Probably a test of virtue every now and then might not be entirely a
bad thing unless one fails miserably, there is motive behind the
coquet of one's wiles to consider when ladder climbing is essential
for career success.  Thinking can become a bit difficult when blood
flow to the brain suddenly decreases so preparation is advisable and
can keep one cool at the water cooler.  I feel it has become
increasingly difficult with the shift in gender ratio at any workplace
environment.  It's easier now to be snagged and taken down, it's not
something to overlook or trifle with.  As you say, if we can't get it
right on the lower level we'll never make it to the top.

On Sep 12, 12:56 pm, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
> Spot on Slip - not what we should be in the game for.  Bad enough
> being a young Lothario, yet alone a Grecian 2000ed one!  There is a
> certain sexual madness in any workplace -worth knowing it is there so
> one can keep it at arm's length!  If we can't spot this behavioural
> stuff (many can't or get it all wrong) I doubt we can ever deal with
> racism, sexism and general power-freaking.
>
> On 12 Sep, 18:37, Slip Disc <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Yes, So are the days of our lives.
>
> > On Sep 11, 11:22 pm, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > The most creative program I watched this week was "Warplane" on PBS.
> > > Utterly amazing and inspiring!// Who is being "used"- the professor or
> > > the student? Academia reminds me of Hollywood sometimes.
>
> > > On Sep 10, 5:14 pm, Slip Disc <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > Very interesting my friend.  It's not that I don't concur but there
> > > > are some areas of gray and, as you well know, shadows sometimes
> > > > represent images that do not formulate the actual instance.  Pat of
> > > > course can have us dancing about the galaxy in search of substance but
> > > > that does not negate the fact that we are still here in ME tossing
> > > > about speculations. Students do have their delusions of achievement,
> > > > some beyond logical comprehension. I'm just wondering how many
> > > > voluptuous students passed your elevated bar via the path of
> > > > libidinous satiation.  Let's be real, for those of us who have been
> > > > there, the opportunity for preferential treatment at certain levels
> > > > can present a special challenge to the cerebral section usually
> > > > designated to be lobotomized.  Creativity is a method to achieve what
> > > > one desires and sometimes one's desires can achieve what one wants to
> > > > create.
>
> > > > On Sep 10, 4:22 pm, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > > I've appreciated the stuff on consciousness and other subjects we are
> > > > > never going to 'disentangle' of late. Someone was 'threatening' more
> > > > > on universes 'sprouting all over the place' from curved space-time
> > > > > (pace moi or a string necktie party round at Pat's perhaps).  All in
> > > > > favour ... yet what about practical creative issues?
> > > > > I used to teach a module called Creative Organisational Practices and
> > > > > Analysis (where we could all come a croppa) - students from long ago
> > > > > often remind me it was an oasis in the desert of business teaching.
> > > > > There were no rules other than to produce a 5,000 word or equivalent
> > > > > project that I could feasibly fit with my own rules of scamming the
> > > > > bureaucracy.  One story about the 'no rules' concerned the leisure
> > > > > studies lecturer who considered hammock sleeping on the beach as a
> > > > > clearly excellent project in leisure, though I did mention he was
> > > > > finally sacked after fourteen years of practice.  Some of the work was
> > > > > so good it made Channel 4 television, some so bad I was reduced to
> > > > > marking the laughs of derision.  The bull in the syllabus was silver-
> > > > > tongued and highly academic - an excellent cover for the FOFO teaching
> > > > > style and deconstruct the penguin ethos.  No one ever failed, but a
> > > > > mark of 43.5% was covertly known to indicate my displeasure.  One
> > > > > survivor even wrote her final dissertation as a comparison of
> > > > > management and the Dancing Masters of the Wu Li (high energy physics
> > > > > meets organisational aesthetics).  Some said I was swooned by her
> > > > > prettiness, but she married a real physicist.  The external examiner,
> > > > > agreeing my mark, spluttered this was the most dangerous work he had
> > > > > ever witnessed.  Another did a photographic comparison of company
> > > > > mergers and marriage - presented at an International conference,
> > > > > topped only by another on the same theme by a Norwegian academic.
> > > > > Teaching, such as it was, varied from presentations of my own papers
> > > > > and people dragged in from the street, including Spike Milligan and
> > > > > Hovis Presley, a prostitute and some amateur magicians.
> > > > > I wonder what our views on practical creativity are?  My course was
> > > > > inspired in part by a Peter Anthony book 'The Foundation of
> > > > > Management', opening with an assertion that the last place to send
> > > > > talented young people to learn about business was a business school -
> > > > > maybe they should spend time with scientists or Bohemians.- Hide 
> > > > > quoted text -
>
> > > > - Show quoted text -
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