malv1009
Sep 13, 2012
Undergraduate / First reactions to my Yale essay- "let us get to know you better" [7]
here's a "final" draft. It still lacks a title... any ideas? I've got minor concerns about flow, but I'm mostly worried that I lost a lot of my "voice" in paring the essay down to 500 words (Yale says they want the essay to "sound like you.") Thoughts?
I stop walking. It stops walking. I frown.
I'm lurched out of my hyper-idealized daydreams of an epic pilgrimage. What was I doing again? I've got a backpack on, I see, around me are some pretty trees, and I'm tired. I'm hiking! Right. Good job, Brain. But now, a big, mean Daddy Long Legs is rudely obstructing my path.
What to do? My self absorbed journey can't continue until I deal with this other being, so a choice must be made. I turn again to the still slightly flustered Brain, then present my query: Do I keep walking and let the cruel boot of death fall on this lowly arachnid? Or do I expend the energy to walk around it?
"Kill it!" Brain answers. "If life is really that precious, then you're already in deep for eating all those shrimp last night. A jumble of atoms, a gene delivery mechanism, that's all it is. It's that bug's own fault if it dies. You know, survival of the fittest!"
Sounds reasonable. Brain usually does. But then that other guy, Doubt, Brain's alter ego, chimes in: "But won't that hurt?"
"I don't know. I can't," Brain retorts. "All knowledge comes from sensory experience after all, and you could never directly sense something else's feelings. You can only see signs, like twitching limbs, that indicate what feelings might be there. Just kill it!"
There's a short pause. Is Brain finished? I wait a moment more, and, surprise, surprise, Doubt creeps in again: "So you should step on people too?"
Brain, a true know-it-all, becomes indignant. He tries to close the argument quickly: "Sure. You can only experience your own happiness, right? Humans are all motivated by self interest anyway. When people help others, they're exchanging the lesser goods of honor or pleasure for the greater good of virtue. The self is king. Such is life. Right? Right."
Another, longer pause. No response from Doubt. Then Brain continues,
"So just kill it!"
A short pause, then...
"But does perception of the self necessarily guarantee the existence of an ontological self? Does the irrationality of perception preclude the synthetic a priori truth necessary to establish the causal relationship between "foot falling" and "dead spider? What is truth? What is? What if? What would Socrates say?"
This was becoming stressful. Ontological? It was time to end this. Clearly, Brain couldn't overcome Doubt any time soon, nor could the question-talking Doubt give me any direction. So where was I, the contemplative paralyzed journeyman, to turn to for guidance but to the most cliché source of all, Heart! Heart threw in a bit of pity for the poor ugly almost-spider, some guilt for Brain and Doubt's self absorption, and I was on my way again. The arachnid lives! Today, excessive rationality would not prevail. Today, there would be no grand display of egotistical nonconformity. Today, a victory for the unpretentious, thanks to a large dose of Doubt and a very helpful Heart.
here's a "final" draft. It still lacks a title... any ideas? I've got minor concerns about flow, but I'm mostly worried that I lost a lot of my "voice" in paring the essay down to 500 words (Yale says they want the essay to "sound like you.") Thoughts?
I stop walking. It stops walking. I frown.
I'm lurched out of my hyper-idealized daydreams of an epic pilgrimage. What was I doing again? I've got a backpack on, I see, around me are some pretty trees, and I'm tired. I'm hiking! Right. Good job, Brain. But now, a big, mean Daddy Long Legs is rudely obstructing my path.
What to do? My self absorbed journey can't continue until I deal with this other being, so a choice must be made. I turn again to the still slightly flustered Brain, then present my query: Do I keep walking and let the cruel boot of death fall on this lowly arachnid? Or do I expend the energy to walk around it?
"Kill it!" Brain answers. "If life is really that precious, then you're already in deep for eating all those shrimp last night. A jumble of atoms, a gene delivery mechanism, that's all it is. It's that bug's own fault if it dies. You know, survival of the fittest!"
Sounds reasonable. Brain usually does. But then that other guy, Doubt, Brain's alter ego, chimes in: "But won't that hurt?"
"I don't know. I can't," Brain retorts. "All knowledge comes from sensory experience after all, and you could never directly sense something else's feelings. You can only see signs, like twitching limbs, that indicate what feelings might be there. Just kill it!"
There's a short pause. Is Brain finished? I wait a moment more, and, surprise, surprise, Doubt creeps in again: "So you should step on people too?"
Brain, a true know-it-all, becomes indignant. He tries to close the argument quickly: "Sure. You can only experience your own happiness, right? Humans are all motivated by self interest anyway. When people help others, they're exchanging the lesser goods of honor or pleasure for the greater good of virtue. The self is king. Such is life. Right? Right."
Another, longer pause. No response from Doubt. Then Brain continues,
"So just kill it!"
A short pause, then...
"But does perception of the self necessarily guarantee the existence of an ontological self? Does the irrationality of perception preclude the synthetic a priori truth necessary to establish the causal relationship between "foot falling" and "dead spider? What is truth? What is? What if? What would Socrates say?"
This was becoming stressful. Ontological? It was time to end this. Clearly, Brain couldn't overcome Doubt any time soon, nor could the question-talking Doubt give me any direction. So where was I, the contemplative paralyzed journeyman, to turn to for guidance but to the most cliché source of all, Heart! Heart threw in a bit of pity for the poor ugly almost-spider, some guilt for Brain and Doubt's self absorption, and I was on my way again. The arachnid lives! Today, excessive rationality would not prevail. Today, there would be no grand display of egotistical nonconformity. Today, a victory for the unpretentious, thanks to a large dose of Doubt and a very helpful Heart.