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Author Topic: Conservatives' Place in Academe  (Read 24964 times)
sad_goat
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« Reply #90 on: May 23, 2008, 05:33:43 PM »

Perhaps, it is time for the train to crash.
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In other words, it is a moral and philosophical question, not a question of details.

We are right to take alarm at the first experiment upon our liberties. - James Madison
lincolns_ghost
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« Reply #91 on: May 23, 2008, 05:35:27 PM »

Perhaps, it is time for the train to crash.

Oh, God, please...
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sad_goat
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« Reply #92 on: May 23, 2008, 05:39:50 PM »

lincoln-

This is not a wish. It is an observation. One I wish I could not even imagine. But I wonder if the modern-age Sumter hasn't already been set in motion.
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In other words, it is a moral and philosophical question, not a question of details.

We are right to take alarm at the first experiment upon our liberties. - James Madison
t_r_b
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« Reply #93 on: May 24, 2008, 10:52:45 AM »

lincoln-

This is not a wish. It is an observation. One I wish I could not even imagine. But I wonder if the modern-age Sumter hasn't already been set in motion.

Would you care to elaborate on this observation?
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"t_r_b is right on all counts.  It's not a bad sign, but it is also not a definitively positive sign either."  --sibyl

"And after all, who among us has not been obnoxious and clueless at some time?" --msparticularly
claragold
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« Reply #94 on: May 24, 2008, 11:11:53 AM »

Perhaps, it is time for the train to crash.

OMG, that was such a tirade, sadgoat! ;-)   That virulent tone, those angry words, I know a tirade when I see one! :-)

I have added smileys (on the GRE they're called emoticons), so that our fellow double-standards-holding forumites can have more precise information concerning my feelings at this very moment.
 
It is a great day for America everybody, especially for Clara who has just watched over 40 minutes of Craig Ferguson on youtube (I hadn't seen his CSPAN dinner speech). He started out quite nervous, but he pulled it through and didn't crash. There you go, Craig!
 
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Yes, indeed!
daurousseau
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« Reply #95 on: May 27, 2008, 09:15:15 AM »

Are there any Conservatives left? I thought I read that the bandwagon went over the cliff and disappeared from view.
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kmellendorf
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« Reply #96 on: May 27, 2008, 09:36:34 AM »

This is just a suggestion from a physicist regarding the intense desire to interpret on this thread, something I have never been any good at.  Why not try this alternative:  Say what you mean, and mean what you say.  I know it opposes standard philosophy in American society (and maybe even throughout the world).  It irritates a significant portion of the population.  It also requires a different set of adjectives and adverbs.  It often results in everybody being right in some ways and wrong in others, thus requiring a certain amount of humility.  Win/lose ceases to be the model, aiming more toward everybody understanding more.  Still, it does get to the point(s) while limiting the range of misunderstanding.  I find it much more productive and much less quarrelsome.

I am not criticizing.  This topic may work best in an interpretive environment.  As I said, I have never been any good at interpretation, at "reading between the lines".  When twenty possible interpretations come to mind, I cannot choose without enough information to eliminate nineteen of them.  I think this makes me conservative and liberal at the same time, or perhaps just an MC on neither side.
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There are two possible outcomes:  if the result confirms the hypothesis, then you've made a measurement.  If the result is contrary to the hypothesis, then you've made a discovery.  (Enrico Fermi)
gastr1
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« Reply #97 on: May 27, 2008, 03:49:59 PM »

Recognizing that it's hypocritical to deconstruct a generalization while freely generalizing about the accused generalizers
--priceless.
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"Gastr1 should not touch Cezanne, it's a travesty that gastr1 does it. Gastr1 must stay within Rothko and Svartz."
sad_goat
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« Reply #98 on: May 27, 2008, 04:40:04 PM »

Recognizing that it's hypocritical to deconstruct a generalization while freely generalizing about the accused generalizers
--priceless.

And we have our first winner...
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In other words, it is a moral and philosophical question, not a question of details.

We are right to take alarm at the first experiment upon our liberties. - James Madison
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