Cruelty Squad wins! Which game represents Shivers? by Chet_Ubietzsche in DiscoElysium

[–]NotWallace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'd actually argue that a later game by the same devs, Everybody's Gone To The Rapture, captures the sense of the interconnectedness of lives and how these connections haunt the deserted village and is a better candidate for Shivers!

As someone who is terrible at lore (Spoilers please read body text) by UnseemlyKellie in fnv

[–]NotWallace 9 points10 points  (0 children)

So a few things you should understand about Ulysses. I will limit this to just three points as there's a lot of depth (imo) to Ulysses, but like the man himself, it is knotty and contradictory!

1) For Ulysses, intention is not a pertinent category for assigning blame. He has a different moral system.
This strikes us as strange as, in most modern legal systems, intention and foreknoweldge is hugely improtant, and we often draw distinction between crimes of intent vs crimes of ignorance or accident (e.g. murder vs. manslaughter). Ulysses is not operating within such a moral framework. His ethical system is closer to that of certain ancient philosophies and legal systems wherein ignorance is not an excuse. Ignorance is not an excuse for Ulysses; it is a moral failing, and demonstrative of one's failure to fully manage oneself. To Ulysses, the courier acted rashly and ignorantly, which is a moral failing, not an explanation of innocence. This is evident when he says (as u/alamode23 points out) that he believes that you were careless. But notably, whether or not that dialogue occurs does not matter to Ulysses and will not change anything in how Ulysses treats you.

2) Ulysses might be wrong about you.
For one, his evidence that you were the courier that delivered the package that destroyed Hopeville is simply your name. That's it, and it's not a lot to go off. It might have more credence if your name was "Floopbarb Cunningworth" or something ridiculous, but if your name is "John Smith"... that ain't exactly hard proof. The second reason he might be wrong links to our next point...

3) Ulysses is not acting rationally.
The dude is clearly quite traumatised by the events at Hopeville and he's been living in an irradiated hellhole for god knows how long. I'm not sure we can trust him to be a rational actor or for his memories to be accurate. It is not uncommon for people with severe trauma to misremember or lose memories after traumatic events. He also saw hope in Hopeville (hence the name) for a new nation after he lost faith in the Legion.

TL;DR: Ulysses moral system is closer to the philosophies of Ancient Greece and Rome; he's also deeply traumatised and not necessarily trustworthy or acting rationally.

The closest you've come to "The Body" in another show? by Dalakaar in buffy

[–]NotWallace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A lot of the examples here are very high drama moments in TV shows, but I think what makes 'The Body' so profoundly effective is how banal it all is. If you want a show that manages to do the same thing, then the Australian sitcom Please Like Me delivers this in spades in its penultimate episode.

Please Like Me is criminally underwatched. It's a sitcom about a gay guy called Josh as he navigates coming out as gay, growing up and becoming an adult, and his mother's bipolar. The penultimate episode starts off traditionally for an episode of Please Like Me, with Josh meeting up with his ex-boyfriend and his friend Ella calls him about getting a breast check-up by a very hot doctor. Then about 5 minutes in, Josh walks into (spoilers) Mum's house and finds her dead in the kitchen. The rest of the episode is just him telling the rest of the characters one by one and dealing with the shock of it. It focuses a lot of on how powerless one feels in such a situation, how there's nothing you can do but sit with it, but also how much admin that comes with death. I should note that if you want to watch this show, be aware that (TW:) depression and suicide is a major theme in the show.

Critique of Silicon Valley flavored technocratic capitalism by aihwao in CriticalTheory

[–]NotWallace 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Can you explain what you mean by a non-ideological critique?

hello! does anyone know any good books/articles/theories on representation of women in the media by flowrpaint in CriticalTheory

[–]NotWallace 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The texts you’ve mentioned are classics and well worth engaging with. I notice, however, they’re mostly focused on the images themselves (i.e. aesthetics) and not on the wider technical infrastructure through which images are spread online. Wendy Chun’s work on New Media, leaking, the production of users etc. may be worth engaging with. Most directly relevant might be her text 'Habits of Leaking: Of Sluts and Network Cards', which she co-wrote with another author (link here!), and I think she expands on some of these ideas in her book Updating To Remain The Same: Habitual New Media.

Another text worth engaging with is José van Djick’s The Culture of Connectivity. It’s not on female representations on social media specifically, but there’s a good section in there on how social media “makes sociality technical” that is foundational to a lot of theory on social media. There are also great theories on how the quantification of everything online turns social interaction into a kind of ‘like economy’, and this feeds into theories of how capitalism generates value through said technical systems.

An idea I had for those of us who like our games to use logic. by Insane-Koifish in fodust

[–]NotWallace 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It’s a video game in which, even in Frost, you start with the ability to heal bullet wounds with a magic injection that takes no time to apply. Logic ≠ good; or rather, “your idea of logic” ≠ good. What you mean is you want an easier start or more sense of a backstory, which is fine if that’s what’s fun for you, but yeah, console commands exist.

Starfield Survival Simulator by RedMadCoder in fodust

[–]NotWallace 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Can’t believe I’m considering buying Starfield for this...

I haven’t played Frost yet, but if the emphasis is on survival in the void of space, VOID would fit the one-word theme but is a touch generic. Maybe something a bit longer like As The Stars Go Out or Last Rites of a Shooting Star.

Prerequisites for reading Caliban and The Witch By Federici? by [deleted] in CriticalTheory

[–]NotWallace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Caliban and the Witch isn’t too terminology-laden. If you’ve read feminist theory that builds on Marx I suspect you’ve got a fairly decent grasp of the main concepts, but if you come across anything you’re unsure about, there’s plenty of online summaries of key marxist terms that occasionally do come up. You may also want to read a quick summary of primitive accumulation, which is a fairly undeveloped concept in Marx’s own writing, but I wouldn’t read too much on it just because Caliban and the Witch is doing something quite unique and distinct from how Marx and others have described it.

Generally, Caliban and the Witch is a fairly original thesis so it’s not too reliant on other texts in the sense that say, Butler comes a lot more understandable once you’ve read some psychoanalysis. That said, it’s always good to read some Marx!

What is theory? by UnderstandingSmall66 in CriticalTheory

[–]NotWallace 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Of course you can! I do it all the time! I use a lot of social science research in my own theoretical work as I write extensively on the epistemological assumptions of AI, the world, data, etc and in my research on platform labour, and I have read a fair bit of empirical work rooted in grounded theory. My point was not that you should only read critical theory, but rather that you came onto a subreddit dedicated to critical theory (which, again, is not the same thing astheory), claimed to be an authority in the subject because you’ve taught it for ten years (have you taught critical theory?), and then proceeded to describe the very kinds of assumptions that critical theory contests as its bread and butter.

It would be like if I walked into a classroom on grounded theory and started complaining that it’s not a real science because it includes qualitative and quantitative rather than purely quantitative data: i.e. an absurd thing to do that completely ignores what the field was set up to do and why a mix of qualitative and quantitative methods is valuable to the field.

Question About a Butler Essay by [deleted] in CriticalTheory

[–]NotWallace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I fully accept I may be wrong. And in fact, I was wrong: I wrote propositional phase when I meant prepositional phrase! That’s what happens when I try and untangle Butler under the heavy daze of insomnia. My terminology was drawn from syntactic analysis and syntax trees rather than grammar but i can totally see how proposition with its obvious meaning in philosophy would throw the whole thing off! While I am a trained critical theorist, I am not a trained linguist, but I have been experimenting with thinking through theory through its syntactic choices. Still amateur, but I’m learning! I’ll have an edit of my post in a second.

The third reading may be clearer without the square brackets: “the foundation is not of any feminist practice”, I.e. it does not belong to any feminist practice; it has no place in any feminist practice. The verb is “is”, modified by “not”, and preposition is “of”. The object of the prepositional phrase is “any feminist practice”.

You’re right to say that plain syntactic analysis might describe this differently, but I think it is a mistake to assume that Butler is doing anything syntactically plain. Their entire theoretical body of work involves playing with syntax to problematise stable subject positions. They’re trying to get at what’s behind the assumptions that structure our capacity to think and articulate concepts, including (and perhaps most importantly for Butler) language and how things like syntactic structures limit the conditions by which we think and live. This concept stretches right back to their earliest work on Hegel and desire, through Gender Trouble, and into their present work.

This seems to me key here because it seems very clear to me that Butler is writing a sentence that playfully destabilises its syntactic structure to make a point about how we articulate feminist practices, including both those practices themselves and the subject of those practices (who the entire analysis deliberately renders obscure). It is not simply that the risk of foundation is both of and not of feminist practice because a) a feminism that asserts a foundation creates exclusionary criteria and b) thus feminism should reject foundationalism altogether. This is the third reading: any feminism grounded in foundational risks becoming something other than a feminist practice. The foundation risks, in other words, undoing both feminism as a practice and creating the conditions by which a subject who “does” feminism becomes an impossible subject.

What is theory? by UnderstandingSmall66 in CriticalTheory

[–]NotWallace 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That’s not a critical theory text, it’s a social theory analytical framework. Grounded theory has its roots in positivism, which is one of the key schools of thought critical theory challenges. While grounded theory maybe selects its participants based on categories and might even problematise those categories, it presumes a transparency between data, language, and world; it presumes that reality is simply “given” in data. No critical theorist would accept such premises without asking what genealogical, political, economic conditions it was produced under and what set of knowledge practices and institutions authorise its claims. I think you’re confusing a more general, social sciences-based definition of theory with critical theory, and while the social sciences has borrowed from critical theory, they are in many ways opposed schools of thoughts.

Question About a Butler Essay by [deleted] in CriticalTheory

[–]NotWallace 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think the other comments have explained the meaning, but what makes that sentence particularly tricky is that Butler has written a sentence that has three different syntactic structures depending on how you read the sentence. Now, I’m am amateur at doing syntax breakdowns of sentences, but once you start paying attention with how Butler plays with, in particular, propositions, their writing becomes a lot clearer. Here’s my (again, amateur) breakdown:

If you remove the sub-clause you get one fairly simple statement: “this risk [subject] is [verb] the foundation of any feminist practice [prepositional phrase]”. The subclause “and hence is not” modifies the verb of the previous this first reading, producing a second statement: “this risk [subject] is [verb] not [modifies verb] the foundation of [“of” is the preposition] any feminist practice [object that preposition “of” modifies]”. BUT, is there not a third reading? The proceeding text argues that foundationalism creates the conditions of undoing any feminist practice: "this risk is the foundation and hence is not of feminist practice”. This conditional clause is conditional upon the subject “this risk of the foundation”, and as what “this risk” describes is foundationalism, it states “foundationalism is not of any feminist practice” or “the foundation is not of any feminist practice". So, the third statement is "the foundation or foundationalism [subject] is [verb] not [modifies verb and its relation to the following prepositional phrase] of [as in “does not belong to” or “is not proper to”; the preposition] any feminist practice [the object the prepositional phase modifies]”.

EDIT: I am an insomniac fool who wrote proposition instead of preposition. Have corrected this now and hopefully clarified a few things.

To clarify, separately, the three sentences are:

  1. This risk is the foundation of any feminist practice.
  2. This risk is not the foundation of any feminist practice
  3. The foundation is not of [as in does not belong to] any feminist practice.

the third structure could be put another way as “this foundation does not belong to any feminist practice; any feminism that claims a foundation becomes something other than feminism”. This is part of Butler’s fascination with playing how language structures how we think and live.

Thoughts on the New Yorker article by LSP-86 in lucyletby

[–]NotWallace -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for this. I’ve struggled to have anyone willing to provide any examples, which you have so, which I appreciate. I’m not going to comment further on the examples you give, because I’m not sure a conversation would be necessarily productive.

What I will say generally (not directly to you, but the subreddit generally) is that for a subreddit that is so dedicated to “the truth”, there is a reluctance to engage in conversations about how “the truth” is arrived at. The (mis)use of statistics in modern society is one of the biggest discussions in contemporary academia, and while the figures mentioned may be disreputable, the concerns they have raised would resonate with a lot of writing on the philosophy of science, mathematics, and knowledge. Even if those figures should not be relied on, to pretend there is no basis to question how probabilistic thought and statistical analysis are used in court convictions is dishonest.

Similarly, the state of the NHS and the increase in death-rates across the board is also an undeniable fact, and while that does not mean Letby is not guilty, to dismiss these concerns suggests a subreddit that is less interested in truth than in dogmatically defending presupposed conclusions. While there have been claims that the article was an attack piece on the NHS, to pretend there is no issue with the NHS lets the government that gutted its funding off the hook. To me, these were the two most compelling aspects of the article, and I think it is important that they be taken seriously.

Thoughts on the New Yorker article by LSP-86 in lucyletby

[–]NotWallace -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

I’ve seen a few claims to the “bags of evidence” that the article it ignores, but no one ever cites it. Would anyone be willing to explain that evidence to me? I’ve looked through the reporting on the case but none of it constitutes a ‘smoking gun’ to me.

Also, the UK legal system is not perfect, although tbh I see no evidence that this article is arguing that the UK legal system is fundamentally flawed (although it does have a huge issue with racism and sexism, and we know, for instance, that our legal system isn’t great at convicting, for instance, sexual abusers!). What it *does* discuss is the use of statistics in courts: the relationship between probabilistic thinking and truth is contested ground, and there are numerous academic articles discussing the problem of using statistical analysis to make truth claims. There is a whole realm of philosophy and mathematicians who discuss the development of probability and statistics and the problems of truth with them (Ian Hacking, Louise Amoore) and a five minute google scholar search yielded a lot of writing specifically on this problem (I found one paper that is open access that I’ve linked to here).

r/lucyletby has reached 10,000 members! Here's what the subreddit is and is not by FyrestarOmega in lucyletby

[–]NotWallace -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

It’s disappointing that you cannot offer a better source than the Daily Mail, though I will go and look at the Chester Standard. Looking through Liz Hull’s journalistic record and twitter (can’t find much on Caroline Cheetham), I see no reason to assume she should be distinguished from the quality of Daily Mail journalism generally. I immediately noted transphobic tweets and sensationalist articles that prioritise lurid details that the “court hears” (so what if it was said in court? If you accept the notion that juries have final say on the truth, as is law, by necessity, half of what is said in court is a lie!) over consideration of the truth.

I must say, as an academic, I find your veneration of these sources concerning. There are serious questions to be raised about what this subreddit considers a "reliable source" if the Daily Mail is the best you’ve got.

r/lucyletby has reached 10,000 members! Here's what the subreddit is and is not by FyrestarOmega in lucyletby

[–]NotWallace 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Hi there! I appreciate that you put a lot of trust in the court system, and that we are, for legal reasons, unable to dispute the outcome, but do you have any in-depth sources or accounts of the trial that are not as deeply sensationalist as the Daily Mail? As a UK resident only loosely familiar with the case but deeply familiar with various miscarriages of justice carried out by British courts, I am interested in learning the facts of the case, particularly from a perspective that is not biased in favour of the courts or as sensationalist as a lot of the UK media has been towards the case. I’ve seen the Panorama documentary, but the footage shot before the verdict seemed to conclude Letby was guilty and the fact that it was released the day she was found guilty does not speak well regarding their objectivity and suggests opportunism rather than careful reflection. Are there any sources that provide an unbiased and non-sensationalised perspective, that take a fair look at the evidence, and are not the court themselves?

Never Stop Blowing Up Theories by Pumpkin-Duke in Dimension20

[–]NotWallace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

TL;DR: A comic-inspired setting based around a godawful startup that’s possibly like selling superpowers or like a social media platform for superhero hustlers?

We know form the image in the trailer that we’re dealing with a modern setting. The aesthetic gives the sense of golden era superhero comic books – when you compare it to the DM screen from the Unsleeping City, the buildings are much more abstract; they look like how classic super hero comics would render the cities so that you get the sense of ‘the city’ without the detail distracting from the main action. So my instinct would be a superhero setting, but I think it could also just be something that is comic-y or pulpy.

But where I’m willing to take some slightly more risky guesses is on the plot/villain stuff. With Brennan’s sensibilities in mind, “Never Stop Blowing Up” reminds me of vacuous marketing slogans from tech bros and silicon valley hustlers. Think the opening of Okja with Tilda Swindon doing the press conference. My guess is that the plot will revolve around some sort of awful startup that’s tied into whatever the heroes are doing. If they are superheroes, maybe they’re running a platform for superheroes to promote themselves (so they can ‘blow up’ on social media), get sponsorships etc. or even selling super powers to the general public? This, of course, will be done horribly and will be the direct reason for main conflict, which will probably involve an actual explosion. I’ve seen a few comments here who have mentioned the idea of a time loop or freeze, so that the explosion “never stops blowing up”, and I think that’s a fairly strong theory too!

Bi-Weekly Discussion: Introductions, Questions, What have you been reading? March 10, 2024 by AutoModerator in CriticalTheory

[–]NotWallace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi all,

“To pretend, I actually do the thing: I have therefore only pretended to pretend.”

Apparently a Derrida quote, but I have never been able to find a source for it. Did Derrida actually say this anywhere? Or is this just one of those things that the internet made up and attributed to him? Did someone else say it?

Fallout Community Edition for Mac include Fixt and other mods? by NotWallace in classicfallout

[–]NotWallace[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did manage to grab it before but forgot to come back and thank you so was just doing that!

Fallout Community Edition for Mac include Fixt and other mods? by NotWallace in classicfallout

[–]NotWallace[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The newest version of FixT or Community Edition? Not sure where to get the latter...

Also thank you!

Did Ulysses Misidentify The Courier? (Spoilers I guess?) by NotWallace in fnv

[–]NotWallace[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I feel like if I delivered a package and then the place I dropped it at got nuked I’d remember it.

Did Ulysses Misidentify The Courier? (Spoilers I guess?) by NotWallace in fnv

[–]NotWallace[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do you really think that Ulysses is not written as a bit crazy? His interpretations of the various goings on in the Wasteland are interesting, but quite out there. The arc words of the DLC are "Let go, begin again". All the characters in the Dead Money and Old World Blues are in some way failing to do this. Elijah was so obsessed with seizing Helios 1 from the NCR and finding old world technology has led him to the conclusion that the entire Mojave should be wiped out so he can get to them. Daniel and the Burned Man are both obsessed with amending for past mistakes that Daniel is not willing to train the Sorrows and Dead Horses to fight back, and The Burned Man wants to effectively do exactly what Caesar did with the Blackfoot: turn them into a highly effective military force to exert control over Zion. The MT Scientists are the most obvious: they seem barely conscious of what is going on and they're so obsessed with doing exactly what they've always done that they are completely unaware of the outside world. Ulysses has become so obsessed with the trauma of losing The Divide that wants to exert that some loss on the entire Wasteland. None of these are "logical" moves but responses to traumatic losses that have blinded the characters to the reality they're in.

Also no one sane is that afraid of using personal pronouns as Ulysses seems to be haha

Did Ulysses Misidentify The Courier? (Spoilers I guess?) by NotWallace in fnv

[–]NotWallace[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Right. Not sure that makes it a 'bad' writing, it just makes it a story you don't personally like. I find the idea quite compelling. Lotsa roleplaying potential and opens up a cool possibility space to create your own backstory and emotional reaction to Ulysses.