Lenin was right about the state as an apparatus of coercion, and noted it’s evil and exploitation; he was right that a state is unnecessary in a moral man; — NOS4A2
But this is a topic for a different thread... — ssu
It was not a matter of doing nothing or projecting maximum force. The Bush National Security Doctrine specifically discounted international instruments that would have treated AQ as a criminal gang. Whatever one thinks about that choice, it was an expensive one. — Paine
That's the myth that those promoted War-on-Terror told us. — ssu
Deterring terrorist attack hasn't happened by fighting the Taleban in Afghanistan. — ssu
Terrorist groups have been destroyed by police through the legal system in various countries. But who cares about how terrorist group are really dealt. — ssu
So better to have the longest war in US history, tens of thousands of killed and a humiliating defeat? Of course! Having the FBI to do a police investigation would have been so "weak dick" response. — ssu
So did many great thinkers. But he proposed achieving such ends through statist means. That’s why it has never worked, and we see that communist states are some of the most totalitarian in history. — NOS4A2
I would prefer a government that doesn’t operate as a criminal organization, a monopoly, and an anti-social institution. — NOS4A2
Did you believed Bush Junior when he said Iraq had WMD? — Olivier5
She resigned because, facing electoral annihilation, her party would have given her the boot otherwise. It's not all that difficult to get rid of a PM compared to a U.S. President. If you're in search of common decency, you are probably looking in the wrong place. — Baden
Here's one way stipulation could enter our play: I don't play golf, but I know roughly how it works. If you know no more than I do, we'll have to make up some rules as we go and agree to them. We'll hope we're getting it roughly right. Our sense of the basic idea isn't enough to get us through an entire round of golf with the sorts of complications that inevitably arise.
Here's another: we could take elements of basketball (teams, a playing area with goals at either end) and elements of golf (small object struck with a special kind of stick) and combine them to make something like hockey or field hockey. Hockey wasn't on your list before so it's not something we can straight up play based only on intuition; we have to make up the rules based on some things we understand from other games. — Srap Tasmaner
I feel like I'm just not getting the opposition you see here. — Srap Tasmaner
(They may not even all be consistent.) — Srap Tasmaner
Agreement in the selection is effectively agreement about the content precisely because what we're agreeing to select among are the semantic contents of our intuitions. — Srap Tasmaner
I don't know. What's "real stipulation"? Does that mean "arbitrary"? — Srap Tasmaner
There's choice in axioms at least in the sense that we can select which of our intuitions to build on. — Srap Tasmaner
They clearly are a matter of choice or there wouldn't be non-Euclidean geometry. — Srap Tasmaner
But Euclid had axioms. — Srap Tasmaner
We have some basic intuitions about collecting and counting, about geometry, and so on, and we build mathematics out of those by making choices, our axioms, and then those axioms have logical consequences. — Srap Tasmaner
Then I take it you don't recognize pure math as having meaning — Real Gone Cat
I was addressing the idea that 0 cannot be across from itself. Now you want applications? I don't get you at all. — Real Gone Cat
frank
No, I was thinking more fundamental mathematical principles, or how mathematics as a system works. Things like harmony, symmetry, orthogonality, duality, that kind of stuff. — Srap Tasmaner
So, let the domain be the number line and replace A with 0. Clearly each negative number is the image of its corresponding positive value under a reflection in 0 (and vice versa). Now here's the kicker : 0 is a reflection of itself. I.e., 0 is opposite (across from) itself. — Real Gone Cat
Let's set aside what caused Putin to invade, it matters less now, because the war is going on. The important question now, is what are the next steps that could be taken to end this war as quickly as possible. — Manuel
If you need to say every integer has a sign (for whatever reason) then you'll need 0 to have a sign. Which one? That strikes me as a deep question, in the sense that your reason for giving it a sign is probably not powerful enough to dictate which sign; you'll need some other reason for saying which, and that reason is likely to be "deeper" if you see what I mean. — Srap Tasmaner
I'd forgotten Dennis Ritchie talks about that, but computer scientists (not coders) spend a fair amount of time thinking about semantics. When Jim Backus and his team at IBM invented the first high-level programming language, they had to simultaneously figure out what such a thing would be, and also invented a formal way of specifying its grammar, the Backus-Naur Form still used today. — Srap Tasmaner
The trouble comes of what fills the role of stipulation in everyday usage of a natural language. — Srap Tasmaner
In other words, zero is across from (opposite to) itself. — Real Gone Cat
and that's the point made by Austin's strategy. Until you have a term with which to contrast it, "real" has no meaning, does nothing except perhaps misguide. — Banno
Indeed and so we might arrive back at idealism - what criteria do we use to demonstrate that the physical world is real other than intersubjective agreement? Not sure kicking a rock Dr Johnson style will cut it. Do you have an approach to this? — Tom Storm
Sure. So here an unreal idea would be an hallucination? A dissociation? Again other words set the issue out with greater clarity. — Banno
