martes, 20 de noviembre de 2012

Emotion

For me this was one of the most interesting ways of knowledge; Emotion. It is such a big concept.

The lecture started and we started debating how to be rational and how to be emotional are somehow the opposite. We either think of something with our emotions or with our rational way of seeing things. Diana made a great example of this, in love, we sometimes have to decide if we either go rational (thinking with our barin) or emotional (normally reffered as to the heart). For me, the emotional way of knowledge is the strongest, as we have almost no control over it, it somehow controls us.

The lecture procedeed and we started talking about a very shocking case,about a guy named Phineas Gage. In an accident he got hit by a tamping iron that went through his head, doing serious neurological damage. The curious thing about this is that Mr. Gage did not died, but he only suffered a personality change and some rational issues. This personality change involved a total lack of emotions. With no emotions it is impossible to communicate. I believe for you to hold a conversation, you need to know that when you tell something you expect an emotional reaction, or else why would you tell the story?
Here is the case:
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/Phineas-Gage-Neurosciences-Most-Famous-Patient.html

As the lecture was ending Ms. Briggs mentioned some EQ's. This are some exams that are pretty important in some parts of the world. It is basically the same as an IQ but in an emotional matter.

For me, it was an amazing lecture, because it taught me that emotions actually are of grand importance for communication.

Truth

Mr. Tomalin started the lecture by showing really great quotes about truth. And explaining how truth is a very big and complex word that causes big problematic.

"Necessary truths" are truths that can't be debatable, just like "triangles have three sides", or "all opthalmologistst are doctor". Then we passed to the phylosophical field, and started talking about how Kant talks about two types of truths syntethic and analitical. Synthetic truths are ones where there is not much to debate about, while analitical is where you can actually think bigger and debate more about the topic.

We then got some situations to analyze and determine if it is truth or not, like are they married? Or the one where was mozart was a good composer, you can't actually tell, it is too subjective.

Then Diana and Domenica read a debate in between a a relativist and a non-relativist person. The Relativist was stronger argument, as the non relativist was close minded. As well this happened with my debate with  Cosima, we each read a paper of relativist and non relativist ways of thinking.


The most important thing I have clear about truth it is that it is such a big and complex word that it is hard to be described, explained and demonstrated. 

In conclusion I think we may all see different truths, and in most of the situations, almost all, there are no certain truths. We all may have a different perspective of truth, so everyone in the world would have to agree  that something is truee for it to be a global true.
We talked about lot of topics in truth, to get to a conclusion of truth, even with almost 3 classes of just seeing true, it was really hard for us to get to conclude something, at least for me.

martes, 13 de noviembre de 2012

Classification



Classification


The lecture started with a small "game" which consisted in classifying some objects shown in the screen. You had to divide them in a given number of groups. First we had to clasiffy them all in one group. Then we had to divide them in 3 or 4 groups, and finally each of the objects in one group, but no other object could fit in that category. This was the hardest, as most of the objects share characteristics, we tend to classify things and person in general, terms, very superficially.

This exercise was great to make me notice how we humans tend to classify everything that quickly.

As the lecture kept going, Ms. Briggs explained how classification began. It all started when Carl Linneus, the first person of the world to actually begin classifying specimens. His classifications for the creatures were: classes orders, families, genera, and species. The problems with this classification is that it was only based on the physical appearance, so now a days biologists and classifiers use DNA to be more precise when it comes to classifying.


Then we talked about how classification is interpretative and how it is almost instant, you don't even think about it sometimes.


However classification can lead to serious discrimination issues, like chauvism, sexism, racism. Classification should be moderated, as it could get you to false conclusions.

lunes, 12 de noviembre de 2012

Language

In this lecture we learned about language as a way of knowing.
It started by an uncommon activity, where Mr. Tomalin asked us to guess which language was the one sang in a song he played. He then proceeded to asked as a question that shocked me, "what would happen if we were stripped off any language?". It actually made me think of how important language is. Even if we have corporal and body language, we would not be able to communicate wholly and as clear as we would want to  if we had no idea how to communicate by language. Language is the base of communication for me.

Another very interesting topic Mr. Tomalin mentioned, was the tourette syndrome, a neurophysical problem that happens to people who have suffered a trauma or were just born with it. It consists in basically a tic where people normally curse and release their stress by screaming bad words.

I found it a very interesting and debatable topic, where you can debate how language is actually necessary to transmit a message. As well you could use body language and the other ways of language we have already learned in TOK to transmit a message.