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8 votes
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Speaking on behalf of … In the tapestry of diverse social groups, the loudest and most extreme get heard. To whom should we actually listen?
5 votes -
Little upside for Malcolm Turnbull in debate over religious freedom
2 votes -
Say goodbye to the information age: it’s all about reputation now
25 votes -
Canadian Geographic's indigenous people's atlas - History of residential schools
10 votes -
1177 BC: The Year Civilization Collapsed (70 min.)
10 votes -
The Zero Meter Diving Team - A story of family, loss, and the Chernobyl disaster
6 votes -
Letter from a Birmingham museum
2 votes -
Canada's slavery secret: The whitewashing of 200 years of enslavement
12 votes -
Slavery's long shadow: The impact of 200 years enslavement in Canada
4 votes -
Archbishop Philip Wilson’s closest bishop colleagues have advised him to resign following his jail sentence on Tuesday
4 votes -
The location for Stonehenge may have been chosen due to the presence of a natural geological feature
I watched a documentary about Stonehenge tonight, and it proposed the theory that the location for Stonehenge was chosen because of a natural geological feature in the area. There's a man-made...
I watched a documentary about Stonehenge tonight, and it proposed the theory that the location for Stonehenge was chosen because of a natural geological feature in the area.
There's a man-made path that proceeds south-west towards Stonehenge: "The Avenue". This path was built around the same era as Stonehenge itself. If you walk westward along The Avenue on the winter solstice, you'll be facing the point on the horizon where the sun sets. However, under The Avenue, there's an old natural geological formation from the time of the Ice Age: a series of ridges in the rock which just coincidentally align with the sunset on the winter solstice (an "axis mundi"). Before Stonehenge was built, there was a chalk knoll on that location. That meant that you could walk along a natural geological path towards the sunset on the shortest day of the year, and there was a local geological landmark in front of you.
The theory is that these natural geological formations coincidentally aligning with an astronomical phenomenon made the site a special one for early Britons. That's why there was a burial site there, and later Stonehenge was built there.
Here's the article by the archaeologist who discovered the Ice Age ridges: Researching Stonehenge: Theories Past and Present
13 votes -
Voltaire and the Buddha: How the French Enlightenment thinker prefigured an approach now familiar in the West
5 votes -
Hiroshima - a 1946 piece exploring how six survivors experienced the atomic bombing and its aftermath
9 votes -
The ACLU retreats from free expression
2 votes -
Feeding the gods: Hundreds of skulls reveal massive scale of human sacrifice in Aztec capital
7 votes -
The ACLU retreats from free expression
26 votes -
Overly sarcastic productions: A relatively unknown Youtube channel that handles tropes, history and mythology
11 votes -
The fallen of World War II
7 votes -
Koko, the beloved gorilla that learned to communicate using sign language, has died
15 votes -
The intellectual we deserve: Jordan Peterson’s popularity is the sign of a deeply impoverished political and intellectual landscape
7 votes -
I know why poor Whites chant Trump, Trump, Trump: From the era of slavery to the rise of Donald Trump, wealthy elites have relied on the loyalty of poor whites. All Americans deserve better
6 votes -
Priests won't comply with law: South Australia church
8 votes -
South Australia to compel priests to report abuse revealed in confession
5 votes -
Thoughts on the World Wars
I've been consuming a ton of media about the world wars lately. There seems to be an inexhaustible supply of historical fiction, records, memoires, and documentaries. But so far, very few things...
I've been consuming a ton of media about the world wars lately. There seems to be an inexhaustible supply of historical fiction, records, memoires, and documentaries. But so far, very few things have come close to painting a cohesive picture.
Most of it focuses on hot spots like Verdun, Pearl Harbor, Dunkirk, Normandy, the haulocaust, the atomic bomb, enigma, u-boats, the luftwaffe, Stalingrad... And I can see why. Even on a microcosm level, the conditions of the stories are unimaginable.
The issue I'm having is that I feel like our cultural memory of these events his been eroded over time. We have these impressions of what we think it was like, but not an overarching understanding of the complex series of events throughout the 20th century. We have an overabundance of records, photographs, film, and documentation in general, but maybe it's the overabundance that makes the digestion such an insurmountable undertaking.
What are your experiences with studying this time period? How do you feel about the quality of your understanding? And finally, do you have any recommendations for myself and others?
14 votes -
Beyond the ‘reading wars’: How the science of reading can improve literacy
4 votes -
I was Jordan Peterson’s strongest supporter. Now I think he’s dangerous
54 votes -
Attorney-General backs laws forcing Australian priests to break confession over child abuse
4 votes -
Austria to shut down mosques, expel foreign-funded imams
6 votes -
How did Easter Islanders lift statues' thirteen-ton hats? Researchers may have the answer.
7 votes -
I for one...
A long time ago I had noticed a trend developing on reddit where people were starting to preface their comments with: "I for one". It's pretty insignificant, which is why I never made a post about...
A long time ago I had noticed a trend developing on reddit where people were starting to preface their comments with: "I for one". It's pretty insignificant, which is why I never made a post about it at the time. Since then, its use seems to have spread significantly on the site and I've seen it a bit here as well.
It makes sense to use the phrase when talking about or quoting another person to help separate their opinions from your own. The weird thing is many people now seem to use it when its not ambiguous that the comment is their own opinion. I was under the assumption that the default position should be that the comment is the opinion of the person that posted it.
For example:
"I for one, prefer dark chocolate over milk chocolate."
Is the same as:
"I prefer dark chocolate over milk chocolate."
There's nothing wrong with using the phrase, it just reads like someone trying to pad out an essay for school.
Have you noticed people using the phrase on other sites? Is it a phenomenon more specific to reddit?
Do you use the phrase yourself? If you do, what is your thought process when typing it out?14 votes -
"Fuck Neoliberalism" - An academic paper by Simon Springer
6 votes -
"Guy" should be a neutered term. Change my mind.
In light of @Deimos mentioning that we have a lot of "favorite" topics going around, how about something a little meatier? I've seen it a few times already around threads that someone uses the...
In light of @Deimos mentioning that we have a lot of "favorite" topics going around, how about something a little meatier?
I've seen it a few times already around threads that someone uses the word "guy" to refer to a poster and the response is "I'm not a guy". I'm not trying to invalidate this stance, but rather make this argument in the same way I argued for a singular "they". Consider the following:
- the plural form, "you guys" is already neutered. I can walk up to a group of women and ask "How're you guys doing?" and it doesn't draw any ire
- we've similarly neutered "dude" in both the singular and plural, but it's especially casual and almost familiar
- "gal" sounds like something out of the forties, "girl" is diminutive, and "person" is clinical / formal
- we don't have another common, non-gendered, non-specific term that fits the "sounds right" criteria and fits in the environment like the one we have (wherein users are getting to know each other and don't know exactly how to address one another).
I realize that this is probably masculine-normative and therefore problematic, but my main goal here is to stimulate discussion on a meatier topic (gender) without having it be an incredibly serious topic.
[EDIT]
I want to clarify a few things, as this reads a lot more trolly than it did 6 hours ago.
generalizing "guy" is a sexist idea because it attempts to make the masculine the generic (what I called "masculine-normativity" above). However, there isn't a term that adequately replaces "guy" but is neutered (@Algernon_Asimov brought up that "dude" fits, but is as more casual than "guy" than "person" is more formal). [Edit edit: I'm an idiot. They pointed out that "dude" as I had defined it earlier in my post would work just as well, but they did not agree that it has been neutered]
Instead of bringing this up as purely a matter of diction, I set myself up as an antagonist to see what would happen. And for this I apologize.
That said, I feel like there is some good discussion here and do not want to call making the thread a mistake. More that mistakes were made in the manner of its posting.
42 votes -
Three myths most Americans believe (Japanese surrender in WW2, Cold War, nuclear bomb threat)
7 votes -
The American Revolution’s greatest leader was openly gay
14 votes -
Denmark bans the burqa and niqab
15 votes -
The Mud Mosque Of Mali: As militant attacks get closer, the Malian town of Djenné defiantly continues its annual tradition of replastering its ancient mud mosque
5 votes -
What can Aristotle teach us about happiness?
6 votes -
New law requires crosses in all public buildings in German state of Bavaria
9 votes -
The mind-expanding ideas of Andy Clark
8 votes -
After the Rev. Moon died in 2012, his church split apart. Two of his sons established a new congregation. Their followers are eagerly awaiting the end times. And they are armed.
5 votes -
Cyborg discourse is useless: Philosophy, ethics and technology
5 votes -
The US-Canada border splits this road down the middle
3 votes -
A fascinating map of medieval trade routes
12 votes -
Traumatic license: An oral history of Action Park
6 votes -
"Be it resolved, what you call political correctness, I call progress…"
11 votes -
No gods no masters: A history of anarchism (part 1 of 3)
5 votes -
Steven Pinker's arguments are flawed; this article shows why
4 votes -
What would happen if historians made their research notes public?
9 votes -
Bear necessities: The big brown bear who helped Polish troops in WWII
4 votes