Somayeh Tohidi
@somayehtohidi.bsky.social
1.2K followers 1.7K following 330 posts
Postdoc at the University of Manchester working on misinformation and polarization; Mum; #WomanLifeFreedom https://sites.google.com/view/somayehtohidi/about
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somayehtohidi.bsky.social
One of the most appealing aspects of doing philosophy, for me, is having a curious puzzle tucked away in my mind for a long time. It feels like a safe, quiet room within my mind where I can take refuge whenever I’m overwhelmed by the external world.
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
It can be but they make progress in a tangible way. So, no one is worried about them…
Reposted by Somayeh Tohidi
hkandersen.bsky.social
We're coming up on philosophy PhD application season. In case it is helpful for you or your students, I have a guide to this process, developed over the years of working with SFU MA students. Let me know if you have questions or suggestions
#philsky #philsci

www.hkandersen.com/applying-for...
Applying for Ph.d. programs
​These notes were developed over the years for the annual "Applying to a PhD program" session for Simon Fraser University Philosophy MA students. This offers a perspective on how to prioritize your...
www.hkandersen.com
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
and then, depending on how often I jumped to the other tiles, I may regress or progress. But why do the past and future always seem more stable to me? There is something both irrational and addictive about this mindset./2
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
I have this vivid picture that at each point in time, my present self is an unstable tile between my past self and my future self, and I struggle to balance myself on that present tile. So I keep jumping back and forth until the present self tile breaks apart,/1
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
(look how few connections the circled node has compared to other highlighted nodes), I somehow contributed to the movement by connecting a network of religious people to a movement against a government that represents their religion./4
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
my little role in this movement was to connect two networks of people through my religious identity (like the circled node in this picture). That’s to say I thought (again, maybe unjustifiably) that although I’m not famous and I don’t have many friends…/3
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
I absolutely loved that movement. Although I was active on social media, I was a nobody, but I was receiving all sorts of threats from both pro-government forces and protesters. A big thing that helped me during that storm was the thought (justified or unjustified) that …/2
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
I was watching one of Duflo’s lectures and she showed this picture as an example of a beautiful representation of data. It’s a visualization of a Facebook network of 1000+ friends in Somalia. It reminded me of what kept me sane during the social movement in Iran 3 years ago./1
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
It reminded me of this:
bsky.app/profile/soma...
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
It’s crazy how much our estimation of the range of possible phenomena impacts our interpretation of a newly encountered phenomenon! I’m always struck by this when I contrast my interpretation of a new social phenomenon with friends who were raised in more diverse or liberal societies.
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
September is coming and it marks the third year of my exile. I don’t even know whether I should call it an exile. Everything in that geography is uncertain…
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
Sitting in my home, mother, they forced me to fight mother
Capable, mother, I’m not mother, I can’t
Say goodbye for me, I’m opening my door, mother
maybe I won’t return, say goodbye
Tell those who are afraid, my heart’s bullets are sharp/1
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
And they are my kin
You are my kin, mother
And separation is hard, mother, by God it is
They are my kin…/2
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
Sitting in my home, mother, they forced me to fight mother
Capable, mother, I’m not mother, I can’t
Say goodbye for me, I’m opening my door, mother
maybe I won’t return, say goodbye
Tell those who are afraid, my heart’s bullets are sharp/1
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
It's not hard to think of mechanisms where knowing about a cognitive bias makes it worse! With a bit of caricature, the current approach to bias mitigation resembles giving a critically ill patient a medical textbook and expecting self-diagnosis and treatment./2
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
It's usually assumed that awareness of a cognitive bias is good, like once you know about it, it'll affect your decisions less and you'll get better at avoiding it over time. But is there any solid evidence for either of these claims?/1
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
Peder Balke - "The North Cape by Moonlight" (1848)
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
You have theories (a whole book of them) about history and enlightenment! TY for sharing your ideas. But I wonder how one could get themselves to record a video from their ivory tower addressing people in ME to tell them the world is improving.The rage I felt watching Pinker’s video is indescribable
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
Growth is such a misleading metaphor for what life experience does to people. I feel like I’m shrinking as I go through life, and I don’t feel bad about it. It actually feels so good to think that someday I may shrink so much that I become invisible…I would have infinite density of consciousness! :)
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
Iran’s Supreme Court has upheld the final death sentence against activist Sharifeh Mohammadi. The Islamic Republic is an irreformable and brutal state whose evil character cannot be excused even when facing genuinely evil enemies.
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
‘Natoori’ by Shima Davoodpour.

(It’s a Kurdish song)
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
Thanks for the response. I don’t think talking with an LLM excludes thinking for oneself. The conversation isn’t just about finding and criticizing their mistakes. Brainstorming requires your own thinking and ideas - an interesting conversation can’t even start without them!
somayehtohidi.bsky.social
But arguably, the time and mental effort spent explaining away a mistake is better spent than that spent on calculations and staring into the distance (in the absence of a brainstorming partner)./2