Imaginations are dandy
I DON'T KNOW ANYTHING AND AM FULL OF SHIT!!!WHOOOOOOOO!
The Muppets are remaking the wizard of oz...oh my lord
The producers is being made into a movie...fucking sweet
I wish everyone I knew hadn't sold out to the man
I fought in a war and I left my friends behind me, to go looking for the enemy and it wasn't very long before I would stand with another boy in front of me and a corpse that just fell into me with the bullets flying round, and I reminded myself of the words you said when we were getting on and I bet your making shells back home for a steady boy to weld
We all have regrets
Song Of The Day: Belle and Sebastian- I fought in a war


4 Comments:
first of all... what the hell? brian listening to belle & sebastian?
and i definitely prefer sociology... it's really interesting & important. no more mediated realities & questioning every single thing & "WHAT IS REAL" it drives me absolutely insane.
-jenn
Rendered down to their most fundamental components, the studies of sociology and philosophy are inextricably bound to one another, for to study sociology is to study the very impetus from which philosophy springs, and to study philosophy is to strive for meaning amidst the intricacies of human society.
;-P i'm sorry, but you were definitely asking for it by asking that question.
While I agree that sociology and philosophy are dependent upon one another, the studies themselves are very different. One is almost completely analitical while the other regards the question of ethics and perspective. When you study philosophy, you study opinions of those that came before you that related to culture and humanity. Sociology is the study of culture on a purely statistical and reason based program. So yes, in a way they are related but it can be shown that one does not always lead to the other.
The world of academia operates by assigning arbitrary boundaries between so-called "fields of study" and dealing with each as an isolated system. These artificial divisions, such as the one between sociology and philosophy, limit our ability to recognize that each is simply a different method for analizing the same perceptions of the world around us, and therefore keep us from the realization that comprehensive understanding may only be achieved through a seamless blending of all such "fields of study" rather than the kailidescopic image presented by meaningless separation.
don't tangle with me boy!
Post a Comment
<< Home