From 883614bc60f6eeaa674f1068cc927def7725304b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: manetta Date: Fri, 9 Apr 2021 09:58:48 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] changing the publishing date of Nishant to next week --- content/Essays/nishant-shah_measure-of-measure-up.md | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/content/Essays/nishant-shah_measure-of-measure-up.md b/content/Essays/nishant-shah_measure-of-measure-up.md index 9ea3471..739114b 100644 --- a/content/Essays/nishant-shah_measure-of-measure-up.md +++ b/content/Essays/nishant-shah_measure-of-measure-up.md @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ Title: Measure or Measure Up: Preparing for Unpopulated Futures Author: Dr. Nishant Shah -Date: 9 April 2021 +Date: 16 April 2021
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@@ -98,4 +98,4 @@ Watts, D. (2016). "How small is the world, really?". Retrieved from 
 
-[^5]: Donna Haraway, in her conception of the cyborg (1985), established a clear distinction between biology and genetics. One of the main characteristics of biological sciences and the ways in which they formulated the human, was through producing measures. The human was intended to be the sacred point of origin from which the meaning of the measure was produced, and human interpretation was necessary for it. Genetics turned this notion of measurement around, by establishing non-human readable, machine interpreted standards that presented an information set around in which the humans needed to be sorted in a statistical model of fidelity and probability to the median established as the normal. This was the idea of the human who had to measure up to an abstracted standard. In this, the human would always be lacking and hence in need of an upgrade.
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+[^5]: Donna Haraway, in her conception of the cyborg (1985), established a clear distinction between biology and genetics. One of the main characteristics of biological sciences and the ways in which they formulated the human, was through producing measures. The human was intended to be the sacred point of origin from which the meaning of the measure was produced, and human interpretation was necessary for it. Genetics turned this notion of measurement around, by establishing non-human readable, machine interpreted standards that presented an information set around in which the humans needed to be sorted in a statistical model of fidelity and probability to the median established as the normal. This was the idea of the human who had to measure up to an abstracted standard. In this, the human would always be lacking and hence in need of an upgrade.