mhbastian

@mhbastian@assemblag.es

A philosophy + interdisciplinary person, interested in time, time-keeping with clocks and non-clocks, human and more-than-human. #envhum #temporaldesign #criticalhorology

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inquiline, (edited ) to random
@inquiline@union.place avatar

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  • mhbastian,
    mhbastian, to workersrights

    Found an art catalogue from 2002 talking about efforts we make to free ourselves from the 'risk society', praising the efforts of 'contemporary individuals' to 'opt for alternative, more fluid and entrepreneurial, lifestyles'. Apparently these offer more freedom from 'canonical time structures'.

    Oh sweet summer child.

    mhbastian, to random

    'Did you come here for the weather?' is a very common joke that British people make at my expense, as an Australian in Scotland. I always say, Yes I did, do you want 45 degree summers? Today, was the first time someone said back, 'Actually I hear a lot of you guys saying that, people from California as well'.

    matthewskelton, to random
    @matthewskelton@mastodon.social avatar

    "The governance and controls required to make the project-oriented model work at all are super expensive (in time and money) compared to the alternatives. It’s also like kryptonite for your best people. " -- Joshua Arnold

    https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7061278960990441472?commentUrn=urn%3Ali%3Acomment%3A%28activity%3A7061278960990441472%2C7061429983507853312%29

    mhbastian,

    @matthewskelton

    Really interesting to think of this from the perspective of academia too. You'd think it would be people focused but instead so much of research is project focused. All the arguments against here in the UK would fit too. Just split the research budget amongst teams and save time and money of ref, and grant applications!

    MarkRubin, to science
    @MarkRubin@fediscience.org avatar

    Open Science and Academic Workload

    New article by Thomas Hostler in the Journal of Trial and Error:

    “There is a high chance that without intervention, increased expectations to engage in open research practices may lead to unacceptable increases in demands on academics.”

    Open access: https://doi.org/10.36850/mr5








    @stsing
    @academicchatter

    mhbastian,

    @MarkRubin @stsing @academicchatter good to see humanities researchers acknowledged here, even if briefly. We are often working in frameworks that make no sense. Even having to make up answers in order to get to the next step. Arts based researchers have even further hurdles of course

    mhbastian, to random

    Explainer: why phenology is key in tracking climate change

    By a great colleague of mine Jennifer Fitchett

    https://theconversation.com/explainer-why-phenology-is-key-in-tracking-climate-change-123783

    mhbastian,

    @matthewskelton
    Yes - this is very common :)

    It's interesting how many people still know the term. I wonder where we all learnt it from. Where its cultural memory being supported from..

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