Difference between revisions of "SEPT 6"

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(Created page with "==3: SEPT 6== ===Assigned=== :*Hibbing, John R., Kevin Smith, and John R. Alford, ''Predisposed: Liberals, conservatives, and the biology of political difference'', Chapter...")
 
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==3: SEPT 6==
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==2: SEP 6 - 1. Some classical ideas on H&W==
  
 
===Assigned===
 
===Assigned===
  
:*Hibbing, John R., Kevin Smith, and John R. Alford, ''Predisposed: Liberals, conservatives, and the biology of political difference'', Chapter 1, "Living with the Enemy". (32)
+
:*Hall, C2 – “The Wisest Man in the World” (18)
:*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrvtOWEXDIQ PBS Aristotle and Virtue Theory: Crash Course Philosophy #38]
+
:*Labouvie-Vief, "Wisdom as Integrated Thought"(27)
  
===In-class content===
+
===In-class===
  
:*Lecture Segment: Philosophical Theories: Virtue Ethics
+
:*1st Writing and Dropbox Practice
:*Lecture Segment: Some Preliminaries about Ethical theory and objectivity
 
:*In-class review of 1st practice writing.
 
  
===Some Preliminaries about Objectivity in Ethics and Features of Ethical Discourse===
+
===Hall, C2 – “The Wisest Man in the World” ===
  
:*A Framework for thinking about moral theories.
+
:*Socratic wisdom -- Chaerephon and the story from the Apology. 
 +
::*Socratic wisdom -- Knowing that you do not know something.  Awareness of ignorance, but also, by implication, of standards for knowing.  
 +
::*Does Socrates behavior in the Apology, toward Meletus and his verdict, show wisdom or contempt?
  
::*Where should we look for "moral goodness"?
+
:*Axial Age Hypothesis, 23  -- for more on this, see the wiki page, "Axial Age"  
:::*Intentions (Kantian),
+
::*digress on cultural evolution -- maybe a better way to theorize this idea.
:::*Person (a virtuous person) (Aristotle),
 
:::*Consequences (Mill, Singer - Utilitarian)
 
  
:*The following is pretty standard, but was drawn from Peter Singer's classic, ''Practical Ethics'':
+
:*Greek
 +
::*Heraclitus - wisdom in recognizing the "flux" of reality.  Note contrast with Platonic/Socratic model - forms.
 +
::*Contrast between Pericles and Socrates, p. 28
 +
:::*Pericles -- "civic wisdom" - Athenian model for decision making.  Quasi-democratic.  (Wise culture/ wise person)
 +
:::*Socrates -- anti-body.  renunciation of desire.  p.29: Hall hints at the modern research on emotion and evolved responses.  He might have said: Emotions are "epistemic". 
 +
:::*both selling "deliberation" as a virtue
  
:*Question to keep in mind for the next 5 minutes: When Haidt was showing that there was cultural variation in the way people make the "Harm / Convention" distinction, was he embracing "bad relativism"?
+
:*Confucius
 +
::*6th century BC China - collapse of Zhou dynasty.  Period of chaos and suffering. 
 +
::*Characteristics of Confucian ideas of wisdom - concept of "gen," put above even wisdom. (gloss)
 +
::*By contrast with Plato, Confucian wisdom is practical, meant to guide life, recognizes primacy of emotion.
 +
::*Like Socrates, Confucious was not personally well-integrated into society. 
  
:*Singer's arguments against cultural relativism:
+
:*Buddha 563-483bc.
 +
::*slight corrective to Jaspers quote on 32.  A bit old school
 +
::*"awakening" vs. "wisdom"
  
::*Cultural Relativism (the old discussion): Ethics varies by culture.  Singer: This is true and false, same act under different conditions may have different value, but this is '''superficial relativism'''.  For example, existence of birth control led to a general change in sexual ethics. The moral principle in question (don't have kids you're not ready to care for) might remain the same and be objective, but the prohibition on casual sex might change. 
+
:*Theological (divine wisdom) vs. Secular (practical wisdom)
 +
::*Hall makes the point that Christian thought re-emphasizes the distinction between "Sapientia" and "Scientia"
 +
::*Solomon's wisdom came in a dream from the divine(More about him later.)
 +
::*Are models of divine wisdom at odds with secular views?
 +
::*
  
::*Note: There is strong polling data on advisability of living together prior to marriage.  Now, yes; 60 years ago, no.  So cultural change itself doesn't tell you whether moral principles are changing. 
+
===Labouvie-Vief, "Wisdom as Integrated Thought"===
  
::*Subjectivist Relativism - This position may not be held by any thoughtful person, but it sounds like what some people say when they start studying values and becomes confused or cynical.  
+
:*Main ideas:   
:::*The Position: "Wrong" means "I disapprove" or "my society disapproves")
+
::*Sees the modern resurgence of interest in wisdom as a way of counteracting the tendency to theorize cognition only in terms of objective forms.  Contrasts "objective" vs. "organismic" (emotions, subjective, interpersonal) thought. 
:::*The Problems:
+
::*Explores a historical thesis about the development of Greek culture from Homeric to the philosophical, that Homeric man was embedded in action in a way that Greek philosophy is notOn the other hand, philosophy opens up a split in consciousness that requires integration. Plato's anti-body philosophy needs to be surpassed.
::::*If this sort of relativism is true, polls could determine ethicsBut they don't.
 
::::*Deep subjectivism can't making sense of disagreement. Ethics is a kind of conversation.
 
::::*There is just too much research suggesting that "I approve" isn't philosophical "rock bottom".
 
  
:*Singer: Ok to say the values aren't objective like physics (aren't facts about the world), but not sensible to deny the meaningfulness of moral disagreement and ethical reasoning.
+
::*In her own work, she came to find Piaget as having an objectivist bias. (Similar to other critiques of pre-evolutionary psch. Haidt's "rationalist delusion".)
  
:*An evolutionist's twist: A society's ethical culture can produce positive, neutral, or negative outcomes for human flourishing.  In this sense, values have objective consequences in meeting selection pressures (both natural and cultural). (Vax values, for example.)
+
:*'''Modes of Knowing'''
  
:*Are there minimum conditions for ethical theories? (Or, What kind of conversation is ethics?)
+
:*Mythos and Logos - Her terms for a contrast she finds in Piaget, Freud, others.  Oral - meaning derived from shared experience / Written - meaning disembedded from context.  Ultimately in Homer vs. Plato/Socrates.
  
::*The sorts of reasons that count as ethical: '''universalizable''' ones. Can't just appeal to one person or group's interest.  Note: most standard ethical theories satisfy this requirement, yet yield different analysis and adviceWe will look at the specific form of universalization in each theory we discuss, but you could say this is a kind of defining feature of ethical discourse.
+
::*Mythos - speech, narrative, plot, dialogue  ::*Logos - gather, read, count reckon, explain, reason objectively. Deductive certainty.   
  
===Hibbing, et. al. ''Predisposed'' Chapter 1===
+
::*Her question: which of these is associated with mature (and by implication wise) thinking?
  
:*'''Some opening examples of the persistence of partisanship'''
+
:*'''Mental Models'''   
:*opening example: William F. Buckley and Gore Vidal -- meant as example of highly educated partisans who would be able to debate in a civilized way.  60's era political divisions often violent. 
 
:*also historical examples of highly partisan politics -- Hamilton & Adams, Hamilton & Burr (duelled).  Jefferson's dirty tricks.  
 
  
:*Goal of the Book: to explain why people experience and interpret the political world so very differently. Thesis at p. 5: “Our pitch…” (6): list of difference that track political difference.  READ
+
::*Birth of logos - Pythagoras, abstraction from matter. Associates it with rise of complex and larger societies. (Disgress with update on cultural evolution.)   By contrast, Homeric thought shows "mythos"
  
:*'''A methodological concern'''
+
::*58: "In the Homeric poems, there is little evidence for the self-consciousness typical of the modern person. The Homeric heroes do not engage in reflection but are embedded in action. Theirs is a concrete, sensory existence. It shows little evidence of the mental types of regulation mastered by the modern adult: impulse delay and monitoring and self-ownership of action and feeling (Onians, 1954). There is no language of a self different from its concrete actions and assets - a self as a permanent, persistent agent who authors its actions but is not identical with them. Indeed, there is no word at all, no specific designating concept, for the self, since "... no one in Homer thinks of himself, but rather engages in an interaction or dialogue, be it with another person, with a god, or with a part of himself (Simon, 1978, p. 72).  
:*Does it makes sense to reduce political difference to "liberal" vs. "conservative".  They are in fact measuring lots of differences, but claim there is a tradition of recognizing this difference. 11: some terminological issues. Ultimately, labels for clusters of real personality and behavioral differences.
 
  
:*Think Probabalistically: not biological determinists, rather real persistent differences shape and mold our ideology.  Example: relation between conscientiousness and ideology 14.  A number of studies replicate a positive correlation bt conscientiousness and conservatism. Lesson on 15: difference between representing data in categories vs. scatterplot. Wilson-Patterson index of conservatism.  Brief lesson on correlation, 17.  Correlation for conscientiousness and conservatism small r = .2
+
::*59: "By Plato's lifetime, a dramatic change in the language of the mind had occurred, and Plato's writings represent the culmination of a new way of speaking about the mature adult. For Plato, the adult is no longer embedded in a concrete, organic, and participatory reality. Rather, the new reality is one defined by a new function, psyche, variously translated as soul, mind, or spirit. Most of Plato's writing is concerned with delineating the new faculty that allows us to live in that new reality and with differentiating it from a reality of concrete sensory textures. "
  
:*'''What are predispositions?'''
+
::*'''The dissociated mind'''
:*Predispositions - "biologically and psychologically instantied defaults that, absent new information or overriding, govern response to given stimuli" (24). 
 
::*Leibniz speculated about "appetitions"
 
::*Neuroscientist Eagleman: brain running alot of its own programs.  Ad hoc defenses (also in Haidt) called "baloney generator" by Pinker.  We may have an illusion of rationality and control.  examples of self-deception like this, p. 21, also top of 22 read. 
 
::*Responses to Political stimuli emotionally salient and not always conscious:  Lodge: "hot cognition" or "automaticity" 
 
::*Predispositions vary qualitatively and by intensity. (Examples among people you know.)
 
::*Note examples from environmental psych on top of p. 21 and top of 22.
 
  
:*23: clarifying argument: not nature / nurture. predispositions are difficult to change. research on long term stability of pol. orientation180 degree turn is very unusual.  
+
:::*Claims that Plato's model is limited bec. it focuses on mind over body, inner over outer...p. 60Can a mature mind be described only in terms of logos?  
 +
:::*Mind without body, suspicion of imagination, identification of thought with the masculine (62)
  
:*'''Technical definition of predispositions''': "Predispositions, then, can be thought of as biologically and psychologically instantiated defaults that, absent new information or conscious overriding, govern response to given stimuli."
+
::*'''The reconnected mind'''
  
:*Our actual predispositions vary, but also the degree to which we have predispositions is variable across a group. (This is one reason researchers in the field sometimes focus on highly partisan test subjects.)
+
:::*The problem of the dissociated mind is address in the 18th-19th centuries during the Romantic era: Kant saw the problem, but later thinkers theorized a more "connected" mind, rejecting rationalism. Habermas is a positive example in 20th century.
  
:*25: some background on theorizing about political dispositions.  what is new today is better research, but also research connecting political variation with bio/cog variation.
+
:*'''The Loss and Gain of Wisdom'''
  
:*27: resistance to this kind of theory in political sciencePhilip Conversealso, idea that politics is best understood in terms of history and culture
+
:*70: cites evidence from developmental psychyounger vs. older adults: read.
  
===Philosophical Moral Theories: Virtue Ethics===
+
:*71:  "More mature adults, however, were able to create more symmetrical representations of self and other. They were able to accept responsibility for the conflict and to understand that the other is not necessarily motivated by malevolent intentions. Thus for anger, lack of maturity involved an overpolarization of self and other, whereas maturity '' brought a compensating ability to experience empathy and to maintain connectedness.
  
:*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrvtOWEXDIQ PBS Aristotle and Virtue Theory: Crash Course Philosophy #38]
+
:*77: "The view of wisdom I am proposing, therefore, retains many of the elements significant in Plato's theory. It squarely rejects the position that the abstract and theoretical and the concrete and practical constitute incommensurable domains of mental functioning. Instead, it accepts the position that a theory of mind, self, and reason for better or worse also implies a prescription for how to conduct and evaluate one's life. The limits of the Platonic vision of wisdom as it has persisted through the ages derive, however, from the attempt to dissociate the two poles that are necessary to the evolution of wisdom. Hence, the objectivist Platonic vision proposes a concept of reason that rejects rational evaluation of elements deriving from one of these poles, mythos. Thereby it opens itself to profound irrationality. "
  
:*concepts from video...
+
===1st Writing and Dropbox practice===
  
::*Virtue — general idea of being an excellent personAlso, specific lists of virtues (vary by time and culture)
+
:*Please write a 250 word maximum answer to the following question by '''September 11, 2023, 11:59pm.''' This assignment will give us some initial writing to look at and give you practice with the dropbox protocol for turning in pseudonymous writing in the course. For this assignment, the writing itself is ungraded, but you will receive 15 points for following the instructions accurately.
  
:*A bit of Aristotle’s theory of virtue and human nature: fixed nature, species eternal, '''proper function (telos),''' distinctive aspect of function: being rational and political(Note that modern virtue theorists aren't committed to some of A's false ideas.)
+
::*'''Topic:''' Drawing on our class discussion and reading of Labouvie-Vief, what do you see as the main contrast she is trying to show?  What would be some contemporary examples?  Do you agree with her main claim about this contrast?
 +
 +
::*'''Prompt Advice''': While this is ungraded and informal writing which asks for your opening impressions, try to give your answer some organization and structureTry to pay attention to word choice and sentence structure.  I strongly encourage you to draft your answer the night before it is due and return to it on the night that it is due.
  
::*Virtue is natural to usLike an acorn becoming a tree. Being virtuous is being the best of the kind of thing you areA deep intuition supports this developmental approach. (Pause to consider personal examples of the reality of moral development.)
+
:*'''Advice about collaboration''': Collaboration is part of the academic process and the intellectual world that college courses are based on, so it is important to me that you have the possibility to collaborateI encourage you to collaborate with other students, but only up to the point of sharing ideas, references to class notes, and your own notes, '''verbally'''. Collaboration  is also a great way to make sure that a high average level of learning and development occurs in the class.  The best way to avoid plagiarism is to NOT share text of draft answers or outlines of your answerKeep it verbal. Generate your own examples.
  
::*Theory of the Golden Mean: Virtue as mean between extremes of emotion:  Ex. Courage (story of stopping the mugger), Honesty, Generosity. (Let's give our own examples.)  Virtue as training of emotional response in relation to knowledge of circumstances and the good.
+
::# To assure anonymity, you must remove your name from the "author name" that you may have provided when you set up your word processing application. For instructions on removing your name from an Word or Google document, [[https://wiki.gonzaga.edu/alfino/index.php/Removing_your_name_from_a_Word_file click here]].  
 
+
::# Format your answer in double spaced text, in a typical 12 point font, and using normal margins. Do not add spaces between paragraphs, but do indent the first line of each paragraph.
::*How do you acquire virtue? Experience.  Practical Wisdom cultivated through habituation.  Follow a moral exemplar (virtue coach). Good parenting and shaping by healthy family. It's a training program in becoming the best human you can be based on your "telos".  
+
::# '''Do not put your name in the file or filename'''You may put your student ID number in the fileAlways put a word count in the file. Save your file for this assignment with the name: Gossip.
 
+
::# To turn in your assignment, log into courses.alfino.org, click on the "#0 1st Writing and Dropbox practice" dropbox.  
::*What if we don’t want to become virtuous?  What is the motivation to virtue?  The pursuit of a happy life that “goes well”EudaimoniaHuman flourishing. Challenge and development of talents. Should be attractive. Connection between virtue and happiness not guaranteed for Aristotle, but could be tighter in other versions.
+
::# If you cannot meet a deadline, you must email me about your circumstances (unless you are having an emergency) '''before''' the deadline or you will lose points.
 
 
:*Additional points:
 
 
 
::*centrality of virtues and practical wisdom. Is practical wisdom real? 
 
::*historic variability and list of virtues. Curiosity was a vice in Medieval Europe. Check out virtue lists on [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtue Virtue Wiki].
 
 
 
:*From Aristotle to Evolutionary theory.  Eternality of the species.  What if you drop this false belief?  Human excellence may have to do with meeting or exceeding the challenges posed by our environment.  Then the idea that virtues change by time and culture makes more sense.  The pursuit of the good life is the objective and constant part of morality, and the everything that changes is part of the challenge of knowing the human good.
 

Latest revision as of 20:08, 6 September 2023

2: SEP 6 - 1. Some classical ideas on H&W

Assigned

  • Hall, C2 – “The Wisest Man in the World” (18)
  • Labouvie-Vief, "Wisdom as Integrated Thought"(27)

In-class

  • 1st Writing and Dropbox Practice

Hall, C2 – “The Wisest Man in the World”

  • Socratic wisdom -- Chaerephon and the story from the Apology.
  • Socratic wisdom -- Knowing that you do not know something. Awareness of ignorance, but also, by implication, of standards for knowing.
  • Does Socrates behavior in the Apology, toward Meletus and his verdict, show wisdom or contempt?
  • Axial Age Hypothesis, 23 -- for more on this, see the wiki page, "Axial Age"
  • digress on cultural evolution -- maybe a better way to theorize this idea.
  • Greek
  • Heraclitus - wisdom in recognizing the "flux" of reality. Note contrast with Platonic/Socratic model - forms.
  • Contrast between Pericles and Socrates, p. 28
  • Pericles -- "civic wisdom" - Athenian model for decision making. Quasi-democratic. (Wise culture/ wise person)
  • Socrates -- anti-body. renunciation of desire. p.29: Hall hints at the modern research on emotion and evolved responses. He might have said: Emotions are "epistemic".
  • both selling "deliberation" as a virtue
  • Confucius
  • 6th century BC China - collapse of Zhou dynasty. Period of chaos and suffering.
  • Characteristics of Confucian ideas of wisdom - concept of "gen," put above even wisdom. (gloss)
  • By contrast with Plato, Confucian wisdom is practical, meant to guide life, recognizes primacy of emotion.
  • Like Socrates, Confucious was not personally well-integrated into society.
  • Buddha 563-483bc.
  • slight corrective to Jaspers quote on 32. A bit old school
  • "awakening" vs. "wisdom"
  • Theological (divine wisdom) vs. Secular (practical wisdom)
  • Hall makes the point that Christian thought re-emphasizes the distinction between "Sapientia" and "Scientia"
  • Solomon's wisdom came in a dream from the divine. (More about him later.)
  • Are models of divine wisdom at odds with secular views?

Labouvie-Vief, "Wisdom as Integrated Thought"

  • Main ideas:
  • Sees the modern resurgence of interest in wisdom as a way of counteracting the tendency to theorize cognition only in terms of objective forms. Contrasts "objective" vs. "organismic" (emotions, subjective, interpersonal) thought.
  • Explores a historical thesis about the development of Greek culture from Homeric to the philosophical, that Homeric man was embedded in action in a way that Greek philosophy is not. On the other hand, philosophy opens up a split in consciousness that requires integration. Plato's anti-body philosophy needs to be surpassed.
  • In her own work, she came to find Piaget as having an objectivist bias. (Similar to other critiques of pre-evolutionary psch. Haidt's "rationalist delusion".)
  • Modes of Knowing
  • Mythos and Logos - Her terms for a contrast she finds in Piaget, Freud, others. Oral - meaning derived from shared experience / Written - meaning disembedded from context. Ultimately in Homer vs. Plato/Socrates.
  • Mythos - speech, narrative, plot, dialogue ::*Logos - gather, read, count reckon, explain, reason objectively. Deductive certainty.
  • Her question: which of these is associated with mature (and by implication wise) thinking?
  • Mental Models
  • Birth of logos - Pythagoras, abstraction from matter. Associates it with rise of complex and larger societies. (Disgress with update on cultural evolution.) By contrast, Homeric thought shows "mythos"
  • 58: "In the Homeric poems, there is little evidence for the self-consciousness typical of the modern person. The Homeric heroes do not engage in reflection but are embedded in action. Theirs is a concrete, sensory existence. It shows little evidence of the mental types of regulation mastered by the modern adult: impulse delay and monitoring and self-ownership of action and feeling (Onians, 1954). There is no language of a self different from its concrete actions and assets - a self as a permanent, persistent agent who authors its actions but is not identical with them. Indeed, there is no word at all, no specific designating concept, for the self, since "... no one in Homer thinks of himself, but rather engages in an interaction or dialogue, be it with another person, with a god, or with a part of himself (Simon, 1978, p. 72).
  • 59: "By Plato's lifetime, a dramatic change in the language of the mind had occurred, and Plato's writings represent the culmination of a new way of speaking about the mature adult. For Plato, the adult is no longer embedded in a concrete, organic, and participatory reality. Rather, the new reality is one defined by a new function, psyche, variously translated as soul, mind, or spirit. Most of Plato's writing is concerned with delineating the new faculty that allows us to live in that new reality and with differentiating it from a reality of concrete sensory textures. "
  • The dissociated mind
  • Claims that Plato's model is limited bec. it focuses on mind over body, inner over outer...p. 60. Can a mature mind be described only in terms of logos?
  • Mind without body, suspicion of imagination, identification of thought with the masculine (62)
  • The reconnected mind
  • The problem of the dissociated mind is address in the 18th-19th centuries during the Romantic era: Kant saw the problem, but later thinkers theorized a more "connected" mind, rejecting rationalism. Habermas is a positive example in 20th century.
  • The Loss and Gain of Wisdom
  • 70: cites evidence from developmental psych. younger vs. older adults: read.
  • 71: "More mature adults, however, were able to create more symmetrical representations of self and other. They were able to accept responsibility for the conflict and to understand that the other is not necessarily motivated by malevolent intentions. Thus for anger, lack of maturity involved an overpolarization of self and other, whereas maturity brought a compensating ability to experience empathy and to maintain connectedness.
  • 77: "The view of wisdom I am proposing, therefore, retains many of the elements significant in Plato's theory. It squarely rejects the position that the abstract and theoretical and the concrete and practical constitute incommensurable domains of mental functioning. Instead, it accepts the position that a theory of mind, self, and reason for better or worse also implies a prescription for how to conduct and evaluate one's life. The limits of the Platonic vision of wisdom as it has persisted through the ages derive, however, from the attempt to dissociate the two poles that are necessary to the evolution of wisdom. Hence, the objectivist Platonic vision proposes a concept of reason that rejects rational evaluation of elements deriving from one of these poles, mythos. Thereby it opens itself to profound irrationality. "

1st Writing and Dropbox practice

  • Please write a 250 word maximum answer to the following question by September 11, 2023, 11:59pm. This assignment will give us some initial writing to look at and give you practice with the dropbox protocol for turning in pseudonymous writing in the course. For this assignment, the writing itself is ungraded, but you will receive 15 points for following the instructions accurately.
  • Topic: Drawing on our class discussion and reading of Labouvie-Vief, what do you see as the main contrast she is trying to show? What would be some contemporary examples? Do you agree with her main claim about this contrast?
  • Prompt Advice: While this is ungraded and informal writing which asks for your opening impressions, try to give your answer some organization and structure. Try to pay attention to word choice and sentence structure. I strongly encourage you to draft your answer the night before it is due and return to it on the night that it is due.
  • Advice about collaboration: Collaboration is part of the academic process and the intellectual world that college courses are based on, so it is important to me that you have the possibility to collaborate. I encourage you to collaborate with other students, but only up to the point of sharing ideas, references to class notes, and your own notes, verbally. Collaboration is also a great way to make sure that a high average level of learning and development occurs in the class. The best way to avoid plagiarism is to NOT share text of draft answers or outlines of your answer. Keep it verbal. Generate your own examples.
  1. To assure anonymity, you must remove your name from the "author name" that you may have provided when you set up your word processing application. For instructions on removing your name from an Word or Google document, [click here].
  2. Format your answer in double spaced text, in a typical 12 point font, and using normal margins. Do not add spaces between paragraphs, but do indent the first line of each paragraph.
  3. Do not put your name in the file or filename. You may put your student ID number in the file. Always put a word count in the file. Save your file for this assignment with the name: Gossip.
  4. To turn in your assignment, log into courses.alfino.org, click on the "#0 1st Writing and Dropbox practice" dropbox.
  5. If you cannot meet a deadline, you must email me about your circumstances (unless you are having an emergency) before the deadline or you will lose points.