标题: 《Liking What You See A Documentary》作者: - Ted Chiang【EPUB】 [打印本页] 作者: zaq 时间: 2013-7-7 09:06 标题: 《Liking What You See A Documentary》作者: - Ted Chiang【EPUB】 Liking What You See: A Documentary by Ted Chiang “Beauty is the promise of happiness.”-Stendhal Tamera Lyons, first-year student at Pembleton: I can’t believe it. I visited the campus last year, and I didn’t hear a word about this. Now I get here and it turns out people want to make calli a requirement. One of the things I was looking forward to about college was getting rid of this, you know, so I could be like everybody else. If I’d known there was even a chance I’d have to keep it, I probably would’ve picked another college. I feel like I’ve been scammed. I turn eighteen next week, and I’m getting my calli turned off that day. If they vote to make it a requirement, I don’t know what I’ll do; maybe I’ll transfer, I don’t know. Right now I feel like going up to people and telling them, “Vote no.” There’s probably some campaign I can work for. Maria deSouza, third-year student, President of the Students for Equality Everywhere (SEE): Our goal is very simple. Pembleton University has a Code of Ethical Conduct, one that was created by the students themselves, and that all incoming students agree to follow when they enroll. The initiative that we’ve sponsored would add a provision to the code, requiring students to adopt calliagnosia as long as they’re enrolled. What prompted us to do this now was the release of a spex version of Visage. That’s the software that, when you look at people through your spex, shows you what they’d look like with cosmetic surgery. It became a form of entertainment among a certain crowd, and a lot of college students found it offensive. When people started talking about it as a symptom of a deeper societal problem, we thought the timing was right for us to sponsor this initiative. The deeper societal problem is lookism. For decades people’ve been willing to talk about racism and sexism, but they’re still