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Musings on Culture, Medicine, and Life in General
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Clay Shirky on self-promotion and gender differences…

January 19, 2010 By: DancingSamurai Category: Links

So here’s a bit of an interesting rant by Clay Shirky on gender differences in assertiveness:

And it looks to me like women in general, and the women whose educations I am responsible for in particular, are often lousy at those kinds of behaviors, even when the situation calls for it. They aren’t just bad at behaving like arrogant self-aggrandizing jerks. They are bad at behaving like self-promoting narcissists, anti-social obsessives, or pompous blowhards, even a little bit, even temporarily, even when it would be in their best interests to do so. Whatever bad things you can say about those behaviors, you can’t say they are underrepresented among people who have changed the world.

Now this is asking women to behave more like men, but so what? We ask people to cross gender lines all the time. We’re in the middle of a generations-long project to encourage men to be better listeners and more sensitive partners, to take more account of others’ feelings and to let out our own feelings more. Similarly, I see colleges spending time and effort teaching women strategies for self-defense, including direct physical aggression. I sometimes wonder what would happen, though, if my college spent as much effort teaching women self-advancement as self-defense.

The comments are very interesting (at least the first few I have read – I’ll have to go back when I am not so pressed for time). danah boyd posts some on her own blog:

Growing up, I loved to debate. With anyone. My debating tone used to drive my mother batty because she thought I was yelling at her. Exasperated, I would often bark back that I was simply debating. Over the years, I realized that my debating tone is one of such confidence that people believe me to be stating facts, not opinions. My mother interpreted it as yelling; my classmates interpreted it as arrogance. I also began to realize that it was the same tone as that of my male peers. I never apologized for my opinions, never deflated them with “I may be wrong but I think…” I asserted. Confidently. And loudly.

Why am I telling you this? Clay Shirky’s “A Rant About Women” has provoked all sorts of conversations in the blogosphere and on Twitter. And Tom Coates rightfully pointed out that one interpretation of Shirky is the problematic encouragement of self-promotion and lies. While a lot has been said on this topic, I feel the need to speak up and say more. Because, as I said, I’m loud.

Chose the rocks in your life…

June 20, 2009 By: DancingSamurai Category: Links, My Life

What a wonderful story (via Whitecoat)… and quite timely too, since I have a new rock in my life as of last week!! Ah, the sleepless nights are beginning… :) But it is really worth it!

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Amazing, mind-blowing talks from TED

July 04, 2007 By: DancingSamurai Category: Links

I had heard of the annual Technology, Entertainment, Design (TED) conference, but only recently was pointed to the vast array of compelling short videos of past speakers (thanks BoingBoing!)

These Creative Commons licensed vids cover all topics from Global Health to militant atheism, and are well worth browsing!

Evolution and Religion NYT Article

March 06, 2007 By: DancingSamurai Category: Links

Here’s a really intriguing article on the current science behind religious belief in the New York Times – Evolution and Religion – Darwin’s God.

Lost in the hullabaloo over the neo-atheists is a quieter and potentially more illuminating debate. It is taking place not between science and religion but within science itself, specifically among the scientists studying the evolution of religion. These scholars tend to agree on one point: that religious belief is an outgrowth of brain architecture that evolved during early human history. What they disagree about is why a tendency to believe evolved, whether it was because belief itself was adaptive or because it was just an evolutionary byproduct, a mere consequence of some other adaptation in the evolution of the human brain.

(via Seed)

Faust at the Canadian Opera Company

March 03, 2007 By: DancingSamurai Category: Arts, Musings

My fiancee and I went to see the Canadian Opera Company’s performance of Gounod’s “Faust” a little while ago — probably a long while ago (February 4th I think). This was at the new Four Seasons Centre. What follows is my attempt at a review, which is actually more like a little plot analysis. Bear with me, I haven’t done a formal English class in ages and my writing has suffered…

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A well written post

January 01, 2007 By: DancingSamurai Category: Musings

PZ Myers‘ daughter Skatje has written a brilliantly concise essay on atheism, “Why I don’t believe in god”. There’s another one on abortion.

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Battlestar Galactica

January 26, 2006 By: DancingSamurai Category: Musings

Well, I should really be sleeping. Off to my last CaRMS interview tomorrow morning — one of a woeful few I managed to secure. *sigh*

Well, at least the active part will be over. It’s down to waiting until match day after this…

In the meantime… I just finished watching the last few episodes of Season 2 of Battlestar Galactica.
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    I am a Family Physician in Southern Ontario with an overindulgent geeky side!
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