Where Every Scroll is a New Adventure
Okay, I need to talk about this.
I am currently a history student studying British politics in the last half of the 20th century, and, in this course, you learn how to analyse a source. A source. This means a photograph, newspaper, extract of a speech, etc. From that time period.
I’m British myself, so this is an A-Level course (a specialisation where you choose 3/4 subjects to study over 2 years), so you’d think they’d be fairly serious about this kind of stuff.
Except, after learning about a reaction to problems in Ireland, we were given a source, and the preface from our professor was that this source, was AI generated.
As in they AI generated something for us to learn and extrapolate information from.
They passed off an AI source as a genuine thing in order to manipulate the information we would learn from it.
React to this how you will, but, personally, I think that is fucking dangerous.
Google doc is here
Discord is here
(If the google doc link doesn’t work for you, try joining the discord server; it should let you in from there, or otherwise let you know if the doc is temporarily down for maintenance.
If the discord link doesn’t work, feel free to hit me up and I’ll try to connect you.)
In the likely event that this might be helpful to students around the world - so we know that most scholarly articles have to be paid for to access.
I’m not sure if you know this life hack, but the website Sci-Hub unlocks most of them, you just paste the link to the article and chances are it’ll be available to download.
I just figured I’d share this, because I know it’s such a pain when you find a promising article and it’s not free. If this helps a single person then my work here is done.
Délivrer les sources, célébrer les silences et leur ouvrir les ailes, crier la vie muette, timide, désarmée, ameuter les rêves, marcher dans le fil du jour, maintenir le cœur sur le cadran solaire, divulguer l'amitié, créer dans la torsion de l'être, ravir le secret vital.
-Colette Nys-Mazure
Sources: SigningSavvy, Lifeprint, ASLDeafined
[Image ID:
The sign for Coffee in American Sign Language. Both hands in S handshape, palms facing signer, are stacked with dominant hand on top moving in a circular motion. Movement is illustrated by arms that are translucent blue, purple, and pink in different stages of the sign. Background is white
End ID]
That's the cruel reality of our times. You can't trust anything you read until you compare it with more than 3 sources.
“If you don’t read the newspaper, you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper, you are misinformed.”
— Mark Twain (via historical-nonfiction)
I promised to share the sources that inspired my Oswald Cobblepot nail art, so here they are. The step-by-step penguin nails came from here: http://confettiavenue.com/penguin-nail-art/
(The tutorial there says to use a ‘dotting tool’, but I just brushed polish onto the end of a toothpick. To do the stripes and the stem of the umbrella, I brushed up the side of the toothpick.)
The purple umbrella nails were both from pinterest:
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/453808099932669718/
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/453808099932638801
(Also, in case you missed my original post with my Oswald nails, here it is: https://alfhildr-the-word-weaver.tumblr.com/post/180302544865/so-i-did-some-oswald-cobblepot-inspired-nail-art )