The logic is supposed to be that only someone of Gorman’s race, and optimally gender, can effectively translate her expression into another language. But is that true? And are we not denying Gorman and black people basic humanity in – if I may jump the gun – pretending that it is?
Translating Amanda Gorman - It Bears Mentioning - 0 views
-
-
Notice I didn’t mention Shakespeare translated into other languages. According to the Critical Race Theory paradigm that informs this performative take on translating Gorman, Shakespeare being a white man means that white translators of his work are akin to him, while non-white ones, minted in a world where they must always grapple with whiteness “centered,” are perfect bilinguals of a sort.
The Quest to Tell Science from Pseudoscience | Boston Review - 0 views
-
Of the answers that have been proposed, Popper’s own criterion—falsifiability—remains the most commonly invoked, despite serious criticism from both philosophers and scientists. These attacks fatally weakened Popper’s proposal, yet its persistence over a century of debates helps to illustrate the challenge of demarcation—a problem no less central today than it was when Popper broached it
-
pper’s answer emerged. Popper was born just after the turn of the twentieth century in Vienna—the birthplace of psychoanalysis—and received his doctorate in psychology in 1928. In the early 1920s Popper volunteered in the clinics of Alfred Adler, who had split with his former mentor, the creator of psychoanalysis: Sigmund Freud. Precocious interest in psychoanalysis, and his subsequent rejection of it, were crucial in Popper’s later formulation of his philosophical views on science.
-
At first, Popper was quite taken with logical empiricism, but he would diverge from the mainstream of the movement and develop his own framework for understanding scientific thought in his two influential books The Logic of Scientific Discovery (1934, revised and translated to English in 1959) and Conjectures and Refutations (1962). Popper claimed to have formulated his initial ideas about demarcation in 1919, when he was seventeen years old. He had, he writes, “wished to distinguish between science and pseudo-science; knowing very well that science often errs, and that pseudoscience may happen to stumble on the truth.”
Opinion | The Pandemic and the Future City - The New York Times - 0 views
-
The Pandemic and the Future City
-
Lessons from Alexander Hamilton and the book trade.
-
In 1957 Isaac Asimov published “The Naked Sun,” a science-fiction novel about a society in which people live on isolated estates, their needs provided by robots and they interact only by video
- ...19 more annotations...
Opinion | The Kind Workers at King Soopers Who Helped a Confused College Kid - The New ... - 0 views
-
The Kind Workers at King Soopers Who Helped a Confused College Kid
-
A University of Colorado Boulder graduate recalls two victims of the shooting who helped a grocery shopping novice.
-
To the Editor:In the fall of 2016 I had just moved into my first apartment and was about to start my sophomore year at the University of Colorado Boulder.
- ...15 more annotations...
Opinion | The Atlanta Shootings and a Religious Toxicity - The New York Times - 0 views
-
I’m a Scholar of Religion. Here’s What I See in the Atlanta Shootings.
-
Did racism or theology or gender motivate the shootings in Georgia? All of the above.
-
I saw in Korean sources first that six of the dead were Asian women, four of Korean descent
- ...28 more annotations...
Opinion | The Social Justice Purge at Idaho Colleges - The New York Times - 0 views
-
The Social Justice Purge at Idaho Colleges
-
Republican lawmakers try to cancel diversity programs.
-
I wrote that right-wing legislatures trying to ban critical race theory from public schools and institutions were a far more direct threat to free speech than what’s often called cancel culture.
- ...20 more annotations...
Opinion | Trump May Start a Social Network. Here's My Advice. - The New York Times - 0 views
-
Trump May Start a Social Network. Here’s My Advice.
-
Recast your past failures as successes, engage in meaningless optics, and other tips from the Silicon Valley playbook.
-
So Donald Trump wants to start a social network and become a tech mogul?
- ...26 more annotations...
Opinion | 'This Is Jim Crow in New Clothes' - The New York Times - 0 views
-
‘This Is Jim Crow in New Clothes’
-
Senator Raphael Warnock’s first speech on the Senate floor brought the past into the present.
-
“We are witnessing right now a massive and unabashed assault on voting rights unlike anything we have seen since the Jim Crow era,”
- ...23 more annotations...
Opinion | What Are Republicans So Afraid Of? - The New York Times - 0 views
-
What Are Republicans So Afraid Of?
-
Instead of conspiracy-mongering about an election they did well in, they could try to win real majorities.
-
There was a time, in recent memory, when the Republican Party both believed it could win a national majority and actively worked to build one.
- ...13 more annotations...
Opinion | The Decline of Republican Demonization - The New York Times - 0 views
-
The Decline of Republican Demonization
-
Why has opposition to Biden’s plans been so low energy?
-
The American Rescue Plan, President Biden’s $1.9 trillion relief effort, is law.
- ...18 more annotations...
What Comorbidities Qualify for Covid Vaccine? That Depends. - The New York Times - 0 views
-
So, What’s Your ‘Fauxmorbidity’?
-
People are racing to get vaccinated — even those who don’t yet technically qualify. And that’s good news.
-
After Covid-19 vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna were approved for use in late 2020, anecdotes proliferated about rich people finding ways to jump the distribution priority line.
- ...19 more annotations...
'I Cry on Tuesdays and Fridays' - The New York Times - 0 views
-
‘I Cry on Tuesdays and Fridays’
-
Moms are still primal screaming their hearts out.
-
Michelle Pasos, 46, describes herself as someone who has “always been extremely healthy.”
- ...25 more annotations...
9-Year-Old Migrant Girl Dies Trying to Cross Rio Grande Into U.S. - The New York Times - 0 views
-
9-Year-Old Migrant Girl Dies Trying to Cross Rio Grande Into U.S.
-
The girl was found unconscious on an island on the Mexican side of the river near the Texas border and could not be revived.
-
the first reported death of a child in a new surge of migration along the southwestern border.
- ...22 more annotations...
$1 Million Raised After Attack on Asian Woman Will Go to Fight Racism, Family Says - Th... - 0 views
-
$1 Million Raised After Attack on Asian Woman Will Go to Fight Racism, Family Says
-
The woman, Xiao Zhen Xie, 75, was punched by a white man last week.
-
Her family raised money through GoFundMe to pay for her medical expenses. Now, they want to use it to fight anti-Asian racism.
- ...24 more annotations...
Is Ringing in the Ears a Symptom of Coronavirus? - The New York Times - 0 views
-
When the Noise Never Stops: Coping With the Challenges of Tinnitus
-
Researchers are just beginning to untangle how Covid might be linked to a ringing in the ears. Here’s what we know.
-
Experts are beginning to learn how it may be linked to Covid
- ...12 more annotations...
It's OK to Feel Joy Right Now - The New York Times - 0 views
-
It’s OK to Feel Joy Right NowHere’s how to prolong it.
-
The birds are chirping, a warm breeze is blowing and some of your friends are getting vaccinated.
-
After a year of anxiety and stress, many of us are rediscovering what optimism feels like.
- ...33 more annotations...
Misogyny Fuels Violence Against Women. Should It Be a Hate Crime? - The New York Times - 0 views
-
Misogyny Fuels Violence Against Women. Should It Be a Hate Crime?
-
Experts say the everyday harassment women have learned to put up with — the catcalling and lewd gestures — connects directly with more serious abuses.
-
“Men who kill women do not suddenly kill women, they work up to killing women.”
- ...42 more annotations...
The Costly, Painful, Lonely Burden of Care - The New York Times - 0 views
-
The Costly, Painful, Lonely Burden of Care
-
Health care in the U.S. relies on an “invisible army” of caregivers — mostly women. For many, stunted careers, lost earnings and exhaustion are part of the fallout.
-
“If society wants us to keep caring for others, it’s going to have to show a little more care for us.”
- ...28 more annotations...
JAMA Editor Placed on Leave After Deputy's Comments on Racism - The New York Times - 0 views
-
JAMA Editor Placed on Leave After Deputy’s Comments on Racism
-
After a staff member dismissed racism as a problem in medicine on a podcast, a petition signed by thousands demanded a review of editorial processes at the journal.
-
Following controversial comments on racism in medicine made by a deputy editor at JAMA, the editor in chief of the prominent medical journal was placed on administrative leave on Thursday.
- ...15 more annotations...
« First
‹ Previous
881 - 900 of 6446
Next ›
Last »
Showing 20▼ items per page