A Brief Bio: In Her Own Words
āI've been a Writing and Learning Peer at the Student Learning Commons for the last 4 terms, as well as an executive member of the ¶”ĻćŌ°AV Debate Society for the last three years, with an abundance of judging and competitive experience. I've studied abroad twice in my undergraduate career, first at the NATO College of Rome as a part of ¶”ĻćŌ°AV's NATO field school, and later on exchange at the University of Strasbourg. Some notable awards I've received recently include the second place at the ¶”ĻćŌ°AV Undergraduate Writing award (2018), a shortlist from the Brian Keenan Philosophy Prize (2019) , and a longlist from the (2020). I've also recently been awarded a SSHRC grant for an MA in philosophy, which I am to start at UBC this fall.ā
What does receiving the Robert C Brown Award mean to you?
What I really feel at the end of my undergraduate studies is gratitude; Iāve been lucky enough to have had an overwhelmingly positive experience, and have been rewarded for it. If there are to be āmodelā students, I think they should be selected at least somewhat on the basis of how much fun and fulfillment they received from their education.
So, Iām going to answer this question intransigently - I had a lot of fun at ¶”ĻćŌ°AV, and to me, receiving the Robert C Brown Award is a jovial affair. Iām being paid for having a great time!
Why Philosophy? and Other Tales
Helen has very generously shared some hints for students new to ¶”ĻćŌ°AV Philosophy, giving advice for Future Philosophers to introduce them to the department and help optimize their experience at ¶”ĻćŌ°AV.
Why choose philosophy?
In high school I was intellectually curious in a variety of disciplines, with a particular inquisitiveness towards questions with theoretical dimensions. For example, while I genuinely enjoyed studying classical music and fine arts, I was ultimately more invested in questions like āhow does the mathematics of music work?ā or āhow does colour theory transfer across different mediums?ā than I was in actual structured practice. This made me a very poor musician and artist. Ditto for the natural sciences.
I felt disengaged from the educational processāit didnāt seem to require any real, substantive critical thoughtāuntil I discovered political science. It was the one discipline I found that allowed a space for genuine, independent thinking, while being grounded in tangible research. However, it wasnāt until I had taken electives within the Philosophy department that I finally acquired the vocabulary to articulate what I really wanted to studyā¦ ah, so this is philosophy! Sign me up!
Why choose ¶”ĻćŌ°AV Philosophy as a joint Major with Political Science and an extended French minor?
I chose ¶”ĻćŌ°AV with the intention of joining the French Cohort program, which offered a very compelling packageābilingual studies, generous funding, specialized smaller classes, and international travelāfor a career in international diplomacy.
However, after two years in Political Science that included a summer with the NATO Field School and an exchange term at the Strasbourg Institut dāĆtudes Politiques, I declared a major in Philosophy. Even though Iād been totally invested in the independent research projects in Political Science, I felt that it was only because of shared similarities with my interests in Philosophy.
I have no regrets about my choice in majors ā I loved French literature and linguistics and believe my studies in Political Science improved my capacity in being an engaged citizen and an informed political participant. I do not believe that my education at ¶”ĻćŌ°AV would have been complete without an interdisciplinary element.
How useful is philosophy?
In my opinion, the question āhow are you going to use your degree in Philosophy?ā is a question wrongly asked. Itās not the case that skills in Philosophy directly translate in the way that skills in technical fields translate, and frankly, even if they did, I would not choose to work in a Philosophy factory.
Concepts and tools in Philosophy encourage systematic problem solving, independent research, clarity in writing, and capacity to address fundamental questions. I have often found that my ability to engage directly and critically with problems has been what elevated my work in French and Political Science, and in this sense I actively credit my courses in Philosophy for having helped me achieve academic success overall.
Philosophy, with all its interdisciplinary branches, is relevant in every field, and there is a philosophy for every academic discipline.
Do any moments in ¶”ĻćŌ°AV Philosophy stand out?
Overall no, but Iāve noticed that professors have a strong tendency to apologize for their lack of artistic skill before embarking on a doomed mission to convey on the whiteboard whatever outlandish thought experiment was on the table.
Over the years Iāve seen many illustrations of trolley problems, Gettier cases, airplanes dropping bombs, cue balls hitting each other, and so on and so forth ā none of which can be described as particularly aesthetically pleasing. This is an especially endearing memory because Iām convinced that nobody can draw an aesthetically pleasing rendition of a trolley problem, and especially not in front of a class and with a whiteboard marker.
It seems like a kind of faultless failing. And yet professors will continue to apologize when their drawing of āa meadow with a rock that looks like a sheep except there is another sheep behind the rockā fails to impress. However, it has made class time pass much more enjoyably.