Helen De Cruz Profile picture
Philosopher writing on science, religion, SFF, @SFWA, Codex, lute videos, Wonderstruck forthc. w @PrincetonUP https://t.co/D09RfzT6dl Any pronouns
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Apr 11 4 tweets 1 min read
We all know we are mortal. It's in the classic syllogism where all men/humans are mortal and Socrates is a man so...
Yet we also think of ourselves as practically immortal.
What happens then if you find yourself in a situation where you might not live? How does it change you? that's where I had been thinking of. at some point things looked really bleak with 20% survival over 5 yrs. Then it considerably looked better. Now, it might look better or not I am waiting. It is psychologically hard. Very difficult.
Mar 6 13 tweets 3 min read
One more covid thread. I have a (serious) personal health situation.
I do link it to my prior covid infection.
So: We often see the choice presented as follows: just accept this new level of illness OR restrictive, politically unpopular measures
But this is not the choice 1/ This presentation of choices implies that it is sustainable to live with covid. That's the choice we made. But I think we see mounting evidence that at a population level this choice is not sustainable. 2/
Mar 4 9 tweets 2 min read
Things we said we would fix back in 2020, but didn't bother to when we went back to normal:

1/ essential workers seem pretty essential for the well functioning of our society. They need better pay, better working conditions, paid leave and things like that. 2/ School inequality: Some schools struggle to provide any form of education because kids have no stable internet connection, are in a car close to a place that has WiFi trying to log into google classroom. Let's address that inequality and invest in schools and teachers!
Mar 1 8 tweets 2 min read
I don't understand academics. Our brain = our bread and butter. Without it properly functioning, we cannot work.
We read peer reviewed lit and trust it. That lit says: covid = bad for brain.Really bad!
Yet no mitigation in our conferences or classrooms.
Our workplaces are unsafe. So, what's going on?
A couple of thoughts:
1/ Most academics don't know about this. I am not sure this is true. In any case, I try to inform. There is really a lot of peer-reviewed lit out there, some of which comes in mainstream press. When did we stop following the science?
Feb 28 11 tweets 3 min read
I saw someone today whom I had not seen since September. We were at a memorial service. It was packed. I was one of two people wearing a mask then. She then asked me "What's wrong, are you not feeling well?"
I said, "No, I just protect myself against covid."
So now we spoke 1/ She told me how she got covid shortly after then and was so, so tired for many months. How she had difficulties concentrating and getting anything done.
She said "I think you are wise to still protect yourself against covid, I didn't know it would be this bad." 2/
Jan 23 15 tweets 3 min read
"people used to live life to the fullest when the plague and smallpox were going around," is a minimizing argument that's used against people who, in spite of public health and governments having given up, continue to protect themselves. Here's why it doesn't work: 1/ I think it seriously underestimates how horrible it was/is to live in times where infectious disease goes rampant and can come for your children, your middle-aged parents, and of course you. Hence Jane Austen "Are your parents well" before convo could even begin 2/
Jan 22 16 tweets 3 min read
Many academics I know, and in general people experienced collective trauma in 2020-2021. They were very eager to return to normal and leave it all behind. Even on the height of it, they were anticipating this return to normal. So, is it a surprise that they went for it? Even as the hoped-for herd immunity, hybrid immunity, exit waves (notice how the minimizers have quietly dropped exit waves, at some point even they realized how ridiculous it was) did not end the fact that we're still in a pandemic and a mass disabling event.
Jan 10 13 tweets 3 min read
Gonna break my X fast for this one since I find it important.
We tenured faculty are still actively helping the destruction of academia, and not doing much in the way of helping to save, let alone reform and improve, the structures that make our scholarly work possible. /1 E.g. cosplaying Harvard's academic integrity committee in the case of Claudine Gay. We *know* why the plagiarism stuff came up. Rufo even put the playbook on WSJ. Yet white fellow philosophers seemed eager to lift quotes from Free Beacon, "Much as it pains me, it's plagiarism" 2/
Jan 5 15 tweets 4 min read
Long covid is trending once again on Twitter/X. How many people do you know with long covid? You can expect that number to grow in the next months. If you don't have long covid, you might get it in a future bout w the virus. That's bc you have been sacrificed for political gain. You might think you don't need to worry because your health is great and only the vulnerable need to worry. But unfortunately, everyone is potentially vulnerable. The people I know who got long covid were in excellent health before.
Sep 27, 2023 6 tweets 2 min read
The situation of Isabel Fall (you can find easily what happened if you do not know) is one case that keeps on being at the back of my mind when I say we should exercise restraint when we are tempted to pile on. A couple of (probably controversial) thoughts on pile-ons 1/ I understand why this dynamic happens. Often, at least in philosophy, the pile on is an exasperated response to something that is systematically deeply wrong in our discipline, that angers us, and we want to vent. The writer of the pile-on has often no idea 2/
Sep 3, 2023 30 tweets 8 min read
I've read this book by Lahontan (Dialogues de Mr le Baron de Lahontan et d'un sauvage (1704) that Graeber and Wengrow (Dawn of Everything) discuss as being foundational to the Enlightenment. Image I'm very intrigued by this book. I think Graeber and Wengrow are right to argue there is a clear influence of Indigenous thought in western philosophy, notably the notion of freedom but also critiques of religion etc. 2/
Aug 26, 2023 13 tweets 3 min read
I am still mulling over the fact that
1. If my platform had been smaller and
2. If I didn't have people advocating for me
I'd still be banned from this site without any explanation on their part of what terms I violated, and without possibility of appeal.
This is unacceptable. Without a clear policy in place of what is and isn't acceptable speech in a platform, you cannot uphold freedom of speech/thought and the platform just becomes subject to the whims and preferences of its owner, as we've seen
Aug 6, 2023 12 tweets 3 min read
Seeing people get covid again and consoling themselves with "It's inevitable now" and "WAYGD, mask forever?" -- even if you don't like masking, this defeatist attitude is socially engineered and lets governments get away with not implementing simple interventions 1/ It's nbd to mask in situations where social cost (which is partly bc of anti-mask attitudes) are low and chance of infection is high, e.g., airports, airplanes. It's not by masking there you miss out on your best life or whatever. Public health messaging could be better. 2/
Jul 28, 2023 26 tweets 5 min read
Academic book publishing: some tips (not exhaustive!)
1/ If you're early in the project, it's a good idea to talk to an editor to get a sense of what they're looking for. Editors are experts w a good sense of what a good book-length project looks like & help shape proposal 2/ Getting an advance contract based on your proposal is nice. Be aware though it will still need to clear a peer review, for academic presses such as Oxford, Princeton, etc green light of the delegates of the press. This is a substantive step (cf recent discussion)
Jul 27, 2023 29 tweets 6 min read
I'm reading Francis Van Den Enden (1602 – 1674), a Dutch utopian thinker and political philosopher, a radical egalitarian (inc gender egalitarianism) and proponent of democracy.
He also has a remarkable life story. Kort verhaal van Nieuw Nederlants (1662) Being kicked out by the Jesuits for excessive interest in women (apparently) he started a school on the Singel in Amsterdam, where you can learn Latin by speaking it. He staged plays (also women were allowed to partake, this scandalized the Calvinists) 2/
Jul 9, 2023 16 tweets 4 min read
How do you publish a book with scandalous, shocking ideas and remain anonymous?
An interesting case is Robert Chambers' Vestiges (1844), an evolutionary book published 15 years before Darwin's Origin of Species. 1/ Vestiges presents an early transmutationist (proto-evolutionary theory that synthesized and innovated upon ideas by e.g., Hutton on deep time that already existed in the 18th century. Unique for transmutation unlike other biological theories was the idea that species evolve 2/
Jun 30, 2023 5 tweets 2 min read
I'm not an American. So I don't quite see how counterfactually the US would've been different if not for Biden... we now have
* massive loss of reproductive rights
* massive encouragement of fossil fuel extraction
* loss of affirmative action (except for wealthy white kids) 1/ * the Trump strategy of dealing with covid (basically let's pretend it doesn't exist). Or wait, with Trump there was state-funded research into pharmaceuticals and vaccines
And there's more. I may be uncharitable, but what am I missing? Why do people think Biden is so great?
Jun 15, 2023 18 tweets 5 min read
I find it, at this point in my life, very liberating to think of myself, nature, and everything, else in non-teleological terms. There is not one way to be, but a multiplicity of ways. For an individual (given their situation etc) there are better and worse ways 1/ But that doesn't mean that we have a set teleological endpoint. I particularly resist the idea of longtermists that @xriskology here points out, which is rooted in debunked evolutionary (Spencerian) thinking that humans need to progress to some point 2/
salon.com/2023/06/11/ai-…
Jun 14, 2023 13 tweets 3 min read
Reading Jürgen Naess (1977) on Spinoza and ecology, "No great philosopher has so much to offer in the way of clarification and articulation of basic ecological attitudes as Baruch Spinoza." 1/ Naess sets out some hypothetical connections btwn spinozism and ecological thought. At a high level, there is the intimate relationship between ethics and metaphysics (note, a point Deleuze makes a lot, that the Ethics is not called "the Metaphysics") 2/
Jun 14, 2023 4 tweets 1 min read
I saw an indigo bunting today!
I walk about 2 hours in the forest daily, it has to do with my spouse's physio/revalidation after injury... I must say daily forest walks + Spinoza is a very calm but very good summer break so far. My son is also seeing so much wildlife Indigo buntings are super-interesting birds because of their migratory patterns. In the 1960s, Stephen Emlen (ethologist) could demonstrate they learn a star compass as nestlings and they use that compass to migrate as adults--
jstor.org/stable/4083330…
Jun 13, 2023 5 tweets 2 min read
This piece on hybrid immunity (did you ever hear about it before covid? Think about it) with @arijitchakrav is so good. It's about how even frequent vaccination was abandoned due to laziness and indolence in favor of the dangerous "infection booster" strategy. Link in next 1/2 “Hybrid immunity”: rebrandi... Piece here. Worth reading in its entirety. You know I've made mostly peace with permanent reinfection (and brain damage, shorter life span etc etc) and I take refuge in philosophy, beautiful things, but then sometimes I get SO ANGRY and upset about it all
wsws.org/en/articles/20…