This seems like a good time to have a little thread on the #Discworld#TerryPratchett philosophy of not treating people as things...
1/10
If you google this quote, you'll find it referenced to Carpe Jugulum, first published in 1998, in which Granny Weatherwax says:
'sin, young man, is when you treat people as things. Including yourself. That’s what sin is.’
2/10
But that's not the first mention of the idea. I'm actually not 100% certain (and happy to be corrected), but I think the first time might be Hogfather, first published 1996...
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'Mister Teatime, who saw things differently from other people, and one of the ways that he saw things differently from other people was in seeing other people as things'
It's also explicitly in I Shall Wear Midnight, with sideways mentions in other books such as Nightwatch.
4/10
It was clearly an idea that was much in Terry Pratchett's mind. But what does it mean?
It's easy to think it means big things, such as slavery (Feet of Clay, Snuff) or torture (Small Gods, Nightwatch), or using human lives to gain power (Monstrous Regiment, Jingo & others)
5/10
But I think those things are too obvious, and it's notable that they're not (in the main) the books where it comes up.
No, I think he was trying to remind us about the LITTLE things. The little, everyday carelessnesses that, if we're honest, we all do.
6/10
I mean, I'm never going to enslave someone, or torture someone, or start a war.
But prioritise my own comfort and convenience over someone else's wellbeing? Carelessly forgotten something that was important to someone else? Yeah... I've done those. Honestly, haven't we all?
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That's where it starts: when you get careless with other people.
Terry Pratchett was trying to remind us to watch for that, I think. To notice it in ourselves, to apologise, to learn.
8/10
Because if not checked, NEXT is consciously thinking: 'I don't care about that person; my feelings are more important.'
It gets close to evil once we reach: 'That person doesn't matter.'
And: 'Those people are disposable.'
And finally: 'They aren't even really people.'
9/10
We've all slipped along this slope. The only question is where you stop. Do you strap on the crampons of apology, haul yourself up, & try do better next time? Or do you thrown your arms up & slide down with glee?
Terry Pratchett was saying, I think: be aware of the choice.
10/10
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Edith Clarke was the first woman to be awarded an electrical engineering degree from MIT, and the first woman to be professionally employed as an electrical engineer in the US. She worked on the hydroelectric systems that, to this day, provide hydropower at the West Hoover Dam.
Mary Jackson was a mathematician and aerospace engineer at NACA, later to become NASA. She was NASA's first Black female engineer. She particularly worked in understanding air flow, including thrust and drag forces—important for aircraft design.
((un)fortunately there’s plenty of material, because English is a pain in the neck*)
(*when did it become bum/backside/arse? Surely a pain in the neck is worse…?)
allude: indirectly call attention to something (“she alluded to the events of last Friday”)
elude: escape from something (“they eluded their pursuer”)
Similar-sounding but with two different meanings. Remember to ALLude means to cALL attention.
which reminds me of…
peruse: examine carefully
pursue: chase/continue along
It only takes a small slip for autocorrect to bite you here. Imagine splitting the words –PER USE vs. PUR SUE – and remember someone might purSUE a legal claim where someone else was SUEd.
I’ve been asked to make a post about my twisty-turny career for #YoungScientistNetworking, because not all PhDs end up in academia. So, here goes… 🧵 1/8
I finished my chemistry PhD in 2000, at Nottingham University (home of @periodicvideos!). I briefly contemplated working for Bio-Rad, because I’d done a lot of infrared spec, but instead I joined UoN’s web design team (it was a pretty new thing, then) 2/8
After two years I decided I missed the science. So I left to complete a teacher-training course. I’d go on to teach secondary science, particularly chemistry, on and off for nearly twenty years 3/8