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Skyping with MIT: Trafficking in Global Surrogacy

3/29/11
Skyping w/ Kim Surkan’s class @ MIT on Gender and Technology

introductions: several biological engineers
(=mathematical modeling of biological systems: chemical & mechanical engineering)

Abha Sur’s presentation:
begin by putting technology in a larger context of
nature/prior existing technologies/labor relations/reproduction/daily life--
all work together

joycetheriot's picture

Brain Drain

Brain DrainBrain Drain

jhercher's picture

Economics/Evolution

When PRofessor Dalke mentioned how many things from Paul Krugman's talk relate to our class, it got me thinking about how closely related Darwin's evolutionary theory and Adam Smith's economic theory are.  Smith and Darwin were both scientific writers with a flair for the prosaic.  And, in fact, they even have a tendency to share metaphors.  It's not really that surprising, really.  For example, Darwin's vision of finches evolving through natural selection to suit their environment is extremely similar to how Smith said businesses would mold themselves to a changing market in order to fulfill demand for a product, service, etc.  They even both come up with the same word to describe this phenomenon: niche.  What I like about this is that it und

An Active Mind's picture

Taking Jamison's Advice...

My past few days have been anxiety ridden and I’ve found myself just wanting it to all go away, angry at myself for not trying hard enough to break out of old habits, old ways of thinking.   But when things get rough I’ve been finding myself returning to Jamison’s epilogue in her memoir, An Unquiet Mind. She reminds me to both reflect on what my OCD has taken away from me, but to also be thankful for what it’s given me in return (and maybe, too, how it can enlighten my own work despite how hard it is to meet the demands of the academic structure when going through a rocky time). Jamison strives to accept who she is, what she’s struggled with, and she “no longer makes attempts to exert too much control over essentially uncontrollable forces” (218). Try t

An Active Mind's picture

Autobiographies of Mental Illness

Before starting Kay Redfield Jamison’s An Unquiet Mind, I was interested in memoir’s relation to mental illness. I wondered, are memoirs like Jamison’s successful? Are they able to capture the true nature of the illnesses they discuss? Do they work to change perceptions concerning mental illness?  What are the benefits and detriments of these types of personal narratives?  

An Active Mind's picture

Kay Redfield Jamison's An Unquiet Mind

 

I just finished reading Kay Redfield Jamison’s An Unquiet Mind: A Memoir of Moods and Madness, which describes her long journey with manic-depressive illness. It was a wonderful read and really depicted the roller coaster ride that comes with mental illness—its highs and lows, triumphs and defeats, beauty and despair. Anne and I are particularly interested in talking about An Unquiet Mind because it very much relates to Margaret Price’s Mad at School. Jamison, who works in psychiatry, reveals throughout her book the struggles of coping with her own illness in the academic setting, and more specifically the field of psychology.

rachelr's picture

Necessary dispassion or a cold recount?

"That a man can take pleasure in marching in formation to the strains of a band is enough to make me despise him. He has only been given his big brain by mistake; a backbone was all he needed. This plague-spot of civilization ought to be abolished with all possible speed."

- Albert Einstein

kelliott's picture

Class notes 3/28

 GIST Notes 03/28/2011

First Half of class: Barad and Tian

TiffanyE: Thinking about whether objectivity is possible in the physical world…

Liz: Notion of those who make the classification, how experiments turn out…the agency of people and how they act and what they do plays a critical role

TiffanyE: The standard or measurement in which the world is classified is subjective b/c (like in video) observations and measurements are always subjective based on the person who makes it..so if our classifications are made always by a specific group of people it’s subjective

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