andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2024-03-15 12:00 pm
simont: A picture of me in 2016 (Default)

[personal profile] simont 2024-03-15 12:09 pm (UTC)(link)
#10's title made me think "yes, that seems like exactly the right collective noun".
calimac: (Default)

[personal profile] calimac 2024-03-15 03:30 pm (UTC)(link)
5) says "Calling a philosopher like Butler impenetrable is a bit like criticising a gym class for being fatiguing or dismissing a children’s book for being accessible. If you’re going to read a post-structuralist like Butler, you are likely to be doing so because you want to be challenged in your thinking."

The second sentence does not follow from the first. Challenging the reader's thinking does not require impenetrable writing; rather, the impenetrability of the prose is likelier to stand in the way of the ideas penetrating the reader's mind (see what I did there?).

No. 6

[personal profile] anna_wing 2024-03-16 10:06 am (UTC)(link)
At the individual level this could presumably be resolved by eating more vegetables. I doubt if this is a problem in the majority of the global urban population, since vegetables are still much cheaper than meat pretty much everywhere.