age: 25 (Dec 31, 1986)
MEMBER SINCE: February 2008
occupation: Student; cancer merchant
stats: Out-of-shape ex-rugby forward.
makes me happy: Schafenfreude, Powell's Books, Everyday Music, and Depeche Mode.
into: Too much to list.
heroes: T.E. Lawrence; Albert Camus; Bill Hicks
sign: Capricorn
most humbling moment: Let me put it this way: I was on a lunch date when my mother decided to call via the Dr. Laura show for an "intervention" (or whatever you call her pseudo-help). Goddamn that was awkward.
makes me sad: Slamming my finger in the door--it happens a lot. Come to think of it, it just makes me feel like a complete tool.
gets me hot: Summertime.
i lost my virginity: ....and?
body mods: Some ink here and there and a piercing or two.
One important thinker who exemplified Epictetus' ideal [of living upon philosophical principles and values] was John Locke. Bored with the scholastic curriculum during his studies at Christ Church, Oxford, he spent much of his time as an undergraduate reading French literature. After receiving his B.A. in 1656, Locke plunged into the study of medicine and chemistry, later supervising a surgery to drain an abscess on Lord Ashley's liver (the operation probably saved Ashley's life). Locke saw his Essay Concerning Human Understanding, the locus classicus for modern empiricist philosophy, as providing part of the conceptual framework for the new scientific advances of Boyle, Huygens, "and the incomparable Mr. Newton". His Two Treatises on Government was the single most important text for the constitution of the United States.
(source: "Philosophers in the World", http://www.philrs.iastate.edu/world.shtml)
Someday, I hope I can follow a similar path. Take one thing you love, regardless of your occupation, and make a legacy out of it. Such examples are the only motivation I have for grad school, granted that being a professional philosopher isn't easy these days. I guess professorship would be the next-best thing.
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Labrea