July 16, 2004
The End of 1L

Where do I begin?

For some reason, blogging became less than seductive to me over the last few months. I think finishing my first year of law school had something to do with it. Rather than feeling I wanted to blog about it, I felt like I just wanted to get off the treadmill for a while.

I also felt like I should stop trying to pontificate about things, now that I've been so humbled by what I didn't know upon entering law school. It has widened my horizons more than I can describe. It has reconnected me with the idea that logic and technology must interface with humanity at some point. The point of intersection is often the law, and it's usually based on some very deep philosophical principles that only the best law professors force you to think about, and only the best students actually figure out. Everyone else just muddles through.

So I finished exams in May. I lost a year of my life, basically. I barely remember anything but studying, for 9 months. Amazing. But I also gained all the things I've been describing. I even became more responsible. And I will have to be even more responsible yet. More on that later...

I can say with reasonable satisfaction that I finished in the top 25% of my class. I could have done much much better, but many things held me back, including my cluelessness about simply how to study. I never really had to study properly before. I could always get by just by pulling all-nighters the last couple of nights before a big due date. Now it's different. There's just too much information.

In computer science, understanding is 85% of your work. If you understand everything, you're pretty much golden. In law, it is not that way. You have to cram a ridiculous amount of information into your head before you can even begin to 'understand.' Then you have to synthesize all that information, distill it, and try to understand it. It's not like looking at an equation or proof or algorithm and just thinking through it. It's more like taking a whole bunch of algorithms that researchers may have come up with, and trying to distill the most salient principles from them, developing a new algorithm that incorporates the principles of all its predecessors.

I've also realized that if there's something out there someone is doing that I think is hard, I know I can do it too. There is almost nothing too tough for me to take on anymore.

The law is an amazing thing. I wish more people knew what I now know about how it works, why it works, and how it should continue working. Particularly our beautiful system of the common law. Yes, judges make law, and it rocks. It is an amazing institution, one we should continue to take advantage of, and attempt not to derogate for merely political ends.

I am now President of the IP law society at George Mason, which will be great fun over the next year.

Yes, even most of a summer later, I'm still in shock.

I'll be back... ;)

Posted by Trevor Hill at July 16, 2004 02:14 AM

congrats.

Posted by: Mike B. at August 19, 2004 04:05 PM