Education and more about me

I graduated with highest honors from the University of California at Santa Barbara with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Philosophy.

I also graduated with honors from Santa Barbara City College with an Associate of Arts degree in Multimedia Arts and Technologies.

I have a small website featuring some of my art, essays, and stories, a free downloadable mod for the computer game Marathon, and outlines of two works in progress that I hope to someday be my magna opera:

I would love feedback of any sort on any of these projects.

Wikipurpose and wikipersonality

This user is a member of
WikiProject Philosophy.

I am here at Wikipedia primarily to improve obscure corners of the philosophy section. Areas of particular emphasis for my contributions have been Rights and Meta-ethics; here is a complete list of my contributions (minus a few edits from before I registered ).

Neutrality and verifiability

I place highest emphasis here on maintaining neutrality in the way that things are phrased and organized, even in defense of positions I do not agree with. However, I know I am rather poor at retaining and citing sources, though I appreciate their value. So in sympathy to others with that fault, I will tend to let clear, relevant, and neutrally-phrased contributions stand without citations, usually tagged appropriately, unless I know them to be incorrect, in order to give someone else a chance to properly cite them.

Civility, patience, and kindness

The Civility Barnstar
For being unwaveringly productive Tesseract2(talk) 03:32, 1 July 2011 (UTC)
The Random Acts of Kindness Barnstar
For spending so much time explaining that dilemma. You have far more patience than I do and you more than deserve this! ----Snowded TALK 20:13, 13 September 2013 (UTC)

I have been called "too kind", but I don't believe there is such a thing. While I find WP:Civil fine as a lowest acceptable standard for behavior here on Wikipedia, I believe that incivility is best responded to not merely with civility but with kindness beyond the level that the incivil party might deserve. This is because in a culture of formal civility, peoples' sensitivity to slights increases, and someone may take offense to a perfectly civil but perhaps too blunt or subtly condescending response. Thus for example, rather than telling someone critical of philosophy that Wikipedia is not a forum and to go study some introductory philosophy — a suggestion that can be made quite civilly — I suggest that he find a notable source to represent that opinion, as Wikipedia is not a forum for our personal opinions, and I suggest a more appropriate article for its inclusion. The difference is subtle and the point is the same, but I find the extra courteous verbosity and supportive suggestions smooth over conflicts and get the point across much better than mere citation of policy and a recommendation to come back when you've educated yourself does.

Peeves

A handful of things I see frequently in Wikipedia articles irritate me and I make a point of changing them whenever I find them: