TDC/Planning-Organization: Difference between revisions

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<h2>Planning & Organization</h2>
<h2>Planning & Organization</h2>
<h4>Develop the right tone & voice</h4>
<h4>Develop the right tone & voice</h4>
<p>What I have to say about <i>the digital campus</i> has a lot of personal meaning for me, and the urge to express it wells up from my life situation, not from some external need. I've become advanced in years, and feel priviledged to still have health and vitality. I feel drawn to reflect on what I've thought and done during those years, partly to savor the meaning it has held for me in my life, and partly with the hope that some time, someplace, someone else may find that meaning helpful in their thinking and acting in their lives as well.</p>
<p>What I have to say about <i>the digital campus</i> has a lot of personal meaning for me, and the urge to express it wells up from my life situation, not from some external need. I've become advanced in years, and feel priviledged to still have health and vitality. I feel drawn to reflect on what I've thought and done during those years, partly to savor the meaning it has held for me in my life, and partly with the hope that some time, someplace, someone else may find that meaning helpful in their thinking and acting in their so-different lives.</p>


<p>Already, I've said a lot about an aspect of <i>my life</i>. That's a start in telling about my like. Somehow, I think I must have recognized early on that both meaning and judgment were situated in the life I'm living. That's problematic, and I don't remember when or how it occurred to me, and I still can't make full sense of it. The recognition did not come marked with some epiphany. It's there, however, and with it, there's something else of import. Things of great significance in our lives come to us cloaked in ignorance, some of which one can't make go away. Even more, <i>everything</i> comes into my life shrouded by ignorance, which I paw away by thinking and acting, never sure or certain about it.</p>
<p>Already, I've said a lot, jumping into speaking of <i>my life</i>. That's a needed start in thinking about the personal meaning of something. To enable anyone to judge what I think about something, I must reveal myself as a thinking, living person. Somehow, I think I must have recognized early on that both meaning and judgment were situated in the life I'm living. That's problematic, and I don't remember when or how it occurred to me, and I still can't make full sense of it. The recognition didn't come marked with some epiphany. It just seems to have been there, and with it, there's something else of import. Things of great significance in our lives seem to reveal themselves from a fog of ignorance as a contingent, imperfect emergence out of the ignorance, which leaves much behind it, still shrouded in an indefinite unknown that one can not make go away.</p>


<p>But I'm saying too much. To savor meaning in my life and to make good judgments in it, I need to tell stories about it, to reflect, to bend it back, to flex it again. But every life comes brimming with particulars, each of which is different and distinct. In the midst of all that, we easily lose the thread of meaning as attention becomes overwhelmed. To cope with that, we use names to signify topics or themes, insubstantial abstractions, to provoke, guide, and sustain attention.</p>
<p>But I'm saying too much. To savor meaning in my life and to make good judgments in it, I need to tell stories about it, to reflect, to bend it back, to flex it again. But every life comes brimming with particulars, each of which is different and distinct. In the midst of all that, we easily lose the thread of meaning as attention becomes overwhelmed. To cope with that, we use names to signify topics or themes, insubstantial abstractions, to provoke, guide, and sustain attention.</p>


<p>Already, that's what I've done in talking about ignorance introduced the first of three big areas of meaning that I think have arisen for me in the course of my thinking and acting. Let's place a kind of marker on it, recognizing it to be, here at the beginning, a meaningless phrase, <i>on the actuality of ignorance as the ground of knowledge and meaning in our lives</i>. And while we're at it, let's put down to more currently empty phrases—
<p>Already, that's what I've done in talking about ignorance introduced the first of three big areas of meaning that I think have arisen for me in the course of my thinking and acting. Let's place a kind of marker on it, recognizing it to be, here at the beginning, a meaningless phrase, <i>on the actuality of ignorance as the ground of knowledge and meaning in our lives</i>. And while we're at it, let's put down to more currently empty phrases—

Revision as of 12:08, 3 March 2025

The Digital Campus

Planning & Organization

Develop the right tone & voice

What I have to say about the digital campus has a lot of personal meaning for me, and the urge to express it wells up from my life situation, not from some external need. I've become advanced in years, and feel priviledged to still have health and vitality. I feel drawn to reflect on what I've thought and done during those years, partly to savor the meaning it has held for me in my life, and partly with the hope that some time, someplace, someone else may find that meaning helpful in their thinking and acting in their so-different lives.

Already, I've said a lot, jumping into speaking of my life. That's a needed start in thinking about the personal meaning of something. To enable anyone to judge what I think about something, I must reveal myself as a thinking, living person. Somehow, I think I must have recognized early on that both meaning and judgment were situated in the life I'm living. That's problematic, and I don't remember when or how it occurred to me, and I still can't make full sense of it. The recognition didn't come marked with some epiphany. It just seems to have been there, and with it, there's something else of import. Things of great significance in our lives seem to reveal themselves from a fog of ignorance as a contingent, imperfect emergence out of the ignorance, which leaves much behind it, still shrouded in an indefinite unknown that one can not make go away.

But I'm saying too much. To savor meaning in my life and to make good judgments in it, I need to tell stories about it, to reflect, to bend it back, to flex it again. But every life comes brimming with particulars, each of which is different and distinct. In the midst of all that, we easily lose the thread of meaning as attention becomes overwhelmed. To cope with that, we use names to signify topics or themes, insubstantial abstractions, to provoke, guide, and sustain attention.

Already, that's what I've done in talking about ignorance introduced the first of three big areas of meaning that I think have arisen for me in the course of my thinking and acting. Let's place a kind of marker on it, recognizing it to be, here at the beginning, a meaningless phrase, on the actuality of ignorance as the ground of knowledge and meaning in our lives. And while we're at it, let's put down to more currently empty phrases—