feat: remove useless content, add liminalOS docs
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# Week 1
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## Lecture 1 (9/30)
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- Ralph Ellison: novel bound up with nationhood
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- What/who are we?
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- What has been the experience of this particular group?
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- How did it become this way?
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- What stops us from attaining the ideal?
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- American writers + artists always return to question of our national
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collectivity -> successes / failures
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- American flag is abstraction + symbol
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- Same painting, over and over again, different meaning/symbol
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- w/ rise of democracy in US, slavery happened in parallel -> cannot talk about
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one without the other
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- Use example of Asian American literature as entryway toward understanding
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larger American / minority literature
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- _Otherness_: radical difference -> Asian is always "foreigner", "strange",
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"grotesque"
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- Asians come to US for labor shortage (railroads, etc)
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- Perceived through 19th century and further as radically different
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- Assimilation: American promise of leaving behind "tradition" -> "modern life"
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- Theoretical concept -> trickle into daily lives
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- W.E.B. DuBois -> "the problem of the color life" + "double consciousness"
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- Most useful metaphor: double consciousness
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- Double consciousness -> hybridity: rethinking from two different distinct
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selves -> combination / overlapping "hybrid consciousness"
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- Does the arc of history bend toward progress?
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- On style: how do stylistic decisions (by writers) shape their thematic
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arguments?
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- Leave things out, emphasize, etc
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- On realism, modernism, postmodernism
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- Next: read Erika Lee
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## Section (10/04)
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### Logistics
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- 2 excused absences -> no questions asked
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### Notes
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- Minority-ness in 5 categories
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- Assimilation
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- Hybridity
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- Double consciousness
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- Invisibility
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- Otherness
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#### Otherness
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- What is us? -> group an individual identifies w/ and sense of belonging
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- Other -> (perceived) different / "out group"
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- Distinguishing "us" / "other" -> culture, language, behaviors, religious
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traits, citizenship, race, etc
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- Social constructs -> (may) change over time
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- Stereotypes, power, political policies, hegemony, etc...
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- Anti-Asian laws and policies
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- 1875 Page Act
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- 1882 **Chinese Exclusion Act**
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- 1907 Expatriation Act
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- 1913 First Alien Land Law
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- 1922 Cable Act (reverses Expatriation Act except for women who marry "aliens ineligible for citizenship")
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- 1924 Immigration Act
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- Keep in mind while reading Bulosan (191X, 1930-1956)
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- Attain citizenship for rights, representation, and influence
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- Accumulate wealth through real estate
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- Form _families_ and establish a lasting presence
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# Week 2
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## Lecture 1 (10/07)
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- America is in the Heart -> What is the life that Bulosan is living as he's
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producing the book?
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- 1950s/1960s -> series of radical changes (CRM, Brown v. Board, CRA, Voting
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Rights Act, Immigration and Nationality Act)
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- Asians from Assimilation -> Model Minority
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- Compliance, emasculated -> in contrast to "loudness" of African Americans /
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Latinos (in fighting for civil rights) -> Model way to be minority is to be
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silent
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- Supposed _cultural_ traits -> better at math, stronger family structures
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- Asian American literary response -> "claiming America for Asian Americas"
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- Community -> desire to remain "others" but by defining our own "otherness" ->
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resistance to domination
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- History of Asian America is also a history of how race works in United States
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-> there is a particular history of race in America which is understood by
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looking at the Asian American history, cannot be understood solely by looking
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at history of other groups
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- Liminal Asian America -> simultaneously included and excluded
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- AA living between America and "origins" -> transnational to achieve something
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that is quintessentially American
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- How are our writers expressing the notion of being included and excluded
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- Bulosan is telling his own story from the POV of an older, wiser person
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- Using Spanish words -> showing people that they have a whole separate POV,
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distinct group of people
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- Bulosan's aesthetic eyes fall on the natural land -> repeatedly talks about
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how beautiful his home was -> his way of explaining ("translating") life in
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Phillipines -> a certain "transcendence to nature" -> same in one place to
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another
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- Once Bulosan leaves America, never comes back -> act of writing is nostalgic
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- 1899-1902: American-Phillipine War -> 1907-1924 approx. 52,000 Filipinos
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immigrate to US -> 1946 Phillipines gains independences -> Bulosan arrives in
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between
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- Context between Bulosan's arrival in 1930 and publication of book in 1946:
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The Great Gatsby -> Emblematic of Roaring Twenties; not a huge hit
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immediately -> Fitzgerald explores the life of striving outsider -> critique
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of American promise (upwards mobility, second chances)
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- Context 2: The Good Earth -> American born Pearl S. Buck, daughter of
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Chinese, grew up in China, Wrote her most famous novel about inhabitants of a
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Chinese village. Shaped ways in which Americans viewed Chinese in America
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- Greatest connection: Grapes of Wrath
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- First few pages of Bulosan -> Nature, Bulosan's location, translating
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Filipino reality for Western audience, split between young and older/wiser
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Bulosan
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- What is Bulosan doing besides just talking about nature? Why is he
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concentrating on it? -> in conversation with specific type of literary style
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-> the "pastoral"
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- The pastoral is a literary tradition -> traditionally, poems about shepherds
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-> beauty of life, waking up early, farming, etc -> idealized lives of the
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poor -> tension between cultivated author and low born subjects -> Bulosan
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deconstructs pastoral through realism
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- Social Realism -> unvarnished and unfiltered economic racial injustice ->
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working class figure as hero -> scrutinizing ills of society -> reality
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without illusion -> one problem: emphasis on collective vs. individual
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- Do for Filipinos in America what Lange tried to do for working class -> book
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as work of pastoral social realism
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## Lecture 2 (10/10)
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- AH is a biography in the "social realist" mode -> leaves home in the
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Phillipines after beaten down by harsh realities of life -> tries to maintain
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optimism about American Dream as he continues through his journey
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## Section
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- Pastoral
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- Realism -> depict life as it truly is, complexities, imperfections, etc,
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verisimilitude
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- Social realism -> see peoples' struggles, critiques about causes/reasons,
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### Writing assignment
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Then, please write up why Carlos portrayed them in this particular manner.
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Each individual should write your own answer. Please write the name of the woman you are analyzing.
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1. Mary Strandon
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2. Marian
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3. Judith
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Mary Strandon was portrayed as a kindly woman who gave Bulosan work and allowed him to read
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#import "@preview/unequivocal-ams:0.1.1": ams-article, theorem, proof
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#show: ams-article.with(
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title: [Week 2],
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authors: (
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(
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name: "Youwen Wu",
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organization: [University of California, Santa Barbara],
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email: "youwen@ucsb.edu",
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url: "https://youwen.dev",
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),
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),
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bibliography: bibliography("refs.bib"),
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)
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= Vectors, linear combinations, spans, matrix-vector product.
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- Consider a whole new way of looking at linear systems
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- Add vectors entrywise, head to tail
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- Multiply vectors via scaling
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- A more flexible way to draw a line. For a line through point $p$, in direction $arrow(d)$, use $arrow(p) + t arrow(d), t in RR$. Intuition: Add a vector $arrow(p)$ pointing to point $p$ and compose a vector pointing in the intended direction $arrow(d)$ head to tail.
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A linear combination is
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$ arrow(y) = sum_(k=1)^n alpha_n arrow(v)_n $
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@article{netwok2020,
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title={At-scale impact of the {Net Wok}: A culinarically holistic investigation of distributed dumplings},
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author={Astley, Rick and Morris, Linda},
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journal={Armenian Journal of Proceedings},
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volume={61},
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pages={192--219},
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year=2020,
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publisher={Automatic Publishing Inc.}
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}
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#import "@preview/unequivocal-ams:0.1.1": ams-article, theorem, proof
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#show: ams-article.with(
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title: [A Digression on Abstract Linear Algebra],
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authors: (
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(
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name: "Youwen Wu",
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organization: [University of California, Santa Barbara],
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email: "youwen@ucsb.edu",
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url: "https://youwen.dev",
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),
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),
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bibliography: bibliography("refs.bib"),
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)
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= Introduction
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Many introductory linear algebra classes focus on _application_. In general,
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this is a red herring and is engineer-speak for "we will teach you how to
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crunch numbers with no regard for conceptual understanding."
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If you are a math major (or math-adjacent, such as Computer Science), this
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class is essentially useless for you. You will learn how to perform trivial
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numerical operations such as the _matrix multiplication_, _matrix-vector
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multiplication_, _row reduction_, and other trite tasks better suited for
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computers.
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If you are taking this course, you might as well learn linear algebra properly.
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Otherwise, you will have to re-learn it later on, anyways. Completing a math
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course without gaining a theoretical appreciation for the topics at hand is an
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unequivocal waste of time. I have prepared this brief crash course designed to
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fill in the theoretical gaps left by this class.
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= Basic Notions
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== Vector spaces
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Before we can understand vectors, we need to first discuss _vector spaces_. Thus
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far, you have likely encountered vectors primarily in physics classes,
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generally in the two-dimensional plane. You may conceptualize them as arrows in
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space. For vectors of size $>3$, a hand waving argument is made that they are
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essentially just arrows in higher dimensional spaces.
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It is helpful to take a step back from this primitive geometric understanding
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of the vector. Let us build up a rigorous idea of vectors from first
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principles.
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=== Vector axioms
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The so-called _axioms_ of a _vector space_ (which we'll call the vector space
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$V$) are as follows:
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#enum[
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Commutativity: $u + v = v + u, " " forall u,v in V$
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][
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Associativity: $(u + v) + w = u + (v + w), " " forall u,v,w in V$
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][
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Zero vector: $exists$ a special vector, denoted $0$, such that $v + 0 = v, " " forall v in V$
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][
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Additive inverse: $forall v in V, " " exists w in V "such that" v + w = 0$. Such an additive inverse is generally denoted $-v$
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][
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Multiplicative identity: $1 v = v, " " forall v in V$
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][
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Multiplicative associativity: $(alpha beta) v = alpha (beta v) " " forall v in V, "scalars" alpha, beta$
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][
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Distributive property for vectors: $alpha (u + v) = alpha u + alpha v " " forall u,v in V, "scalars" alpha$
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][
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Distributive property for scalars: $(alpha + beta) v = alpha v + beta v " " forall v in V, " scalars" alpha, beta$
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]
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It is easy to show that the zero vector $0$ and the additive inverse $-v$ are
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_unique_. We leave the proof of this fact as an exercise.
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These may seem difficult to memorize, but they are essentially the same
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familiar algebraic properties of numbers you know from high school. The
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important thing to remember is which operations are valid for what objects. For
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example, you cannot add a vector and scalar, as it does not make sense.
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_Remark_. For those of you versed in computer science, you may recognize this
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as essentially saying that you must ensure your operations are _type-safe_.
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Adding a vector and scalar is not just false, it is an _invalid question_
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entirely because vectors and scalars and different types of mathematical
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objects. See #cite(<chen2024digression>, form: "prose") for more.
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=== Vectors big and small
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In order to begin your descent into what mathematicians colloquially recognize
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as _abstract vapid nonsense_, let's discuss which fields constitute a vector space. We
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have the familiar space where all scalars are real numbers, or $RR$. We
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generally discuss 2-D or 3-D vectors, corresponding to vectors of length 2 or
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3; in our case, $RR^2$ and $RR^3$.
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However, vectors in $RR$ can really be of any length. Discard your primitive
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conception of vectors as arrows in space. Vectors are simply arbitrary length
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lists of numbers (for the computer science folk: think C++ `std::vector`).
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_Example_. $ vec(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9) $
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Moreover, vectors need not be in $RR$ at all. Recall that a vector space need
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only satisfy the aforementioned _axioms of a vector space_.
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_Example_. The vector space $CC$ is similar to $RR$, except it includes complex
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numbers. All complex vector spaces are real vector spaces (as you can simply
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restrict them to only use the real numbers), but not the other way around.
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In general, we can have a vector space where the scalars are in an arbitrary
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field $FF$, as long as the axioms are satisfied.
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_Example_. The vector space of all polynomials of degree 3, or $PP^3$. It is
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not yet clear what this vector may look like. We shall return to this example
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once we discuss _basis_.
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== Vector addition. Multiplication
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Vector addition, represented by $+$, and multiplication, represented by the
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$dot$ (dot) operator, can be done entrywise.
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_Example._
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$
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vec(1,2,3) + vec(4,5,6) = vec(1 + 4, 2 + 5, 3 + 6) = vec(5,7,9)
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$
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$
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vec(1,2,3) dot vec(4,5,6) = vec(1 dot 4, 2 dot 5, 3 dot 6) = vec(4,10,18)
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$
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This is simple enough to understand. Again, the difficulty is simply ensuring
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that you always perform operations with the correct _types_. For example, once
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we introduce matrices, it doesn't make sense to multiply or add vectors and
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matrices in this fashion.
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== Vector-scalar multiplication
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Multiplying a vector by a scalar simply results in each entry of the vector
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being multiplied by the scalar.
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_Example_.
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$ beta vec(a, b, c) = vec(beta dot a, beta dot b, beta dot c) $
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== Matrices
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Before discussing any properties of matrices, let's simply reiterate what we
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learned in class about their notation. We say a matrix with rows of length $m$,
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and columns of size $n$ (in less precise terms, a matrix with length $m$ and
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height $n$) is a $m times n$ matrix.
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Given a matrix
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$ A = mat(1,2,3;4,5,6;7,8,9) $
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we refer to the entry in row $j$ and column $k$ as $A_(j,k)$ .
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=== Matrix transpose
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A formalism that is useful later on is called the _transpose_, and we obtain it
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from a matrix $A$ by switching all the rows and columns. More precisely, each
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row becomes a column instead. We use the notation $A^T$ to represent the
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transpose of $A$.
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$
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mat(1,2,3;4,5,6)^T = mat(1,4;2,5;3,6)
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$
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Formally, we can say $(A_(j,k))^T = A_(k,j)$.
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@misc{chen2024digression,
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author = {Evan Chen},
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title = {Digression on Type Safety},
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year = {2024},
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howpublished = {\url{https://web.evanchen.cc/upload/1802/tsafe-1802.pdf}},
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}
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# Peace dialogue notes
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Rotem Levin's introduction
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- Grew up as Israeli, became soldier
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- Doubted morals, told to not think about consequences
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- Army is above everything
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- Never imagined meeting Palestinians -> always told to never cross wall (into
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West Bank), violent
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- Never heard about Nakba (in Israel) until Germany -> In Israel, Law prohibits teaching Nakba
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- Israeli/Palestine peace activists: First step forward is recognizing the
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other side
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- Decided to move and live with Palestinian friends in West Bank -> reaction
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was shock
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- Oppressive system, Israeli government encroaching on Palestinian way of life
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Osama Illiwat's introduction
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- Lived in Jericho, born in East Jerusalem
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- Stories of Nakba were earliest
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- In Jerusalem, no services, not allowed to fix houses, etc
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- Army gave two options: administrative detention -> kidnapped by General for
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2-3 years or military court
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- Learned about all injustices committed by jews (Israelis) and began to feel
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hate, throw stones, etc
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- Heard of peace talks, celebrations in Jericho
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- Felt not recognized by international law, community, etc -> no rights
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- Palestinian schools closed by Israeli army
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- Shocked by jews who believe in peace -> could not believe they exist -> only
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one narrative
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- Met woman who believed had right to live on land, but did not believe they
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had the right to displace and discriminate against others
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- Everyone is suffering, paying the price
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- Went to Europe, learned what happened to Jews (holocaust) -> came to
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conclusion that Israelis and Palestinians have to meet and talk to resist the
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system
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- Started "Visit Palestine" to show Israelis what Palestine and life under
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occupation looks like
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- Only way forward is to give everyone their freedom
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Questions:
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Where was the meeting in Bethlehem?
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_Q: What other parts of the system oppress the people?_
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A: There are three groups:
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First - from (Jordan) River to Sea. Arabs born in Israel ostensibly have
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citizenship
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Second group: Palestinians in West Bank, Gaza: not citizens, military
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law/police instead of civil police
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Third group: Palestinians expelled
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The entire system is how to guarantee Jewish majority (ethnostate). You can't
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guarantee "Jewish democratic state" without discrimination. Jewish democratic
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state / Jewish majority / "Jewish supremacy"
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_Q: Is land redistribution is a path through this crisis, and do you see that as
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a part of this movement?_
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A: In America, ethnic cleansing is complete, so we can talk about reparations,
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redistribution, etc. In Gaza, we are in the middle of ethnic cleansing.
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Redistribution is a "fantasy", because we need to stop the violence now. Of
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course, it is part of thefuture, but no one is imagining it because worried
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about more immediate issues
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Need to work on a ceasefire now. Worrying about what is the best solution,
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peace organization, etc, is us trying to keep conscience happy. No one knows
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about what is going on in Gaza, Israeli jails, etc. We need to talk about the
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governments defending Israel's crimes. Peace organizations are part of the
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system. Can't use system to change system.
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Israeli government doesn't want citizens to learn common language with Arabs.
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Discourage learning Arabic. Want to keep people apart because otherwise they
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will realize they are similar.
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System needs to keep people divided to dehumanize them.
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_Q: Who in the system do or would you think you need to speak to?_
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|
||||
A: Very flexible, willing to speak to anyone who agrees or disagrees with us.
|
||||
Want to convince everyone.
|
||||
|
||||
_Q: What do you think are the best steps to take to promote ceasefire on
|
||||
individual and institutional level?_
|
||||
|
||||
A: We are all complicit because the system in Israel is the same system here.
|
||||
The same military complex, the same bombs. Understand how system works, and
|
||||
unite and build power and a movement. Need to be open and let people who
|
||||
disagree with us into our space, to stop separation of us against them.
|
||||
Transformation takes time. We are fighting against the empire who makes
|
||||
billions while we kill each other.
|
||||
|
||||
Q: It seems that real transformation will not occur until mass media begins to
|
||||
change. The most respected media voices censor much of the discourse. What has
|
||||
your experience been with the media branding many of your points as
|
||||
anti-semitic?
|
||||
|
||||
A: The mainstream media are not interested. Only invited by podcasts and small
|
||||
newspapers. Big channels will never talk to the activists. We need to build
|
||||
alternative independent media.
|
||||
|
||||
Q: Do you feel that with support for Palestine on social media, Israelis are
|
||||
beginning to see the actions of the Israeli state?
|
||||
|
||||
A: More and more Israelis are waking up but it's not enough, the mainstream are
|
||||
moving right. Every night, the news is propaganda. The prevalence social media
|
||||
and phones is very good because it's finally documenting the war crimes.
|
||||
Before, people wouldn't believe the atrocities committed by the Israel
|
||||
government. The US government is working more for Israel than the Americans.
|
||||
|
||||
Q: Is the way that we discuss the issues productive?
|
||||
|
||||
A: Many people are too busy infighting amongst themselves, when they have no
|
||||
skin in the game.
|
|
@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
|
|||
#import "@preview/ilm:1.2.1": *
|
||||
|
||||
#set text(lang: "en")
|
||||
|
||||
#show: ilm.with(
|
||||
title: [Notes on the Israeli-Palestine Peace Dialogue],
|
||||
author: "Youwen Wu",
|
||||
date: datetime(year: 2024, month: 10, day: 08),
|
||||
abstract: [
|
||||
],
|
||||
figure-index: (enabled: true),
|
||||
table-index: (enabled: true),
|
||||
listing-index: (enabled: true),
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
= Introductions
|
||||
|
||||
- Recruited to
|
|
@ -1,43 +0,0 @@
|
|||
# Week 1
|
||||
|
||||
## Goldschmidt & Marashi Reading
|
||||
|
||||
- What is "middle east"?
|
||||
- Nile Valley to Muslim lands of Central Asia
|
||||
- Geography: hot + dry, rainfall but small
|
||||
- Many farming villages found, however
|
||||
- Polar ice caps retreated, rainfall diminished. People move to Nile, Tigris,
|
||||
Euphrates, etc.
|
||||
- Middle East more accessible than US, China, etc.
|
||||
- Not endowed w/ nature; no grassy plains, scarce drinking water
|
||||
- Meager mineral deposits
|
||||
- Huge oil reserves (more than half of world's), but concentrated in few
|
||||
countries: Saudi Arabia, Iran, Kuwait, Iraq, UAE
|
||||
- Exploitation started in 20th century
|
||||
- Mountains shield minorities in countries (eg. Lebanon, Yemen, Iran) while
|
||||
invasions bring new races + culture into Middle East, resulting in cultural
|
||||
"mosaic" - many physical characteristics, belief systems, languages, cultures
|
||||
<!--- $9$ of ME is muslim, half / half speak Arabic / (Turkish, Persian)-->
|
||||
- "Mosaic" starts to crumble - modern information age (schooling, TV, etc) lead
|
||||
to universal culture (mostly) among young
|
||||
- Cultural/religious difference persist -> conflicts. Muslims felt unequal to
|
||||
Christians -> Lebanon civil wars
|
||||
- Iraq -> Suni vs. Shi'a Muslims
|
||||
- Israel -> 1.7 million Arabs in borders
|
||||
- Gaza Strip -> occupied between 1967 -> 2005, invaded 2006, 2009, 2014,
|
||||
contains 1.8 million Arabs. Jews (in Israel) divided between European or Asian
|
||||
and African origin (Ashkenazim vs. Mizrachim / Orientals).
|
||||
- Interaction between humans + geography important
|
||||
- Main causes of ME conflict
|
||||
1. Incomplete transfer from religious / theological government to secular
|
||||
government
|
||||
2. Resulting belief that governments are illegitimate, not willingly obeyed
|
||||
3. Quest for dignity + freedom by people determined to not lose independence
|
||||
(again)
|
||||
4. Involvement of outside gov't without regard for the people in ME
|
||||
5. Growing concentration of destructive weapons in volatile countries
|
||||
6. Scarcity of / demand for food, water, fossil fuels
|
||||
7. Overpopulation and widening inequality (wealth gap)
|
||||
8. Failure to resolve Palestine-Israel
|
||||
9. Sectarian / Ethnic tensions
|
||||
10. Palestinian, Iraqi, Syrian, Yemeni refuges. Internal displacement.
|
|
@ -1,54 +0,0 @@
|
|||
# Wiki Bios
|
||||
|
||||
## Wiki Bio 3
|
||||
|
||||
Shirin Aliabadi 10 March 1973 -> 1 October 2018
|
||||
|
||||
### biography
|
||||
|
||||
- Born in Tehran, Iran
|
||||
- Mentored by older borther
|
||||
- Raised in rich environment until Iranian Revolution, went abroad to study art
|
||||
history at University of Paris
|
||||
- Commuted between Paris and Tehran, although primarily based in Tehran
|
||||
- Exhibited worldwide
|
||||
- Art is part of several notable collections (Deutsche Bank in Germany, Bristol
|
||||
City Museum and Art Gallery, Farjam Collection in Dubai)
|
||||
- Passed away in Tehran after battling cancer
|
||||
|
||||
### artwork
|
||||
|
||||
- Delves into conflicting influences on young urban Iranian women
|
||||
- Tension between traditional values, religious restrictions, pervasive impact
|
||||
of globalized Western culture
|
||||
- Photographic series _Girls in Cars_, women riding in cars, ready to party
|
||||
- Illustrates contradiction between Iranian restrictions and youthful women
|
||||
who were engaging with Western style traditions
|
||||
- _Operation Supermarket_, criticized failed capitalism and consumerism
|
||||
- Common household goods to question and critique societal values and
|
||||
economic systems
|
||||
- _Miss Hybrid_ presents young Iranian women in unconventional and striking
|
||||
ways, features women with bleached blonde hair, blue contacts, flawless
|
||||
makeup, in contrast with traditional view of Muslim women.
|
||||
|
||||
### bio
|
||||
|
||||
Shirin Aliabadi was a contemporary Iranian artist. Born on March 10th, 1973 in
|
||||
Tehran, Iran, she was exposed to a rich environment of art and culture while
|
||||
growing up, until the Iranian Revolution left both of her parents jobless.
|
||||
However, they still managed to send her overseas where she obtained a degree in
|
||||
art history at the University of Paris.
|
||||
|
||||
Aliabadi was primarily based in Tehran but frequently commuted to Paris. Her
|
||||
artwork spans both photographs and drawings and has been exhibited worldwide,
|
||||
including in collections in Germany, Dubai, and France. A prevalent theme in
|
||||
her artwork is the contrast between the traditional view held in the West of
|
||||
muslim women and the reality around her in Iran. Her most famous works, _Girls
|
||||
in Cars_, and _Miss Hybrid_, both portrayed Iranian women in unconventional
|
||||
ways that were in contradiction with the traditional culture and values muslim
|
||||
women are often associated with. Women were depicted with bleached blonde hair,
|
||||
flawless makeup, and heading to parties in cars. Aliabadi's artwork highlighted
|
||||
the social and cultural structures in Iranian society and the shifts happening
|
||||
alongside the proliferation of Western culture.
|
||||
|
||||
Aliabadi passed away in 2018 at the age of 45 after battling cancer.
|
94
content/Hacks/liminalOS-docs.md
Normal file
94
content/Hacks/liminalOS-docs.md
Normal file
|
@ -0,0 +1,94 @@
|
|||
---
|
||||
id: liminalOS-docs
|
||||
aliases: []
|
||||
tags:
|
||||
- nixos
|
||||
- nixpkgs
|
||||
- liminalos
|
||||
- linux
|
||||
title: Documentation for liminalOS system distribution
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
This is documentation for the [liminalOS system
|
||||
distribution](https://github.com/youwen5/liminalOS), a Linux distribution built
|
||||
on [NixOS](https://nixos.org).
|
||||
|
||||
The goal of liminalOS is to provide an opinionated desktop environment and
|
||||
system for those too lazy to spend 100 hours ricing their NixOS system.
|
||||
|
||||
To that end, a NixOS module and home manager module are provided such that it
|
||||
is possible to configure an entire operating system powered by a riced out
|
||||
desktop environment built on Hyprland in a few lines. These modules come with
|
||||
verified versions of all of the other flake input modules that compose NixOS,
|
||||
so that you don't have to manage and version Home Manager, stylix, agenix, etc
|
||||
yourself.
|
||||
|
||||
Central to this system is the `liminalOS` option that is added to both home
|
||||
manager and NixOS. It is designed to be used alongside a very minimal NixOS and
|
||||
home manager configuration to define the entire liminalOS system.
|
||||
|
||||
You only need to set up basic things like a minimal `flake.nix`,
|
||||
`configuration.nix`, and `home.nix`, where you need only set up a basic user
|
||||
(in both NixOS and HM) and boot loader configuration. The rest of the higher
|
||||
level system features will be handled by the `liminalOS` abstraction.
|
||||
|
||||
Something like this is sufficient to bootstrap a liminalOS system. It can be
|
||||
dropped into any existing NixOS system and be used alongside an existing
|
||||
configuration.
|
||||
|
||||
```nix
|
||||
# file: configuration.nix
|
||||
{
|
||||
liminalOS = {
|
||||
config.allowUnfree = true;
|
||||
defaultEditor = pkgs.helix;
|
||||
formFactor = "desktop";
|
||||
theming = {
|
||||
# place your desired wallpaper in your configuration repo and watch your
|
||||
# system theme itself
|
||||
wallpaper = ./wallpaper.jpg;
|
||||
};
|
||||
system.graphics.nvidia.enable = true;
|
||||
extras.gaming.enable = true;
|
||||
};
|
||||
|
||||
# Set up a user
|
||||
users.users.default-user = {
|
||||
isNormalUser = true;
|
||||
description = "Default liminalOS user!";
|
||||
extraGroups = [
|
||||
"networkmanager"
|
||||
"wheel"
|
||||
];
|
||||
shell = pkgs.fish;
|
||||
};
|
||||
|
||||
home-manager.users.default-user = {
|
||||
# in this simple example, the content of ./home.nix is an import of the
|
||||
# liminalOS home manager module
|
||||
imports = [ ./home.nix ];
|
||||
};
|
||||
home-manager.extraSpecialArgs = { inherit inputs; };
|
||||
|
||||
# Set your time zone
|
||||
time.timeZone = "America/Los_Angeles";
|
||||
|
||||
# Bootloader and kernel.
|
||||
boot = {
|
||||
loader = {
|
||||
efi.canTouchEfiVariables = true;
|
||||
timeout = 15;
|
||||
systemd-boot = {
|
||||
enable = true;
|
||||
};
|
||||
};
|
||||
};
|
||||
}
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
## Full liminalOS module options
|
||||
|
||||
These are all of the available options set by `liminalOS`, automatically
|
||||
generated from liminalOS' modules. Keep in mind that many of these are enabled
|
||||
automatically when `liminalOS.enable` is set to true, but they are still
|
||||
available for fine-grained customization.
|
|
@ -11,19 +11,23 @@ Welcome! You've stumbled upon (or perhaps were pointed to) my public-facing
|
|||
This is where I grow my ideas, and they are meticulously tagged to form the
|
||||
knowledge graphs you see in the top right.
|
||||
|
||||
Currently this is a very new vault and the only contents are the trash notes
|
||||
which I took in the fall quarter of 2024. You can find them in
|
||||
[the Fall 2024 directory](./Fall-2024), with [[./Fall-2024/as-am-5/week-1.md]],
|
||||
[[./Fall-2024/as-am-5/week-2.md]] and [[./Fall-2024/mes-45/week-1.md]] being
|
||||
the weekly notes.
|
||||
Currently this is a very new vault and there are not many contents. It will
|
||||
likely be updated with notes on courses in mathematics and computer science as
|
||||
well as other expository content.
|
||||
|
||||
If you're interested in the Nix package manager, I've also started maintaining
|
||||
a sort of "cheat sheet" or "tips and tricks" collection around various quirks
|
||||
and features of the NixOS / nixpkgs ecosystem in
|
||||
[[nixos-cheat-sheet]]. Maybe you'll find something useful in
|
||||
there!
|
||||
In addition, many of my experiments and hacks will be documented here for
|
||||
posterity.
|
||||
|
||||
Feel free to take a look around and appreciate the scenery.
|
||||
If you're interested in the Nix package manager, I've started maintaining a
|
||||
sort of "cheat sheet" or "tips and tricks" collection around various quirks and
|
||||
features of the NixOS / nixpkgs ecosystem in [[nixos-cheat-sheet]]. Maybe
|
||||
you'll find something useful in there!
|
||||
|
||||
Also, there is some documentation on the
|
||||
[liminalOS](https://github.com/youwen5/liminalOS) system distribution in
|
||||
[[liminalos-docs]].
|
||||
|
||||
Feel free to take a look around and appreciate the scenery!
|
||||
|
||||
## FAQ
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
1243
flake.lock
1243
flake.lock
File diff suppressed because it is too large
Load diff
|
@ -1,8 +1,9 @@
|
|||
{
|
||||
inputs.nixpkgs.url = "github:nixos/nixpkgs/nixos-unstable";
|
||||
inputs.liminalOS.url = "github:youwen5/liminalOS";
|
||||
|
||||
outputs =
|
||||
{ nixpkgs, self, ... }:
|
||||
inputs@{ nixpkgs, self, ... }:
|
||||
let
|
||||
forAllSystems = nixpkgs.lib.genAttrs [
|
||||
"x86_64-linux"
|
||||
|
@ -19,7 +20,9 @@
|
|||
inherit (pkgs) callPackage;
|
||||
in
|
||||
{
|
||||
default = callPackage ./site.nix { };
|
||||
default = callPackage ./site.nix {
|
||||
liminalOSDocs = inputs.liminalOS.packages.${system}.docs;
|
||||
};
|
||||
}
|
||||
);
|
||||
apps = forAllSystems (
|
||||
|
|
5
site.nix
5
site.nix
|
@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
|
|||
stdenvNoCC,
|
||||
nodejs,
|
||||
pnpm,
|
||||
liminalOSDocs,
|
||||
}:
|
||||
stdenvNoCC.mkDerivation (finalAttrs: {
|
||||
pname = "alexandria";
|
||||
|
@ -20,6 +21,10 @@ stdenvNoCC.mkDerivation (finalAttrs: {
|
|||
};
|
||||
|
||||
buildPhase = ''
|
||||
mv ./content/Hacks/liminalOS.md ./liminalOS-docs_tmp
|
||||
cat ./liminalOS-docs_tmp ${liminalOSDocs} >> ./content/Hacks/liminalOS.md
|
||||
rm ./liminalOS-docs_tmp
|
||||
|
||||
node ./quartz/bootstrap-cli.mjs build
|
||||
'';
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue