Law in Contemporary Society

PREFACE (297 words)

(Picking up, by popular demand, where the last paper left off ...)

... and everything else went just fine,
UNTIL this paper got assigned ...

Though I didn't start stuck searching for a topic -- I had two in mind --

I didn't know which to put in this thread,
and which I should save for the end:

1. A 1,000-word paper:

    WHICH, because I am a disorganized writer, would fall JUST SHORT of depicting how I see the world
2. A picture (but drawn by me) :
    WHICH, because I am a terrible artist, would be worth a mere 474 words; BUT WHICH, when preceded by the following 230-word CAPTION, would perfectly explain how I see the world; BUT WHICH, when following this 297-word PREFACE, would fall JUST OVER the 1000-word limit.

At first, I blamed whoever it was who gave me this Hobson's Choice (i.e. a Catch-22, but whose options are equally bad rather than just plain equal); for

We knew from Day One
We'd be ranked by uniform
Not in spite of it.
But eventually I recognized that I was just behaving like Buridan's Ass. Which recognition empowered me to repeat exactly that magic I did in my first paper. You guessed it -- I took a hoofstep!

(Which is NOT a nonsense word, dummy: from this context, you can see that it means, e.g., CALCULATING THAT the penalty I would incur, by going one word over the 1,000-word limit, would be SMALLER than the penalty I would incur by writing another nonsensical paper.)

Upon which result I dedicated the remaining space to explaining my



collage.



CAPTION (230 words)

Title: Centrifightal Forces Must Meet Somewhere

(Plato = Freud + Socrates)

Explanation: In order to define the place and time distinguishing a Centrifugal from a Centripetal force,

1) Find the center.

  • e.g., that coordinate at which an interpreter of dreams witnesses Socrates dreaming up alibis for that strange attraction of his --
    • Young Sigmund: Socrates, why are you attracted to young boys?
    • Socrates: The truth is just the opposite -- I'm satisfying my desires with precisely those people that I find UNATTRACTIVE!
    • Sigmund: Why?
    • Socrates: ... so that I can be SURE that what attracted me to them, was not their great beauty, but their great sense of justice. I'm controlling a variable.
    • Sigmund: Which variable?
    • Socrates: Here's the truth: I'm controlling beauty, in order to figure out justice.
    • Sigmund: How do you distinguish them?
    • Socrates: I prefer justice to beauty; Girls are Beautiful and Boys are Just; therefore, justice is a function of the boy I happen to be having a ... dialogue with.
    • Sigmund: Is that a dialogue in your pocket, Socrates?
    • Socrates: Yes, the Muse recited it to me last night, and I wrote it down. We could read it together, if you'd like ...
    • Sigmund: Socrates, you're creeping the hell out of me!

2) Define as "centrifugal," that which follows.

 

 

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r8 - 29 Mar 2008 - 01:46:35 - AndrewGradman
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