Scholar

Martin Willis

H-index: 11
Philosophy 32%
Psychology 18%
profwillis.bsky.social
Perhaps you’ve gone beyond study, beyond the department, beyond even the university. Maybe you’ve reached the ultimate: a state of beyondness.

Reposted by: Martin Willis

lbflyawayhome.bsky.social
I used to find this picture - and the whole concept - of a flooded valley quite haunting.
Actually, I still do

Artist: Ronald Lampitt
(Our Land in the Making, 1966)
Illustration divided into two frames. The upper frame shows a cut-through depiction of a flooded village with intact church and stunted trees, green in hue under the water as fish swim past.
Below is an innocuous, conventional scene of a peaceful reservoir in sunlight

Reposted by: Martin Willis

wordsmith.bsky.social
I had not seen this before, and it made me smile...
A flow chart titled 'What to call your Academic Event', poking fun at academic event titles.

Reposted by: Martin Willis

thebsls.bsky.social
ECRs and PGRs - you have three days to submit your 4k-5k word essay to the BSLS/JLS essay prize! Tidy up those conferences papers and send them in! Deadline is THIS FRIDAY.

www.bsls.ac.uk/2025/04/call...
Call for entries: 2025 BSLS/JLS Essay Prize – The British Society for Literature and Science
www.bsls.ac.uk

Reposted by: Martin Willis

drdouglassmall.bsky.social
In case you want proof, here's an article i wrote years ago about Victorian eugenicists wanting to found a religion centred on "the human body is god". (I'll cheerfully admit that it has a genuinely terrible title. I don't know what I was thinking.) www.literatureandscience.org/wp-content/u...

Reposted by: Martin Willis

jordankistler.bsky.social
Very pleased that my article 'Facts and Fictions: Emotional Authenticity and Narrative in Natural History Exhibitions', which close reads the displays of the NHM and the Loch Ness Centre, has been published today!

journals.le.ac.uk/index.php/mas

Reposted by: Martin Willis

adeleguyton.bsky.social
Dr Guyton at last!

On Tuesday I defended my dissertation, "Popular Astronomy: Mediating Outer Space in German and British Periodical Culture, 1890-1950."

#PhDone
Me and the jury. The doctoranda pictured in front of slides on the five magazines her dissertation focuses on, moments before a small constrictor attacked for the "snake fight" portion of the defence.

Reposted by: Martin Willis

earlymodlancs.bsky.social
Taking today's date as an opportunity to thank my lucky stars that I was taught "Shakespeare" by the terrific triumvirate of Catherine Belsey, Martin Coyle and Terence Hawkes at @cardiffuni.bsky.social

Always grateful 🙏

Reposted by: Martin Willis

thebsls.bsky.social
The first day of the conference is already over - with a fantastic plenary from @profmhwhitworth.bsky.social and two panels of amazing papers. It's #BSLS2025 to follow along!

Reposted by: Martin Willis

maebhlong.bsky.social
I’m extremely lucky to have an early preview of ‘The Good Father’, the new novel by my brilliant colleague @liammcilvanney.bsky.social. It’s his fault if I’m late for work because I stayed up all night reading…
Hand holding up a copy of The Good Father by Liam McIlvanney against background of living room

Reposted by: Martin Willis

philippaeast.bsky.social
Calling all #literaryagents!
A northern Literary Festival is looking for agents to present and do author one-to-ones.
The all-day event will be at Leeds Trinity University, Sat 6th Sept 2025.
It’s partly to fill the gap in the North of England now that #JerichoWriters have relocated to London.
1/
a kangaroo wearing sunglasses and a red shirt says " someone call my agent "
Alt: a kangaroo wearing sunglasses and a red shirt says " someone call my agent "
media.tenor.com
jksteinberger.bsky.social
As promised, here are the slides I shared with students to convince them to NOT use chatGPT and other artificial stupidity.

TL;DR? AI is evil, unsustainable and stupid, and I'd much rather they use their own brains, make their own mistakes, and actually learn something. 🪄
NO CHATGPT Or other artificial stupidity: motivation
First, clarity on distinguishing AIs:
Non-generative: grammar aid, translation, dictionary, text-to-audio (e.g. Natural Reader): no problem
As long as you use the appropriate tools (least intensive in data and server energy use).
Why? Because you provide the content. Your brain is doing the most important work
Generative: ChatGPT & Co. 
You only supply the prompt, the AI supplies the content.
Why is this delegation of work problematic?
3 domains: ethical, environmental, intellectual engagement.

(Caveat: generative is probably ok for computer programming, where it can be useful and save time. Not relevant to this class.)
1) AI and ethics
Mass theft of all and everything
«learning» on books, articles, blogs, social media, images, music, cultural production, without  permission of authors/creators, and leading to their mass joblessness. Profits are not reditributed to originators. 
Permanent destruction of the mental health of underpaid precarious tech workers in the Global South (Kenya, Philippines …):
«correction» to avoid production of violent and pedophile contents etc, tech workers are obliged to watch and correct super violent contents for days on end, leading to extreme psychological suffering and trauma, from which recovery is doubtful. No or little compensation (certainly not at the level of the suffering inflicted). 
In short, an industry built on theft of real human creation and sacrifice of real human health, profiting a few megafortunes. 
2) AI and (un)sustainability

Massive consumption of electricity, water, server capacity for generative AI. 
Outcome: keep fossil fuel companies in business, using up new renewable capacity, without any satisfaction of basic human needs.
Massive misappropriation of the finance necessary for climate and ecological action (renewable generation, efficiency and retrofit for buildings, public transit, infrastructures for cycling etc) towards AI industry. 
Overall: undermine climate action, reinforce fossil industry, waste resources necessary for human development. 
3) AI and intellectual engagement

First, what learning is (or should be) about:
The goal should not (only) be the reproduction of «correct» knowledge,
But mainly personal engagement and experience of thinking about topics of interest. Personal engagement = using one’s own brain. 
The most important activity for learning and intellectual engagement is the experience of making one’s own mistakes, by trial and error, corrections based on new ideas, starting over again. Learning to recognise nuances, knowledge gaps, better explanations 
This kind of learning is possible only through using your own brain, not AI. 
Also, Ais are not «intelligent». At all. 
They simply reproduce pre-existing patterns. They «bullshit», invent false references, false facts, false data, simply because those sound plausible. VERY DANGEROUS. 
If you learn how to NOT use AI, and how to research facts and data on your own, this will serve you and your communities for the rest of your life.
profwillis.bsky.social
2/ “They need ethics, philosophy, language and history to guide them. Universities like ours, cherishing the full range of academic disciplines, will have a vital role in showing how sciences and humanities can inform and strengthen each other.” Words that might be heeded by VCs elsewhere.
profwillis.bsky.social
1/ Lord Hague, speaking as he becomes Oxford University Chancellor: “the pace of change in sciences and medicine will mean we need humanities and social sciences more than ever. New technologies are changing politics and transforming the way culture is developed and communicated…”

Reposted by: Martin Willis

tim-waterman.co.uk
Now here's an attractive CFP: Railway Aesthetics: Experiencing Locomotion across Media and Cultures. Takes place ON THE TRAIN Vienna-Bucharest-Istanbul, 10-13 September 2025. Deadline for submissions: May 2, 2025 call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2025/02/...
View down a well lit railway platform with a sleeper train alongside
profwillis.bsky.social
Great letter. The cuts at Cardiff include English, history, philosophy, linguistics, creative writing. Reductions not closures, but sadly familiar. English at Cardiff is the home of the late Catherine Belsey, and of Peck and Coyle (of essay writing fame). It’s the destruction of a subject’s history.
artsandhums.bsky.social
The Arts and Humanities Alliance have written an open letter to Bridget Philippson, Secretary of State for Education, on the recently announced cuts across the sector. We are concerned that these measures disproportionately affect our disciplines and call for an urgent government review.

by Martin WillisReposted by: Martin Willis

profwillis.bsky.social
This is such a generous thing to do for emerging writers!

Reposted by: Martin Willis

victstudies.bsky.social
To ring in the new semester, check out Abigail Droge’s article, “Reading George Eliot with Victorian College Students” from Issue 63.2. We hope you enjoy this opportunity to not only read about past students but imagine future generations of scholars to come! muse.jhu.edu/article/801003

Reposted by: Martin Willis

thebsls.bsky.social
There's one week left to submit your essays to the JLS/BSLS Early Career essay prize! Essays of approx. 8000 words on any topic related to literature and science (or medicine or technology, etc) are welcome!

www.bsls.ac.uk/2024/09/2024...
2024 Essay Prize Competition – The British Society for Literature and Science
www.bsls.ac.uk

References

Fields & subjects

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