David Zweig

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David Zweig

David Zweig

@davidzweig

Author of INVISIBLES and AN ABUNDANCE OF CAUTION. Order now: https://t.co/36kL0G6P11 Subscribe: https://t.co/ytTP1HqGbi Clips: NYT, Atlantic, NYmag, TFP, Wired.

Lower Hudson Valley Katılım Mayıs 2011
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David Zweig
David Zweig@davidzweig·
💥🔥🧨 I am beyond excited to announce that I will be writing AN ABUNDANCE OF CAUTION, a book for @mitpress, about the schools debacle in America during the pandemic. The book, in essence, will be a case study of how and why bad decisions are made THREAD 1/12
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i/o@avidseries·
I once had a very talented boss who also happened to be an atrocious human. There were four people in the office in particular who hated him. One of them, the head deacon of his church, would tell me, "People like him don't end well." All four of those people are now dead (three died before age 60), but that boss is now in his 80s, rich and seemingly content, playing golf every day, with a new young bride.
Unamuno 📜@UnamunoAgain

Jodie Foster dijo una vez: "No, amigos. No sean tan inocentes. A los que hacen cosas malas no siempre les va mal. A muchos les va a ir bien. Los vas a ver triunfar. Los vas a ver quedarse con la mejor parte de todo. Y ese es el mundo real. Pero si esto les sirve de consuelo, puedo decirles que he visto muchos malvados exitosos... pero nunca en paz."

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David Zweig
David Zweig@davidzweig·
Pittsburgh Public Schools will be closed for three days, and compel "asynchronous" remote learning, because of the NFL Draft. Since the city will have a lot of visitors this will "ensure students can continue learning safely and effectively." Unreal. publicsource.org/pittsburgh-pub…
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David Zweig
David Zweig@davidzweig·
@SwipeWright This is well put and something I’ve been thinking about for quite some time as an avid podcast listener. People, even if very smart, speaking extemporaneously in conversation tends to be infotainment. Cogent, sophisticated, defensible arguments generally are best when written.
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Colin Wright
Colin Wright@SwipeWright·
Podcasting lets people speak vaguely about a topic while creating the impression of thorough treatment. I’ve often pushed back on something a podcaster posted on X, only to be told by their fans that it was “thoroughly addressed” somewhere in a three-hour podcast. But when I listen to the relevant section, it doesn’t deliver. It’s often just more vagueness and dancing around the issue, avoiding making direct, falsifiable claims they can be held to. There’s a reason many podcasters don’t write articles about the topics they discuss. Writing forces them to make coherent arguments without fluff. It forces them to connect every link between premise and conclusion. It forces them to cite sources accurately instead of speaking vaguely off the cuff. It’s also easier to be misled by smooth-talking podcasters. People like listening to podcasts because spoken language is the more natural way humans have received information throughout our evolutionary history. But that doesn’t mean it’s the best way to communicate with precision. It’s not. Podcasters also form relationships with their audiences. They speak to them like friends, even like family. None of this is necessarily a bad thing, but it can lead people to lower their standards for accepting the claims they make. A statement communicated verbally by a skilled orator can sound convincing, when the same statement written down plainly would seem absurd. This is why people who both write well and speak eloquently—think Douglass Murray and Christopher Hitchens—are so influential. Podcasting also puts a moat around claims due to the effort required to extract the relevant information. Fewer people are willing to wade through long episodes, constantly hitting ⏩ to find the segment in question, and then transcribe the audio into text. Podcasters can also more easily claim they were taken out of context, whether due to clipping or failing to have watched the previous week’s 3-hour episode that supposedly laid all the groundwork. It’s more difficult to claim this when your arguments are stated clearly and succinctly in writing. Podcasts are great. But anyone presenting themselves as a public intellectual and making serious, high-stakes claims about the world needs to do more than talk. They need to write.
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Anish Koka, MD
Anish Koka, MD@anish_koka·
The origin story of organ transplant is brutal. (Link in reply) The 3 precious kids pictured here with surgeon Carl Groth represented the longest anyone had survived with a liver transplant. All were dead within 2 years of this picture being taken.
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David Zweig
David Zweig@davidzweig·
@ChozangNoyb I agree. My point is that the lab leak theory had/has copious, credible evidence. The suppression, censorship and demonization over it was wrong. Lab leak was not random conjecture or outlandish connecting of the dots, which is what many conspiracy theories are.
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Chozang
Chozang@ChozangNoyb·
The conspiracy (and it was real) was not just the lab leak itself, it was the repression of the lab leak theory and the successful branding of those who considered it as conspiracy theorists. If you said anything against the COVID narrative on Facebook, Twitter, etc., it would get warning labels and soft-banned.
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David Zweig
David Zweig@davidzweig·
I’ve become increasingly unsettled by the amount of people with brain melt conspiratorial worldviews.
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eagle_bird
eagle_bird@EagleBird1233·
@davidzweig I’ve become increasingly unsettled by the amount of people with brain melt and their labeling of theories they disagree with as conspiratorial worldviews.
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David Zweig
David Zweig@davidzweig·
@ChozangNoyb There was copious, overt evidence about Wuhan lab leak and GOF research. Conversely, much of the conspiratorial claims we are seeing are based on insinuation, innuendo, and conjecture. A bunch of B movie evidence boards.
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Chozang
Chozang@ChozangNoyb·
@davidzweig The speed of my knee jerk against conspiratorial worldviews decreased slightly after witnessing the whole Wuhan debacle, especially the repression of the lab-leak theory.
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Geoff Graham
Geoff Graham@ggraham·
@davidzweig I think our lives are ever more abstracted. Less of what we do is tangible. Most of us are less rooted to a place or a people. I think that primes us to seek meaning in increasingly abstracted ways. And on top of that there is a ton of observably insane things going on.
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David Zweig
David Zweig@davidzweig·
David Foster Wallace wrote about this re professional tennis. Although, his main insight was you have to be very good in order to be able to appreciate the difference between the superstars and the merely excellent. The better you are at a sport, the more clearly you can see the difference between 'good' and 'great.' I think about this a lot in relation to basically every domain of society.
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Ann Bauer
Ann Bauer@annbauerwriter·
@Seppie123456 Exactly. I apply this to all sorts of situations, including my own writing. I say to myself, Why are so few people reading my novel? Then I read Tolstoy, or Stegner, or Donna Tartt and think, Oh...okay.
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Ann Bauer
Ann Bauer@annbauerwriter·
I once had a friend who thought her brother was a great guitarist. Couldn't fathom why he wasn't a star. Then she started dating a sound guy. One night he played her a song & said, That's your brother. Then he played another & said, That's Eric Clapton I think about this a lot.
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AG
AG@AGHamilton29·
I know Ryan Grim's attack is aimed at @jaketapper, but let me respond since he is referencing my post: 1) Dropsite News is absolutely terror propaganda. The site has repeatedly shared clear falsehoods and spin directly from U.S.-designated terror groups. Ex: x.com/AGHamilton29/s… In fact, this is so apparent that even the Palestinian ambassador has called them out as “compromised” advocates for Hamas: x.com/AGHamilton29/s… 2) There is actually a lot of “credible evidence” of rapes. Witness testimony, like the example he is dismissing, is credible evidence. There are several other witnesses. There are the video confessions from captured Hamas terrorists. There is extensive physical evidence, including many victims found naked and with broken pelvises. Even the UN experts, who are hardly pro-Israel, have concluded that “There are reasonable grounds to believe that conflict-related sexual violence — including rape and gang-rape — occurred across multiple locations of Israel and the Gaza periphery during the attacks on 7 October 2023” You can read the UN report here: ohchr.org/sites/default/… All while propagandist Ryan Grim says “no credible evidence” 3) His response to this specific example is full of intentional nonsense meant to cover for terrorist rapists. He claims they couldn’t have done this because IDF helicopters were bearing down on them. The attack on Nova started before 7 am. There were no helicopters near the area until over 3 hours later. We have countless videos of terrorists operating openly for hours. He also claims they could not have shot an RPG at the car because they would have been blown up, but we have over a dozen videos of the hamas terrorists shooting RPGs at cars throughout the attack. He’s calling the witness and victim a liar based on no evidence other than preferring a narrative that the terrorist murderers he supports aren’t also rapists. But they were. And the fact that he continues to deny it speaks volumes about him.
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Bob Wilson
Bob Wilson@Bob_WilsonGEO·
@HistorianZhang Yes! Precisely. This semester, in two upper-division courses, a third of the class earned A's--even a few with 100%. But then a slew of C-'s, D's, and F's. Almost nothing in the middle. Can't recall that ever happening in 20+ years of teaching. Both are reading-heavy courses.
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Lawrence Zhang 張樂翔
Lawrence Zhang 張樂翔@HistorianZhang·
I think another phenomenon we are seeing among my colleagues anyway is a bimodal distribution of grades instead of a normal distribution one that was more common previously
Dr. Sally Sharif@Sally_Sharif1

I just gave a closed-book, pen-and-paper midterm exam in my 300-level course at UBC with 100 students. All exams were graded by an experienced graduate-level TA according to a rubric. *** The average was 64/100.*** My class averages at UBC are usually 80-85. Context: • This was the first midterm, covering ONLY 4 weeks of material. • Students had a list of possible questions in advance: no surprise questions. • Questions included (a) 3 concept definitions, (b) 3 paragraph-long questions, and (c) a 1.5-page essay. • I have taught this class multiple times. Nothing in my teaching style changed this semester. • We read entire paragraphs of text in class, so students don't have to do something on their own that wasn't covered during the lecture. • Students take a 10-question multiple-choice quiz at the end of every class (30% of the final grade). • Attendance is 95-99% every class. Attention during lectures and participation in pair-work activities are very high → anticipating the end-of-class quiz. *** But unfortunately, I suspect many students are not reading the material on the syllabus. They are asking LLMs to summarize it instead.*** After the midterm, students reported: • They thought they knew concept definitions but couldn't produce them on paper. • They thought they understood the arguments but struggled to connect them or identify points of agreement and disagreement. My view: It might be “cool” or “innovative” to teach students to summarize readings with ChatGPT or write essays with Claude. But we may be doing them a disservice: reducing their ability to retain material, think creatively, and reason from what they know. If you only read what AI has summarized for you, you don’t truly "know" the material. Moving forward: We have a second midterm coming up. I don't know how to convey to students that the best way to do better on the exam is to rely on and improve their own reading skills.

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David Zweig
David Zweig@davidzweig·
Gothamist, a website owned and operated by New York Public Radio (WNYC), in a feat of linguistic contortion, managed to write an entire article without saying that a counterprotesters is the one who threw the IED. Look at the caption! 3/4
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David Zweig
David Zweig@davidzweig·
The media bias and mayor's public statement on the Gracie Mansion story is a case study in misleading narrative formation. 1/4
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