Another Interests Meme
Nov. 3rd, 2005 08:21 pm1. Pick one thing from my interests list that you like, and explain why.
2. Pick one thing from my interests list that surprises you, and explain why.
3. Pick one thing from my interests list that you don't understand, and I'll tell you about it.
4. Tell me one thing that's not on my interests list that you think I might want to add, and why.
2. Pick one thing from my interests list that surprises you, and explain why.
3. Pick one thing from my interests list that you don't understand, and I'll tell you about it.
4. Tell me one thing that's not on my interests list that you think I might want to add, and why.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-04 02:31 am (UTC)2) Dancing surprises me because I like to think of you as a statue of the Thinker, and there is too much motion in dancing for that mental image to apply.
3) Otherkin?
4) Optical Illusions. We seem to have a lot of interests that overlap, and the only thing that seems relevant that you do not have is optical illusions.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-04 05:21 am (UTC)2. Physics surprises me. I remember you saying at one point that you don't grok it very well.
3. Logos?
4. Debate. You do it and talk about it enough, and it a *terrible* pun. ;-)
no subject
Date: 2005-11-04 05:22 am (UTC)2. Honestly, nothing on the list surprised me. There are several things that I don't immediately recognize, but that's not the same thing.
3. "Lager rhythms"? Since I know you well enough to assume that it's not a misspelling of "logorithms"...
4. Given some of the things you've posted from time to time, I would have expected to see some variation on "size acceptance" in your list.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-04 11:26 pm (UTC)2. 'trout fishing in america' is a surprise.
3. Please explain your interest in conspiracy theory. Are you a believer? a skeptic? a scoffer? something else?
4. Juffo-wup
no subject
Date: 2005-11-05 04:12 am (UTC)3) - A quickie definition for those who aren't familiar with the term: Otherkin are people who have what might be termed fantasy body dysmorphic disorder. In the same way that a transsexual person feels that they are in a body of the wrong gender, otherkin feel that they are in a body of the wrong species, where that species (unlike a furry or a therianthrope) exists only in the realm of myth, legend, and story. Most people who post on otherkin message boards are bored fourteen-year-olds who think they're elves, but there are a few of us who merely have phantom limb sensations for limbs that humans cannot possibly have (in my case, wings, horns, a much longer neck, talons, and a tail). Unlike many of the people who are quite serious about being otherkin, for me it's sort of a mental game, a way of thinking about my draconicity without taking it too seriously.
4) Not a visual enough person to find these terribly interesting; sorry. I like the sorts of wordplay that are the verbal/auditory equivalent . . .
no subject
Date: 2005-11-05 04:20 am (UTC)2) I have a very, very good abstract/mathematical understanding of physics (at least, up through what's covered on the AP Physics C exam, and a smattering of modern/particle/relativistic physics). I enjoy it as a subject very much. However, my visual/spatial understanding of physics is cruddy. I can deal with fields point by point, but I can't visualize the whole thing worth crap.
3) The complement of mythos. Logos is logical, deductive understanding and explanation, of the type that underlies science but is expressed through words. Mythos is metaphorical, inductive understanding.
4) He's got a swelled enough head already. ;-)
no subject
Date: 2005-11-05 04:24 am (UTC)4) I'd put it on there if there were a general widely accepted term for it.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-06 01:19 am (UTC)3) A, B, and D, to varying degrees. Conspiracy theories are fun, and building plausible ones is a highly enjoyable intellectual game. And while I haven't yet found a conspiracy theory that I think is a full, accurate description for what's going on, it does appear quite often as if there are strong threads of truth woven through the crazy quilt.
Plus, dropping random bits of conspiracy theory on my kids is highly amusing.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-06 09:59 pm (UTC)