I'm self taught. I've been pursuing philosophy as a balm for the slow motion accident that has been my life since 2001, when I was forced into retirement from a stellar career in cellular telecom (where I excelled in computer programming) that took me traveling the globe for ten years, and also made me enough money to last all this time. (Its 2013, and I'm about fifty-one.
Teaching myself meant a change of course from "things" language (about computers and their networks), to "people" language. I then discovered early on in my initial self-searching, that my intuitions about the authors of our common realities were quite discoverable in t…
I'm self taught. I've been pursuing philosophy as a balm for the slow motion accident that has been my life since 2001, when I was forced into retirement from a stellar career in cellular telecom (where I excelled in computer programming) that took me traveling the globe for ten years, and also made me enough money to last all this time. (Its 2013, and I'm about fifty-one.
Teaching myself meant a change of course from "things" language (about computers and their networks), to "people" language. I then discovered early on in my initial self-searching, that my intuitions about the authors of our common realities were quite discoverable in the writings of philosophers.
I'm a serious type of person, and have adhered to formal systems, so I edit Wikipedia, where people and things merge. I've come to see philosophical systems at work everywhere--in the terminologies of science, in literary artistry, in the math forms, and in the languages.
Now I'm back studying science and technology, having refitted my BSEE (U of H) with tools from the linguistic dive into religious, philosophical, and literary issues. I climb, with my gift of creativity, to rebuild not just my worldview, but especially those of others.