We can assume that there has to be at least similar if not larger amount of infections at the spring as now. — ssu
You say, 'we must turn to something other than science to determine the criteria for truth,' and I do believe that on a daily basis most people search beyond the findings of science, which are just the foundations. And here, is where I would say that relativity comes in because everyone's search is unique. — Jack Cummins
The reason I use the word 'myth' is based on the idea of the collective unconscious, as stressed by Jung, and he said that, 'There is nothing mystical about the collective unconscious.' Of course, I realise that many people reject the idea of the collective unconscious and many find Jung's writings to be a bit mystical. — Jack Cummins
One again arrives at the problem: we have a supposedly non-physical thing indirectly observed through its physical effects and its physical causes, just like a physical thing. What distinguishes it as non-physical, other than sheer insistence? — Kenosha Kid
Merkel didn’t stoop to criticize Obama when Snowden revealed his NSA was spying on her. Is this the normal you’re speaking of? — NOS4A2
but if we can discern that time was ‘passing’ before there were conscious observers, then differences such as molecules relating to each other over time must have been observed non-consciously (ie. integrated into molecular structures) for this temporally differentiated information to be perceived now. — Possibility
You get that the grounding is through feedback against a target specimen? — bongo fury
So, I am asking about the whole question of truth arising from the clash between religion and science and divergent systems of thinking. Is there one which is the ultimate in terms of establishing truth? — Jack Cummins
I am thinking of mythic truths, although I would suggest that for many the word myth implies false fantasies. — Jack Cummins
If I decide to drink some and vomit onto a blank canvas, that's creative. — Outlander
Hopefully completing stage one. Have started to try and produce a (piano) g4 image in the midst of other music. — bongo fury
Yeah, I also doubt his intentions were purely motivated by ideological beliefs about the dangers of technology. Like you said, fifteen years is a long time to go without any explanation as to why the attacks are happening. — darthbarracuda
Regardless, I don't see much use in focusing on his actions. It's his ideas that really matter. — darthbarracuda
K claims it was meant to draw attention to his ideas, but who knows how sincere he is when he says that. — darthbarracuda
In 1967, Kaczynski's dissertation Boundary Functions[42] won the Sumner B. Myers Prize for Michigan's best mathematics dissertation of the year.[11] Allen Shields, his doctoral advisor, called it "the best I have ever directed", — Wikipedia
Language doesn’t lend itself to clarity here. My understanding of ‘observation’ as not requiring consciousness comes from the definition used in physics. Noticing something happening is different to noticing what is happening. So observation often refers to the content as well as the act of observing. The former depends on consciousness, the latter does not. — Possibility
However without that spoken word thinking I would imagine you would only think in images. — Thinking
From conceptual thougths into language. — god must be atheist
When my mind is at rest, so to speak, I don't have images. No images, no language, only meaning, and concepts. One concept bears another. I often try to pin myself down on catching myself what I am thinking of at the moment -- impossible. There is no dialogue in my head, in my mind... just one concept morphing into another. A linear monologue, with tons of lateral jumps, of course. — god must be atheist
If you're going to be that flippant about nearly half a million excess deaths then there's no point talking to you. — Isaac
Nope. Uniform expansion doesn't involve overlapping points.
Consider ordinary Hubble expansion.
I assume that you would not contest that we see galaxies as redshifted, and the further galaxies are away from us, the more redshifted they are?
If a galaxy 1 megaparsec away from us is travelling at speed N away from us, a galaxy 2 megaparsecs away is travelling at speed 2N and so on. From our perspective, we look like the center of the universe's expansion. But, when we do the maths, we find that it looks like that from the perspective of any galaxy. — Mijin
I don't think in words or language — god must be atheist
might be a lot of counting ahead of us. — Hippyhead
Observation is unconscious sensory interaction, perception is a process of consciousness that integrates sensory information, — Possibility
The description is false — Possibility
Unrelated, I think stylistically art is going to become more interactive and exploritory. With Sleep No More and Then She Fell in NYC, you have the transformation of a typical play into a haunted house type scenerio where each audience member sees different scenes as events play out across a large building simultaneously. The audience also gets brought into the performance. VR art (the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art has some up right now) is a promising direction, allowing exploration into a scene. — Count Timothy von Icarus
An observation is a process of relating one 4D structure to another; what has been observed is a 4D structure of difference between them.
A description is a linguistic rendering of information, not necessarily confined to what has been observed. It includes linguistic structures, probabilistic patterns of prediction and concepts that enable what has been observed to make sense in a conceptual system. — Possibility
Complicated, but not contradictory. Having described an event, your perspective of it may have changed. ‘Half an hour ago, I ate crab sticks over there’ describes an event from a perspective which is ‘fixed’ within the description. You would need to describe that same event differently a week later, because the description has a fixed perspective, but NOT the observer. — Possibility
Well of course not, if you’re only going to read half the sentence. This is difficult enough to explain without you skim-reading. Yes, the ongoing observation is an event, but not an observed “event that has actually occurred”, as you were arguing. — Possibility
What I’m referring to is thinking of ‘time’ as boundless. — Possibility
Why would you just prima facie disbelieve this? — Isaac
Since then changes have been made to include epidemiological evidence that Covid -19 was indeed an exacerbating factor. — Isaac
What's interesting here is not the facts themselves, which are as indisputable as it gets, but the way in which, without even researching the article's sources, you've already assume it is — Isaac
but you carry on with your preferred narrative, don't let any of these tricky complications... — Isaac
You’re missing my point here, which is about describing an event, as opposed to observing it. — Possibility
‘The present’ is not a universal perspective, but a subjective one. — Possibility
In reality, your position of observation is an ongoing event that changes in relation to the event you describe. So each time you describe that event, it is from a different ‘fixed’ perspective. — Possibility
Each description is inclusive of a fixed point of observation, to which we relate as ongoing events. — Possibility
So this variability that I’m talking about is in a relation not between two events that have actually occurred in relation to an observation, but between the event and an ongoing observation. — Possibility
And yet we describe objects of our imagination - a ‘description’ is just using words to render information, and doesn’t necessitate observation, only perception. — Possibility
But where an ‘event’ or ‘time’ appears infinite, it is really bound by the perceived potentiality of the conscious observer. And where potential appears infinite, it is bound by imagined possibility. — Possibility
Time exists as a four-dimensional structure, but passes only in relation to a conscious observer — Possibility
There's a post mortem which will still try to establish the cause of death. If the person in the car died from their injuries at the scene and one excaserbating factor was a covid infection then it would be listed as a covid death. We're talking unlikely circumstances at this stage, but it would be recorded the way the article describes, and for good reason too. — Isaac
In that they're both asking for a recount? Surely the significant factor in Trump's actions is that he's asking for legitimate votes to be discounted. The legitimacy of the picture presented by the statistics for the job at hand is what matters, not the superficial resemblance anyone making such a request shares. — Isaac
It doesn't invalidate the consequences the author highlights on the counting of non-covid excess deaths. — Isaac
It's pretty much uncontested that policies designed to reduce deaths from covid will cause a rise in deaths from other causes. — Isaac
When you describe an event in the past, this is relative to a fixed point of observation: a relating event in itself. So the ‘actual relations’ you’re referring to as invariable are a relation between these two events, not the relations of the event itself - the variability of which transcends this description. — Possibility
Right - so describing an ‘event in the future’ is not just a mere possibility, but can more specifically be a calculated probability or potentiality wave that maps changing relations between observables. — Possibility
Time is bound by materialisation - and events ‘fixed’ - only in relation to a point of observation. — Possibility
So an event can only be observed in matter as time passes, but it exists regardless of the observer’s position as a four-dimensional structure. — Possibility
If their recovery was in any way hampered by Covid-19 (even having had it) then it would form part of the chain of events leading to death (the other being the car crash injuries) and so it would form part of the Covid-19 statistics, yes. — Isaac
But just pointing that out that the issue of 'excess deaths' is consequently complicated by by this decision is not in the least bit reminiscent of Trump's nonsense. Partisanship in politics is one thing, but when millions of people are dying or at risk of dying what we need is good data and dispassionate analysis, not mob rule shutting down any discussion not totally on board with the Hollywood version of this disaster movie. — Isaac
The decision to count all listings of Covid involvement as a Covid death was a perfectly rational one, and a good idea, in my view, but subsequently pointing out that the result of this decision is that the statistics, particularly related to excess deaths caused by policy responses, needs to be treated with caution is not — Isaac
The over-counting of deaths goes even further than Ezeke and Birx suggested because most U.S. states (including Illinois) include in their Covid-19 death tally anyone who has tested positive for the virus at any point prior to death.
...
2) most states go even further and include anyone who tested positive for the virus at any time and then died, whether or not they actually had Covid-19 or were an asymptomatic carrier;
Process philosophy is a starting point - I don’t see ‘events’ as fundamental, rather I see the capacity to describe reality in terms of a variability of relations between 4D ‘events’ rather than a changing of relations between 3D ‘objects’ as simply a step towards a more accurate perspective. This term ‘thing’ refers to an indeterminate concept - neither particularly three, four or five-dimensional, rather whatever is being related to. — Possibility
The unfolding universe is commonly viewed as one all-encompassing event: a temporal duration of changing relations between physical matter, from the ‘Big Bang’ to heat death (or some other predicted future end). — Possibility
That said, too much science is funded by technology companies and institutions, including military. — Kenosha Kid
The precise causes of my beliefs are important, not solely because of the physical mechanisms in the brain that yield them, or the physical configuration that stores them, but because the _external_ causes are not equal. — Kenosha Kid
You can train a neural network to infer, say, the interests of a shopper looking for t-shirts based on similar shoppers who bought t-shirts. The operator infers nothing: they accept the inference, until evidence suggests the neural net is systematically wrong. The error is in assuming that humans do the same thing in a significantly different way. — Kenosha Kid
