Hmm... how do you feel about GMU? The good, the bad, and the ugly. I am interested since I was only there for that one French class I took, where we ran into each other on campus, so I don't know too much about "student life" but would like to know more.
So, I'm finally getting around to responding to comments....gnownaymMarch 26 2008, 00:42:58 UTC
As with any school, GMU has it's strengths and weakness. Its great strength is its amazing diversity. I haven't seen a more thorough mixing of ethnicities and interests in any other place. This is probably because I've never spent any extended period in New York City or Los Angeles, but seriously, it is pretty amazing for a school in Virginia. That being said, I don't live on campus and never have, so I don't know at all what it's like to live on campus, though I imagine it must suck, 'cause there's supposedly no food on weekends, which probably isn't that big of a loss as most non-chain venues on campus are just short of abysmal. (I am horribly spoiled, as I spent that two years at Tech, which you may not know has consistently ranked #1 for on-campus food. Lobster! Steak! Flexible meal plans
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Suppose a person was born from a seed on a desert isle that had only vegetation -- no humans, animals, fish, whatever. The person is photosynthetic, so it raised itself. Despite those differences, though, the person has all of our other human qualities.
Not ever knowing of the existence of "intelligent" life forms (let's assume none exist), does that person ever feel lonely?
Yes, that person does feel lonely as I'm sure after a while he would notice that he's the only one of him around despite a plethora of other living beings in multiples.
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Only in solids, not stripes.
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Though I am rather partial to my cowboy hat. Of this I do not have a picture. :P
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http://tonbotoka.mine.nu:8000/wordpress./wp-content/uploads/2008/03/photo-14.jpg
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Suppose a person was born from a seed on a desert isle that had only vegetation -- no humans, animals, fish, whatever. The person is photosynthetic, so it raised itself. Despite those differences, though, the person has all of our other human qualities.
Not ever knowing of the existence of "intelligent" life forms (let's assume none exist), does that person ever feel lonely?
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How's that for a late response?
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