85-100% You must be an autodidact, because American high schools don’t get scores that high! Good show, old chap!
Archive for November, 2006
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What American accent do you have? Your Result: Philadelphia
Your accent is as Philadelphian as a cheesesteak! If you’re not from Philadelphia, then you’re from someplace near there like south Jersey, Baltimore, or Wilmington. if you’ve ever journeyed to some far off place where people don’t know that Philly has an accent, someone may have thought you talked a little weird even though they didn’t have a clue what accent it was they heard. |
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| The Midland |
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| The South |
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| The Inland North |
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| The Northeast |
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| Boston |
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| The West |
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| North Central |
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| What American accent do you have? Take More Quizzes |
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Not even close. i be from the South, dahlin’.
No TagsIt’s that time again. Next week is the last week of the quarter (already!). On my agenda is a paper for the Study of Religion class, a take-home final for it, and an in-class final for Buddhism. i’m pretty sure this is my first in-class final as a grad student. Practically speaking, i’ll be finished a week from this coming Monday (i.e. the 20th) even though i still have that in-class final on Wednesday the 22nd. In other news, i was “encouraged” (to say the least) to say around Denver for another year and wait to do my thesis. So, i’m going to go for the dual-MA (again) so that i’m not wasting any time. i have to add 8 books to my list to make 100, many which will be the rest of the Chronicles of Narnia series. i am still thinking of 2-3 more books to complete the list… i’ve got a lot of reading and coding to do between now and Dec 31 to fulfill my goals, but i think i’ll be able to do it.
Read for Buddhism class:Buddhism in Practice by Donald LopezBuddhist Religions by Richard RobinsonThe Foundations of Buddhism by Rupert Gethin
Read for Study of Religion class:Globalized Islam by Olivier RoyA Thousand Plateaus by Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari
- Read for Thesis
- The End of Modernity by Gianni Vattimo
- The Adventure of Difference by Vattimo
- Radical Orthodoxy and the Reformed Tradition by James K.A. Smith
- Introducing Radical Orthodoxy by James K.A. Smith
- Religion by Vattimo and Jacques Derrida
- Weak Thoughts by Vattimo
- Philosophy and Theology by John Caputo
- The Parallax View by Slavoj Zizek
- Dogmatics in Outline by Karl Barth
- Read for “fun”
- Phenomenology of Spirit by Georg Hegel
- The Voyage of the Dawn Treadle by C.S. Lewis
- The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky
- The Inferno by Dante Alighieri
- The Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals by Immanuel Kant
- Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysicsby Kant
- De Anima by Aristotle
- Categories by Aristotle
- Physics by Aristotle
- Metaphysics by Aristotle
- The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver
- Of Grammatology by Derrida
- Exclusion and Embrace by Miroslav Volf
- Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion by David Hume
- Coding projects
- Update impleri.net
- New face for impleri.net
- Update Zeal for Truth (both forums and frontend)
- New face for ZfT
- Advanced Messages for Categories Hierarchy
- Advanced Logging for CH
- Cash for CH
- Reporting for CH
- Drafts for CH
There is something that is absolute difference. Deleuze sees it in what he calls the War-Machine. It is without respect or reason, without emotion or attachment. It borders on the suicidal and self-defeating. It is always and absolutely conflictive difference. It does not accept “community” or the contemporary notion of “diversity.” It rejects the Hegelian subsumption of difference under identity. It does not believe in “unity in diversity.” It engenders hate. It follows no rules, no laws, no structures. It does not act for some “good.” It does not even act for some “evil.” It simply acts.
Deleuze believes that the best example of the War-Machine is Genghis Khan and his Mongolian warriors. Even though they conquered the Chinese empire and large portions of the Muslim one, they slept in tents. They razed cities, drove around the Great Wall, and killed for kicks. Yet they never built (or rebuilt) cities, did not institute a new government, nor even made it mandatory for the people they destroyed to adhere to their laws. This is because they had none. There was no hierarchy. They were rhizomatic….like weeds. Yet, because of their lack of respect for laws, rules, and structures, they were also suicidal. At any moment, they could have brought about their own destruction. Yet they would still act without remorse.
Another example is that of Geronimo. Here was a man upset at the Spanish. Along with just two troops, he snuck past the guards and into the center of the Spanish encampment…and opened fire. They were able to shoot 20 people dead. It was a massacre by three. That is the intensity of the War-Machine.
Today, there are many groups surfacing in this mode. I say “mode” because it is not something one can always avoid. Currently, the Christian Right, as well as other groups of neofundamentalists (e.g. the al Qaeda brand), are becoming machinic. They are moving towards that suicidal grasp. The recent problem with Ted Haggard is one such example. One cannot become the War-Machine without losing control, ethics, and morality. The War-Machine is pre-philosophic, pre-ethical, pre-morality. It is passion and intensity. It deterritorializes its past (i.e. removes the context of its past in which it is situated) and creates a new context which disregards both its contemporary locality and its historical context. As Nietzsche said (On the Genealogy of Morals, of which Deleuze quotes often), “They come like fate, without resaon, consideration, or pretext…” The War-Machine becomes the face of the other: a blank wall with two dark eyes. It is the completely unknown.
Technorati Tags: Christendom, Deleuze, Khan, Mongols, Nietzsche, postmodernism, State, Ted Haggard, war machine
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