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©2008-2009 ~thylacine-girl
:iconthylacine-girl:

Artist's Comments

Quick and unworthy test-run for the wonderful Adobe CS3
*siiiiiiiigh*

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:iconhexium86:
Unworthy? Nuh-uh. I'd be happy for you to give me lessons if this is the outcome (:

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Og hér ert þú, glósóli.
:iconcutedarkelf:
Good to see you are still around. Your stuff still looks great.

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Insanity is only bad if you don't know how to use it.
:iconananisapta:
Yay! You've actually uploaded something! Finally! This is too many exclamation marks in one paragraph! But I don't care! Because not only have you uploaded something, but it is also actually very good!

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Those who dance are thought mad by those who cannot hear the music
:iconfringeperson:
hey, for a test run, you do great stuff. And hey, when can I get you away from your busy timetable of "eternal study" to give me some lessons on my tablet? *only wants to learn from a master*

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I want to find that person who will hold me and tell me everything will be alright, and who, just by holding me, can make me believe them.
:iconthylacine-girl:
Thanks! How're things with you, Mr. Medical Apostate? :P

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Always remember: you're unique, just like everybody else.
:iconananisapta:
Trust you to use a word like that one.....heh heh.

Pretty well, pretty well. The zoology and Plant science are definitely agreeing with me; I find both interesting despite the fact we are now relearning things like the basic structures of cells. I am ignoring this in anticipation of when we get on to the far more interesting things, like behaviour, evolution, genetics and so forth. Psychology has also been pretty good - ironically, though the actual psych theory is an absolute breeze, the essay writing procedure is so abysmally tight in terms of its most posterior sphincter that actually writing something that makes sense degenerates into a easter-egg hunt for errors in punctuation. The pracs have been fun, though. Philosophy hasn't been all that great; by and large, the lecturers don't seem to know how to think, let alone wrap their heads around such concepts as Cogito ergo sum with any degree of clarity or indeed self-consistancy. One in particular is so desparately fond of his own education that he feels the need to regurgitate the 'Dictionary of Eye-watering words' for every lecture, meaning most of the lecture theatre completely fails to understand that when his rambling is translated he has actually said very little whatever. The pracs are ok, though, and its nice reading about the various theories.

Now I have expunged my spate of verbal haemorrhaging, how are things with you?

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Those who dance are thought mad by those who cannot hear the music
:iconthylacine-girl:
Rough. I've been reading Mill's Utilitarianism, which is about as much philosophy as my brain can handle while exploding with pathologies of the digestive system. I never knew abdominal pain could herald such a myriad of weird and wonderful (and potentially fatal) diseases. It's right up there with sore throats and chest pain. =D

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Always remember: you're unique, just like everybody else.
:iconananisapta:
Heh. One of the questions on the exam was along the lines of 'Is it possible to construct a normative theory that combines aspects of Kantianism and Utilitarianism. I reckoned it was, and spent the next four pages explaining why. Not bad considering it wasn't something we'd been prepared for wrapping our brains around.

Good to hear you're getting something paranoia-inducing out of your education; a little paranoia never hurt anyone. Least, that's what they WANT you to think......

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Those who dance are thought mad by those who cannot hear the music

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July 20, 2008
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