Law in Contemporary Society

View   r7  >  r6  >  r5  >  r4  >  r3  >  r2  ...
MattBurkeIntro 7 - 29 Jun 2015 - Main.MarkDrake
Line: 1 to 1
Changed:
<
<
META TOPICPARENT name="PersonalIntro"
>
>
META TOPICPARENT name="OldIntros"
 

Personal Intro

When I was a teacher, I loved the job, but loathed the profession. The job, impossible to do without loving it, the profession, impossible to love for its brokenness, loathsome were its contradictions. Neither, then, to love nor to loathe, but to strive for lovelessness, for dispassion, for contradictions of the mind, not the heart—save the heart for its own endeavors. Thus, to prove Camus neither right nor wrong, but to bathe my labor in cynical acid, to be not Hamlet (nor was meant to be), but to do, and that alone I want—something I can do.


MattBurkeIntro 6 - 30 Jan 2015 - Main.MattBurke
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="PersonalIntro"

Personal Intro

Changed:
<
<
When I was a teacher, I loved the job, but loathed the profession, and law school was my exodus. Exoduses often lead to wandering. Fine then, I'll consent to wander—to wander a bit in the law. Wordsworth, like a cloud, discovered daffodils on his wander, but I, I will content myself with a profession I don't loathe.
>
>
When I was a teacher, I loved the job, but loathed the profession. The job, impossible to do without loving it, the profession, impossible to love for its brokenness, loathsome were its contradictions. Neither, then, to love nor to loathe, but to strive for lovelessness, for dispassion, for contradictions of the mind, not the heart—save the heart for its own endeavors. Thus, to prove Camus neither right nor wrong, but to bathe my labor in cynical acid, to be not Hamlet (nor was meant to be), but to do, and that alone I want—something I can do.
 -- By MattBurke - 27 Jan 2015 \ No newline at end of file

MattBurkeIntro 5 - 28 Jan 2015 - Main.MattBurke
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="PersonalIntro"

Personal Intro

Changed:
<
<
When I was a teacher, I loved the job, but loathed the profession, and law school was my exodus. Exoduses often lead to wandering. Fine then, I'll consent to wander—to wander a bit in the law. Wordsworth, like a cloud, discovered daffodils on his wander, but I, I will be content with a profession I don't loathe.
>
>
When I was a teacher, I loved the job, but loathed the profession, and law school was my exodus. Exoduses often lead to wandering. Fine then, I'll consent to wander—to wander a bit in the law. Wordsworth, like a cloud, discovered daffodils on his wander, but I, I will content myself with a profession I don't loathe.
 -- By MattBurke - 27 Jan 2015

MattBurkeIntro 4 - 28 Jan 2015 - Main.MattBurke
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="PersonalIntro"

Personal Intro

Deleted:
<
<
<-- I've adjusted the font from default to reflect two "personal" associations which I here assume for "personal" reasons. First, I associate "personal" with informal. Second, I associate serifed fonts with formal and sans-serifed fonts with informal. The deduction from these propositions is evident. -->

I enrolled in law school after being a teacher for five years—an avocation I loved (and one at which I was talented), but a profession I despised. I want to get, and have gotten, from law school something for which law school is sufficient but not necessary: An exodus from education.

But you haven't gotten out of education. You have changed roles, leaving the teaching work to someone else, and—presumably—going back to enjoying learning.

That for which law school is likely necessary and hopefully sufficient: I want to get the ability to conscript the law—that is, to work with and within it to achieve desirable outcomes for myself individually and for society at large in relation to my values.

You are at your most precise in your comment about fonts. (Not your most accurate, however, because given cascading style sheets, you can't really associate anything with a font, because you don't know what font the user is reading with, even if you think you've defined the answer in the HTML you wrote.) You are somewhat less precise but still clear about your desire to stop teaching. But you are entirely imprecise with respect to what you want from law school. (Using the law to achieve desirable outcomes for yourself and your society in relation to your values could not be more generic if it tried, don't you think?)

In my view, the way to improve the draft is to remove the extraneous and concentrate on the central. Try starting with a sentence addressing the question directly and go on from there.

 
Added:
>
>
When I was a teacher, I loved the job, but loathed the profession, and law school was my exodus. Exoduses often lead to wandering. Fine then, I'll consent to wander—to wander a bit in the law. Wordsworth, like a cloud, discovered daffodils on his wander, but I, I will be content with a profession I don't loathe.
 -- By MattBurke - 27 Jan 2015 \ No newline at end of file

MattBurkeIntro 3 - 28 Jan 2015 - Main.EbenMoglen
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="PersonalIntro"

Personal Intro

<-- I've adjusted the font from default to reflect two "personal" associations which I here assume for "personal" reasons. First, I associate "personal" with informal. Second, I associate serifed fonts with formal and sans-serifed fonts with informal. The deduction from these propositions is evident. -->
Line: 6 to 6
 I enrolled in law school after being a teacher for five years—an avocation I loved (and one at which I was talented), but a profession I despised. I want to get, and have gotten, from law school something for which law school is sufficient but not necessary: An exodus from education.
Added:
>
>
But you haven't gotten out of education. You have changed roles, leaving the teaching work to someone else, and—presumably—going back to enjoying learning.

 That for which law school is likely necessary and hopefully sufficient: I want to get the ability to conscript the law—that is, to work with and within it to achieve desirable outcomes for myself individually and for society at large in relation to my values.
Added:
>
>
You are at your most precise in your comment about fonts. (Not your most accurate, however, because given cascading style sheets, you can't really associate anything with a font, because you don't know what font the user is reading with, even if you think you've defined the answer in the HTML you wrote.) You are somewhat less precise but still clear about your desire to stop teaching. But you are entirely imprecise with respect to what you want from law school. (Using the law to achieve desirable outcomes for yourself and your society in relation to your values could not be more generic if it tried, don't you think?)

In my view, the way to improve the draft is to remove the extraneous and concentrate on the central. Try starting with a sentence addressing the question directly and go on from there.

 -- By MattBurke - 27 Jan 2015 \ No newline at end of file

MattBurkeIntro 2 - 27 Jan 2015 - Main.MattBurke
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="PersonalIntro"

Personal Intro

Changed:
<
<
>
>
<-- I've adjusted the font from default to reflect two "personal" associations which I here assume for "personal" reasons. First, I associate "personal" with informal. Second, I associate serifed fonts with formal and sans-serifed fonts with informal. The deduction from these propositions is evident. -->
 

I enrolled in law school after being a teacher for five years—an avocation I loved (and one at which I was talented), but a profession I despised. I want to get, and have gotten, from law school something for which law school is sufficient but not necessary: An exodus from education.


MattBurkeIntro 1 - 27 Jan 2015 - Main.MattBurke
Line: 1 to 1
Added:
>
>
META TOPICPARENT name="PersonalIntro"

Personal Intro

I enrolled in law school after being a teacher for five years—an avocation I loved (and one at which I was talented), but a profession I despised. I want to get, and have gotten, from law school something for which law school is sufficient but not necessary: An exodus from education.

That for which law school is likely necessary and hopefully sufficient: I want to get the ability to conscript the law—that is, to work with and within it to achieve desirable outcomes for myself individually and for society at large in relation to my values.

-- By MattBurke - 27 Jan 2015


Revision 7r7 - 29 Jun 2015 - 21:21:45 - MarkDrake
Revision 6r6 - 30 Jan 2015 - 23:29:48 - MattBurke
Revision 5r5 - 28 Jan 2015 - 22:31:37 - MattBurke
Revision 4r4 - 28 Jan 2015 - 20:26:51 - MattBurke
Revision 3r3 - 28 Jan 2015 - 16:52:05 - EbenMoglen
Revision 2r2 - 27 Jan 2015 - 16:49:36 - MattBurke
Revision 1r1 - 27 Jan 2015 - 04:11:31 - MattBurke
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform.
All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
Syndicate this site RSSATOM