example attachment theory is fairly good at predicting problems in adolescence and later life with deliquency and criminal behavior. does that prove it's "right" or "meaningful"? not really, but if it works, that is worth something on its own i was most interested in forensic psychology because i am into assessment and prediction, such as risk of reoffending, recommendation for parole, sanity assessment, police psychology (negotiation training and assessing for trauma mostly), parenting and custody assessment, and stuff like that. i don't know that it was necessary for me to learn about evolution (and evolutionary psychology) or even developmental psychology to learn how to do these things, but those classes made me think about the world and people in ways i never would have thought of. does that make me a better assessor? probably, but unlike most people in undergrad i had a lot of self-directed learning because of my grades and being in honors studies. i had basically an entire year to study whatever i wanted (9 credits, anyway). and i studied forensic and evolutionary psychology. mostly psychopathy as a life strategy and negotiation, cooperation, and deception based on evo psych/social psych/developmental psych i learned a lot and i think it would ultimately help me in that kind of field but it wasn't so much learning any theories but learning how they could matter to what i really wanted to understand i see freud to some extent but especially jung as mostly philosophers. i do credit freud with basically creating psychotherapy (not that it didn't have problems, it definitely did), and the concept of the unconscious mind, and for just noticing and writing about things that had never been strictly defined before. defense mechanisms come to mind. his stages of sexual development are kinda weird but the main points - that children are sorta sexual in a way and then it stops and then it comes back at puberty - are pretty much right. he was extremely smart and the world is definitely better because of him. but he has all kinds of wacky shit too, and that's what people stick to. who cares about penis envy and the Oedipus shit? well basically all the professors except the clinically oriented ones, it turns out. and evo psych might have been the only class that never mentioned him once. |
sorry i just kinda rambled on there
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Am currently watching the woman at the table in front of me at McDonalds eating a quarter pounder with a knife and fork.
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Jokes on me. I got sauce and grease all over my fingers + phone. I also give her a gold star for taking her rubbish to a bin.
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I am seeing a lot of articles, all too annoyingly written to link here, that seem to indicate some Europeans and particularly the French do this with burgers
So I am guessing this woman was a damn foreigner and you and the other patrons should have lynched her |
Thanks for the kind words guys. He was just playing at school, they have a sort of high wire bridge and they're pretty relaxed (which I think is good). He was hanging off the outside of the bridge, lost his grip and fell with arms outstretched to break his fall.
Had to go in yesterday for a one week check up, six hours of x-rays, taking a cast off, morphine and nitrous so they could manipulate his wrist again, putting another cast on. I think I played a good three hours of eye spy, probably 1.5 hours of it in the same room. Fucking depleted He's been referred for an MRI to check for cartilage damage in his elbow and may need surgery. Poor guy is so over it. Luckily my test could be postponed until Friday, and I have an extension on some other work. Just....gotta keep going. Livin' the dream here in the Kennel Kafe! |
i ordered my first uber last week for work cause apparently you can order from a computi now and it's good timing, too, since i can get reimbursed for such rides.
now i'm living the good life. /hops into car and says to driver, "sir," indicating i need the door closed |
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