Knowledge is not green either, and was never meant to be. Was it ever meant to be "perfect, complete or absolute"? — Banno
although perhaps their argument is that because we are occasionally mistaken about what we think we know, we therefore do not know anything. — Banno
Close enough for practical purposes, but not 100%. It always needs updating, correcting, adding detail. — Vera Mont
Any thoughts? — Jack Cummins
But the creation story and all of Genesis up to Joseph's sojourn in Egypt, is suffused by the mythology of the region.The origins of Judaism date back more than 3500 years. This religion is rooted
in the ancient near eastern region of Canaan (which today constitutes Israel
and the Palestinian territories). Judaism emerged from the beliefs and practices
of the people known as “Israel”
The plan calls for much more material about African Americans than I received in high school or college history courses (through the 1960s). That's all to the good. — BC
Once upon a time, the US had very conservative and very liberal democrats and very conservative and very liberal Republicans. — BC
By his political calculation to capitalize on the racial and cultural divisions of his day, Nixon opened the gate to the political polarization of the United States in 2018. While President Donald Trump hardly emulates the furtive and nuanced Nixon, there is a direct line that runs from the Nixonian “southern strategy’’ to the Trump presidency.
The facts of the working class, white and black, is a key piece of American history, which like the history of slavery, hasn't been treated honestly. — BC
Are you talking about the USA? — BC
They're also systematically disadvantaged, but I guess most of them deserve obscurity.All together, these parties command too few votes to win a dog catcher election. — BC
What is very sad is that all that shows the self-destructiveness of Man --in the Modern Era more than ever-- and I can't see how that could be cured — Alkis Piskas
Anyway, let's hope that we'll be luckier with the AI sector. — Alkis Piskas
Why wouldn't these facts count as a provisional kinds of absolute knowledge. — Nils Loc
Right, but times change. — frank
Can't read it without a subscription. (Which is ironic in light of their slogan "Democracy dies in the dark")Notice in the article I linked, — frank
I'll believe that when they change the shape of the gerrymanders in North Carolina and take down the confederate flags in Mississippi. I suspect it's more because their two front runners for candidate are slagging each other off in public. Republican party division means a better shot for the Democrats.it explains that DeSantis is a pain in the GOP's ass at this time because they want to court minorities.
I don't think either has a shot in today's GOP, but they make pretty window-dressing.G.O.P.’s candidates of color have come to reach the pinnacle of national politics, a run for the presidency. But in bolstering their own bootstrap biographies with stories of discrimination, they have put forth views about race that at times appear at odds with their view of the country — often denying the existence of a system of racism in America while describing situations that sound just like it.
I'm not seeing why. — frank
So leftism is the wrong word. Do you agree? — frank
If that means progressives are divided by focus, that's ok. — frank
As you said, people who are opposed to racism might believe any damned thing about how society should allocate it's resources. — frank
It was hard enough, and he had to be resourceful and ruthless enough at that time, to get bipartisan support.It [1964 Civil Rights Act] required Republican votes to pass, and that party’s leadership had threatened to expel members who supported it. So Johnson called in church pastors and unions to apply pressure, and the tone of the debate shifted.
Who benefits? Who pays? None of this can be separated from economic issues.This occurred because Republican analysts saw that the Democratic New Deal coalition was cracking, the traditionally conservative south and west began to control more seats in the House of Representatives, and Americans were becoming more affluent and, thus, more interested in taxes and inflation
Do you think this is true? — NOS4A2
The question should be whether it is true or false. — NOS4A2
The response also needs to be specific. If that means progressives are divided by focus, that's ok. I don't think they're really divided in spirit, are they? — frank
Since these attacks are on-going, the answer to them must be, ideally from representatives of those identities. — frank
Besides the cogito, what absolute knowledge do we have? — Cidat
What is this legacy about? — Alkis Piskas
It's a good thing you've brought up this, because I had the curiosity where do different countries stand ragarding guns control ... — Alkis Piskas
Ideally....n a sector should not be a reason to stop the development in that sector, but a reason to take measures about that. — Alkis Piskas
As I said, the relative is what is relative to human experience, and the absolute is what cannot be experienced, which in the context of this discussion is the existence of anything as it is pre-cognitively. — Janus
. But let this aside for the monment ...
Do you mean that the development of computing has stopped to be beneficial? — Alkis Piskas
Are we at the end of the digital era? — Alkis Piskas
Just imagine that the nuclear technology will stop being developed --even discontinued-- and all nuclear power plants be closed because of the Chernobyl disaster. This would mean erasing from Earth this technology and finding another technology to replace the nuclear technology, which took more than a century to be developed to its current state. — Alkis Piskas
Easy said! In theory, the US could legislate gun control... but it's not going so well.[ which "you"?] Whoever has the authority to do it. — Alkis Piskas
OK, let's make it simple and real. How has legislation been passing regarding Covid-19? — Alkis Piskas
But you don't discontinue a technology that produces mostly benefits because it can also produce dangers! — Alkis Piskas
Which "you" does this? How? Even assuming any existing government had the necessary accord, and power, what would that proposed bill actually say?You create instead a legislation about the use of that technology. — Alkis Piskas
But if I were an expert in the field these projects are developed around, I would not simply drop out of the game but unstead start warning people, knowing well the dangers and having a credibility as an expert on the subject. — Alkis Piskas
My argument though is that AI will enable smaller players to do much more than they ever could before. — Judaka
You are making the point for me. — Janus
The world certainly presents itself as being largely independent of human control, so that was not the point. — Janus
The point was that what we know of the world is dependent on, meaning relative to, human experience and judgement. — Janus
There is a sense in which the world is relstive to human experience; we only know things as they are experienced and understood by us. — Janus
Well clearly you can still use words to say a whole bunch of nothing. — Matt Thomas
To know what the number 1 means in example (1) requires additional knowledge of maths. — Matt Thomas
You could say something changes in relation to something else, but that relation is defined in absolute terms. — Matt Thomas
Arbitrary, unnecessary and meaningless - which may be why nobody said that. A planet may have greater mass, less atmosphere, a cooler core, less gravity or whatever, compared to others of its category; only characteristics of an object are relative; not objects themselves.To say the world is relative seems arbitrary. — Matt Thomas
I also have the issue that I don't see the sense in defining anything as absolute, since a word means nothing in isolation. — Matt Thomas
But just pairing AI + terrorism should be scary enough. — Judaka
Currently there is no true AI, there is simulated AI. However, even simulated AI can replace numerous workers in middle management and low level creative fields. This can/will have a devastating impact on employment and thus the economy as well as social stability. — LuckyR
Prostitution seems less alienating for both parties to me. — Count Timothy von Icarus
This reminds of sci-fi. I have the title ready: "The revolt of the machines". A modern Marxist movement run by machines: "Computers of the world, unite!" — Alkis Piskas
The notion of machines with human-like intelligence dates back at least to Samuel Butler's 1872 novel Erewhon. Since then, many science fiction stories have presented different effects of creating such intelligence, often involving rebellions by robots.
How can it be dangerous? :smile: — Alkis Piskas
One of the issues raised by people who worry about the threat is: "What if the computers become independent and stop following orders from humans?" You'd think if those who own the damn things really believed that could happen, they would disarm them now, before they go rogue. Just like they turned off all the gasoline engines when they learned about climate change....Computer-controlled munitions. Smart weapons include precision-guided bombs that have great accuracy, smart bullets that can change their trajectory and smart land mines that deactivate at a certain time. Advanced technology offers the military more clever ways of killing the enemy, while some of the methods are designed to eliminate or lessen collateral damage. The term may also refer to smart guns that work only for their owner. See smart gun and UAV.
Do you see a contradiction between what I said and what you said? — wonderer1
I think there is a lot that is interesting about human acts that is independent of whatever moral judgementalness might pass through people's minds. — wonderer1
If you've ever reprimanded yourself for an unfair judgment or secretly 'taken back' a wish that someone would die, or immediately upon the impulse to strike someone for a trivial offense checked yourself and thought, 'That's not me!', then you already know perfectly well that it does. And knowing this is the reason for the self-censorship that forestalls a thousand unnecessary violent confrontations and social disgraces in each of our lives. We know what we ought to do and we know how we ought to think. The uncivilized savage within has impulses; the ethical superego controls them.Does ethics apply to thoughts? — NOS4A2
Not by itself. But thoughts invariably precede actions. The good man may have some bad thoughts - it's almost impossible not to - but his next impulse is to suppress those bad thoughts. The evil man indulges his evil thoughts and acts them out - and usually goes to great lengths to justify them, first to himself as "they owe me" or "it's my right" or "I'm defending freedom", and then to the world as elaborate moral or political or legal gobbledegook.Is a man evil if he has evil thoughts, and good if he has good ones?
It seems to me that you confirm that there are valid models that could be used to counter, if not defeat the more pernicious affects of privately owned and privately controlled media. — universeness
Just an idea that probably has many flaws I haven't realised yet, but whadyafink? — universeness
What do you think of the YouTube channels that are supported via public subscription/donation? — universeness