About me

GreenLoeb
en-us
-ap-N
Thisere user larnt Appalachian English fum ther own kin.
sax-enThis brooker wishes to cleanse English of needless fremd words.
enm-3This wiȝt knoweþ Englysshe ful wel.
This editor is a WikiGnome.
This user has been on Wikipedia for 4 years, 9 months and 23 days.
This user has given up Wikipedia for Lent.
This user agrees with Larry Sanger's views on NPOV, but encourages you to form your own opinion after carefully reading his article.
This user is a native Appalachian.
This user is an Orthodox Christian.
SJCThis user is a Johnnie!
This user identifies as a communitarian.
This user supports Neo-Luddism and resists modern technologies.
This user really likes old computers.
This user is interested in German intellectual history
This user is interested in the industrial revolution.
This user is interested in the digital revolution.
This user has read Capital Volume 1.
This user is an admirer of Borges.

My love of encyclopedias goes back to my earliest memories, when I would dig through my grandfather’s 1978 World Book Encyclopedia set for hours every afternoon, from the time I got home from school till dinner, and often late into the night, well past my bedtime. I started editing Wikipedia in May of 2019, though I had been lurking and browsing Wikipedia since around 2008, when I was 10 years old. My username is a reference to the color of the Greek volumes published by the Loeb Classical Library. I hope to own every volume they publish one day.

Most of my work on Wikipedia has been as a WikiGnome, copy-editing, fixing syntax, punctuation, spelling, and grammar. I have honed these skills at my day job as an editor for magazines and book publishers, although I often procrastinate on my actual, paid work by editing on here instead. I was first motivated to stop lurking and become involved by the often egregious quality of prose on articles about relatively minor figures in the history of Western philosophy.

I am a graduate student in political philosophy, an Orthodox Christian, a twelfth-generation Appalachian, and an ex-Marxist who was so entranced by After Virtue that I now (often begrudgingly) identify as some kind of culturally conservative communitarian. (More exactly, I am highly sympathetic to Tolkien's anarcho-monarchism, but people look at you funny if you call yourself that.) These biographical facts guide a lot of what I edit on here. My areas of expertise are in the history of ideas; Platonism and Neoplatonism; Marxism, especially the Western Marxist tradition; the history and ethics of technology; Romanticism; conservatism as an intellectual movement; classical sociology (Weber, Tonnies, etc., as opposed to the largely quantitative stuff that goes on in contemporary sociology); and continental philosophy (particularly, German idealism, phenomenology, and hermeneutics).

I read a lot, and you are welcome to follow me on Goodreads.