- Should we read a novel in our class this term? Why or why not?
What are the advantages and disadvantages to reading a novel in class? (Quest has some useful notes on the language for talking about advantages and disadvantages on page 186 (Hartmann, 2007).) - What are the characteristics which we should look for in choosing a class novel?
If we decide to read one, I will choose it, but it's useful to think in advance about how that choice should be made. And I do like to get your opinions about what we do, and why we spend time doing it. - Any other comments on this topic are welcome.
What sort of novel, for example, would you like to read?
Is there anything that you would prefer not to read?
Any other ideas?
The EAP Class Blog at https://
academicaua.blogspot.com for students in Peter's classes.
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AEP Class Blog - information pages
Friday, 27 April 2012
Novels in AEP Reading and Writing classes: Yes or No?
Sunday, 22 April 2012
Have Your Say - What to do? How much homework?
The first follow up the two polls:
- on how many hours students in this class should reasonably expect to do every day outside of class;
and - how we should use our time in class.
You might like to follow up by reading "AEP, Academic English and TOEFL: common threads" (Peter, 2011), skimming through TOEFL iBT Tips: How to Prepare for the TOEFL iBT (Educational Testing Services, 2008), and then adding another comment or two to share your ideas on what we should and should not do in this class, both in class and out of class.
Welcome to AEP Reading and Writing 4, Term 3, 2012.
Over the next six weeks we will be working through two or three chapters in Hartmann's Quest 2 Reading and Writing [Quest] (2007), which is probably already familiar to some of you from level 3 last term. As usual, we will be doing both a a bit more writing than Quest asks for and a bit more reading.
And this being 2012, we will be using the tools that are normal in modern academic institutions: email, the internet and so on; academics and students no longer submit their written work on scraps of paper, and we won't be doing that either.
I hope that you find the class both enjoyable and challenging so that our six weeks together will be productive and pleasant.
Hartmann, P. (2007). Quest 2 Reading and Writing, (2nd. ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.
Monday, 9 April 2012
How to deal with the War on Drugs?
Since I read your blogs and your comments about legalized all drug abuse( Peter, 2012 and Crystal, 2012), one idea just come to my mind that a good solution should not concern about legal or illegal of substance uses because it cannot give clear direct effect to reduce bad consequence of drugs and cannot convince people to consider drug abuse in the proper way. I have gotten a new idea after I read one article this evening.
According to "Substance Abuse Control: How Do We Measure Success?" (Mann,2010). This paper tries to give a good meaning of successful measurement for drugs abuse control. The future goal for drug abuse should implement multi-strategies for individual, social and national level. It should consider all aspect of substance use, namely manufacturing drug supply, dealer, drug user, courts, police stations, government policy, cell, treatment staffs and rehabilitation system. On one hand, the ultimate goal should be prevention of drug abuse, which can use the word of successful substance abuse control. Because the root cause of drug abuse problem is the poor knowledge, greedy, stubborn, and powerful, the decriminalise drugs cannot give clear solution for all drug abuse issues(Mann,2010) (Mann, 2010).
As I mention earlier that knowledge of drug abusers is the root of drug abuse problem but from Mann, (2010), it is only one of substance uses causes. I agree with this article that the multifaceted programs should be considered than only one program. In addition, the successful result cannot measure only one aspect such as the number of new user decline or the order of big batch drugs abuse is canceled, but it should also consider the declining or the working of drug abuse control program. Whether government is going to use elimination of illegal drugs abuse by law or not, it is an only one component of all program that should be applied for control them.
If we are going to give all drugs legal, we should be sure that this process do work in our context or our country and its consequence should not do any bad phenomena for social and individual level. I meant that these drugs should use under warning, precautious and contraindication or control drug supply by government staffs because it give harm effects to human health and spend a lot of money to solve each cases with high rate of relapse back into drug use and all treatment failures.
The harm reduction program should give the more effective than allow to sell the drug legally but if government consider both program, I can see more synergistic effect to reach the successful of drug problems after consider additional intervention program to each area. Therefore, we can win the drugs war by the holistic approach.
Peter. (2012, April 3) Worse than Heroin: Another reason for legalization Retrieved April 9, 2012 from http://peteraep.blogspot.com/2012/04/worse-than-heroin-another-reason-for.html?showComment=1333894379772#c3878543887971111086
Crytal. (2012, April 8) No reasons to legalize use of fentanyl
Retrieved April 9, 2012 from http://peteraep.blogspot.com/2012/04/no-reasons-to-legalize-use-of-fentanyl.html
Sunday, 8 April 2012
No reasons to legalize use of fentanyl
After I read Peter’s post “Worse than Heroin: Another reason for legalisation", I check the source “Synthetic drug fentanyl causes overdose boom in Estonia”, I don’t find any indication that the writer appeal to legalize use of fentanyl. He states the fact about serious consequence, which includes death, HIV, hepatitis and family broken up, caused by using fentanyl in Estonia and hopes Estonian government take actions to solve the problems. Is there only way to solve the problem, which is Peter’s suggestion that is decriminalization using fentanyl? I don’t think so.
Firstly, the first reason is “If fentanyl were legal, addicts could more easily get help”, I agree with the assumption that addicts could get help more conveniently because there would be more addiction treatment centre in Estonian with more professional doctors; but there would be more addicts than now in Estonian which were the result of legalization using fentanyl, which will make the public have a protest to express their dissatisfaction. Can the government use a way to solve problems on the one hand but to produce other problems on the other hand? Definitely no, they can’t.
Then,” If it were legal, the price would be lower, so there would be less crime.” It is true but not the point of fentanyl problems. To declare a person commit crime or not just has meaning on law, it doesn’t change a person’s behavior. It has nothing to do with addicts’ health and life. Governments should focus on people’s health and real life rather than money, corruption or crime rate, which presents that I disagree with another reason about corruption of policemen and officials.
Next, I partly disagree with “If it were not illegal, the quality could be regulated, so there would be fewer deaths and other health problems.” I believe the quality of fentanyl would be ruled if it were legal to use fentanyl, but there would be many kinds of fentanyl with different purity to meet addicts’ need. The death toll caused by wrongly using high degree fentanyl would decrease, but the impending doom for addicts is inevitable with dosage of fentanyl increasing. Therefore, legalization using fentanyl would not make people’s death decrease but increase because addicts became more and more.
I can’t imagine what situation I would be in if legalizing use of fentanyl or other dangerous drugs, which means that people can buy dangerous drugs as convenient as Coca Cole? Would I need to worry about is there somebody who I offend by accident to put drugs into my drink or food? It is too horrible. Actually, people would recognize that they should keep far away from fentanyl if Estonian government sent doctors go to schools to educate young people and advertised the dangerous consequence of using fentanyl on TV in prime time.
References
Peter. (2012, April 3) Worse than Heroin: Another reason for legalization Retrieved April 8, 2012 from http://peteraep.blogspot.com/2012/04/worse-than-heroin-another-reason-for.html?showComment=1333894379772#c3878543887971111086
Wilson, S. (2012, March 30). Synthetic drug fentanyl causes overdose boom in Estonia. BBC News. Retrieved April 8, 2012 from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-17524945
Friday, 6 April 2012
Why Peter disagrees with Law on eating meat
His real mistake is at the start, where he states and then immediately dismisses the argument that it is causing suffering that makes eating meat wrong in favour of the much stronger idea that killing "a living thing capable of enjoying life" is wrong (p. 125). First, there are problems in understanding exactly what "capable of enjoying life" means, but presumably Law means enjoying such things as: eating, sex, interacting with other members of the species, and so on. That's probably a good enough definition of Law's phrase "capable of enjoying life", but is it wrong to end the life of something simply because it has that capability? I don't think that that is why we worry about killing human beings. We worry about killing human beings because they have a much rarer quality: self-awareness, the ability to know that they are enjoying their own life, or not enjoying it, and to make decisions about the course of that life where one of the criteria for deciding is an awareness of being alive as a particular, individual thing, of being a person in fact. This is an experience familiar to every one of us, but unknown to most other animal species, and wholly unknown to every plant and simpler living thing.
An immediate problem now arises because it's not easy to show conclusively whether or not an animal possesses self-consciousness. It's easy enough to judge that an animal is suffering or enjoying itself: when hit, a dog yelps and cringes in pain; when stroked or rewarded with food, it shows signs of pleasure which it would like to continue, just as humans do. But we know that other humans are self-conscious because they can tell us in language that strongly matches up with our own experience of being ourselves, of being a self aware person in a world full of other self-aware persons making decisions as living things taking deliberate account of themselves. Animals do not have the ability to do that, or at least no such sophisticated language ability has ever been clearly demonstrated in any non-human animal. The most popular test for self-awareness is the mirror test, which, although not without it problems and criticisms, some non-human animal species do seem to pass ("Mirror Test", 2012). Since our own self-awareness is the product of evolution and functions of our brain, it is at least possible that other animals do possess at least some such concept of self; that is, that they are in some way persons, not merely bodies experiencing pleasures and pains, and reacting to them, even with intelligence. I don't think we need to settle exactly what other animals do or do not possess self-awareness, thought it seems to me likely that at least some great apes, and perhaps a couple of other mammals, do. And the great apes are not an animal we typically kill and eat. No one has ever suggested that there is evidence that chickens, cats, sheep, dogs, or cows possess self-consciousness; pigs, however, are certainly intelligent and just might pass.
If we accept that the relevant criteria is being self-conscious, then that does separate us from most of the animals that we like to kill and eat in a way that avoids Law's charge of speciesism: it is not arbitrary, and we can decide on the criteria before we apply it. However, the point that Law raises in the section "The mentally impaired" is now relevant (Law, 2003, p. 129 - 130): the distinction between brain dead humans and food animals has disappeared. Worse, the evidence suggests that even perfectly normal, healthy human babies have anything like self-awareness until at least a few months old. We might now suggest other reasons for not eating human babies, but those reasons will need to be different to the basic reason that makes our food animals relevantly different to us. I'm not going to argue it here, but I favour a modified version of Roger Scruton's argument based on potential (as cited in Law, p. 134), where the relevant modification is that we have good grounds for believing that the particular baby will become a normally self-conscious human person before the age of two years; Mary Midgely's ideas about social bonds might also provide good reasons here, even if they do fail as a morally relevant criteria against speciesism.
And this is where the philosopher Peter Singer received death threats when he took up his position as professor of philosophy at Princeton. Although it is not clear from the quotation in Law (p. 130), Singer follows through this line of reasoning to conclude that in fact it is morally acceptable for, for example, parents to ask a doctor to kill their brain dead baby, and that it is just and moral for the doctor to comply with that wish. In fact, Singer takes the idea that being a person who is self-aware and able to make decisions that take that fact into account so seriously that he argues that abortion is morally permissible even after birth; that is, that it is not necessarily wrong to kill a new born baby (Singer, 1996). If you like the idea that personhood is the relevant difference that separates us from our food, you also need to consider the consequences that logically follow from accepting that argument. If A logically follows from B, and you accept A, then you must also accept B, however much you might hate it, unless of course you have a relevant reason for breaking the logical chain between A and B.
Singer thinks that eating meat is sometimes wrong, but not always or necessarily, not because it means killing an animal that is "capable of enjoying life", but because it often causes suffering, and that causing needless suffering, unlike killing, is morally wrong. Singer would allow that provided the animal lives a happy life, and is killed painlessly, then there is nothing morally wrong with enjoying it for dinner, and this seems right to me. It might be OK to painlessly kill an animal that has not suffered, but causing suffering simply to satisfy our lust for tasty flesh does seem wrong. Law would have done better to stick with Singer's real argument instead of dismissing it so quickly on page 125 (2003).
Please feel welcome to comment.
I thought that the point Crystal raised in class on Thursday, about the meaning of the word moral and what it means to be moral or immoral was something about which there is a lot of misunderstanding, especially among academics in social science fields. (I think whole groups of academics are sometimes seriously wrong in their understanding of ideas from fields in which they are not expert: for example, anthropologists, sociologists, political scientists and other social scientists on the nature of morality; and doctors on health policy.)
Law, S. (2003). Carving the roast beast, in The Xmas Files: The Philosophy of Christmas (pp.124 - 140). London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson
Mirror test. (2012, March 27). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 03:23, April 6, 2012, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mirror_test&oldid=484211668
Singer, P., (1996). Rethinking Life and Death. New York: St. Martin's Griffin.
Tuesday, 3 April 2012
Worse than Heroin: Another reason for legalisation.
I'm sure that everyone realises how dangerous drugs are and the harm they cause to users, their family and society. In "Synthetic drug fentanyl causes overdose boom in Estonia", Sam Wilson reports on fentanyl, a highly addictive drug causing major problems in Europe.
Sadly, the fact that the drug is illegal causes most of these problems. If fentanyl were legal, addicts could more easily get help. If it were legal, the price would be lower, so there would be less crime. If it were not illegal, the quality could be regulated, so there would be fewer deaths and other health problems. And of course, if the drug were decriminalised, there would be much less tempatation corruption of police and other officials. Making the drug illegal has created far more serious social problems, as usual when recreational drugs are criminalised.
Meanwhile, politicians in Colombia, the worlds cocaine capital, are realising that there might be a lot of very real and practical economic and social reasons for legalising the production of cocaine: it would cut the massive profits to the mafia types that now profit from government policy; it would reduce the violence and crime now associated with drug production; and it would likely decrease the production of drugs ("Colombian Lawmakers", 2012).
Finally, at home in Thailand, "Hazards that spell disaster", a recent editorial in the Bangkok Post reminds us that the number one deadly drug for Thai society is alcohol, with most traffic accident deaths being "fuelled by alcohol abuse" (2012, ¶ 1).
The Bangkok Post's editor forgot to point out that, consistent with the government's popular and impressively failing "War on Drugs" policy, the users of this dangerous recreational drug of addiction should be imprisoned, and the producers and sellers executed.
Hazards that spell disaster. (2012, March 31). The Nation. Retrieved April 3, 2012 from http://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion/opinion/286793/hazards-that-spell-disaster
Wilson, S. (2012, March 30). Synthetic drug fentanyl causes overdose boom in Estonia. BBC News. Retrieved April 3, 2012 from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-17524945