Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Reading for Treasure: December


Reading for Treasure is my list of articles that are worth your attention. Click here for an introduction! Here are some articles to read before the holidays.

What Sci-Fi Can Teach Computer Science About Ethics: As a teacher of Science Fiction, I believe that the genre can give readers far more than a glimpse into the future. One of the most powerful aspects of SF is its commentary on ethics and morality. Science Fiction is almost always about the present far more than about the future, and this Wired article explores why future computer engineers might benefit from a little SF literature!

The Comforting Fictions of Dementia Care: This long article from The New Yorker debates whether or not we should lie to our relatives with Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia. My view, before I read this article, was that contradicting and correcting memory challenged adults is irritating to everyone and helps no one. Now, I am not so certain. The moral and ethical issues raised here have given me a great deal to consider.

The Definition Of 'They': This short piece from NPR explores the word “they” as a singular pronoun referring to someone whose gender identity is non-binary. The Merriam-Webster dictionary, as well as many style guides, now recognize the use of the word “they” in this manner. In fact, this use of the pronoun is Merriam-Webster's word of the year! As a former English teacher, using a plural pronoun for a singular subject was a change of habit, but a necessary one: it meant treating my students with the respect and care that they deserved! It was the right thing to do!

The Problem With the “On the Spectrum” Armchair Diagnosis: In this article from Fatherly, the writer makes the argument that, when a non-medical professional says someone is, “on the spectrum”, they are trying to “explain away behavior considered odd. It’s wrong, yes, but also potentially damaging to people living with ASD whose disorder is increasingly misunderstood as it is weaponized.” Just as it is wrong to call someone “retarded,” and use of that word harms more than the person at whom it is directed, this article argues that the overuse of “on the spectrum” has similar ill effects.

White Folks ‘Embarrassed to Admit’ They Just Learned About the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Through an Episode of ‘Watchmen’: This Atlanta Black Star article responds to the opening scene in the new HBO series, Watchman, which shows the destruction a prosperous neighborhood in Tulsa, Oklahoma by a Ku Klux Klan attack. It points out that there are important and pivotal parts of our history that have been ignored, erased, or otherwise hidden. While the TV series is addressing contemporary racial issues, watching Watchman should not be the primary way we expand our understanding of the complex and problematic history of race in the United States – and such an understanding is critical for everyone!

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