The problem here stems from your evaluation, which is skewed by your peculiar standard of judgement. — Sapientia
No, do your own research. I'm not your personal assistant. — Sapientia
Yes I am. — Sapientia
Why do you expect me to have written articles on the subject of nuclear weapons? Do you expect that of everyone you encounter? — Sapientia
Search resusts for "professional philosophers on nuclear disarmament" — Sapientia
Interest from who? There are no doubt academics who are interested in the topic and have written about it. — Sapientia
In other words, is there an overarching unification of all that exists or, is there simply isolated events? — schopenhauer1
I think the problem isn't objectivism per se - though I myself am not keen on the subject - but rather your absolutist need to follow the philosophy. — TimeLine
It would be unreasonable to expect philosophy to guide us to a solution to the threat of nuclear catastrophe in and of itself. — Sapientia
Is this what you were really interested in all along? Fine by me if it was. — Bitter Crank
Were there no philosophy departments--even as elitist rackets--the knowledge of philosophy would eventually disappear. — Bitter Crank
Look at what happened over a few hundred years of the collapsing Roman Empire: piece by piece chunks of social knowledge were lost. — Bitter Crank
On June 3, 1980, at about two-thirty in the morning, computers at the National Military Command Center, beneath the Pentagon, at the headquarters of the North American Air Defense Command (NORAD), deep within Cheyenne Mountain, Colorado, and at Site R, the Pentagon’s alternate command post center hidden inside Raven Rock Mountain, Pennsylvania, issued an urgent warning: the Soviet Union had just launched a nuclear attack on the United States. The Soviets had recently invaded Afghanistan, and the animosity between the two superpowers was greater than at any other time since the Cuban Missile Crisis.
U.S. Air Force ballistic-missile crews removed their launch keys from the safes, bomber crews ran to their planes, fighter planes took off to search the skies, and the Federal Aviation Administration prepared to order every airborne commercial airliner to land.
President Jimmy Carter’s national-security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, was asleep in Washington, D.C., when the phone rang. His military aide, General William Odom, was calling to inform him that two hundred and twenty missiles launched from Soviet submarines were heading toward the United States. Brzezinski told Odom to get confirmation of the attack. A retaliatory strike would have to be ordered quickly; Washington might be destroyed within minutes. Odom called back and offered a correction: twenty-two hundred Soviet missiles had been launched.
Brzezinski decided not to wake up his wife, preferring that she die in her sleep. As he prepared to call Carter and recommend an American counterattack, the phone rang for a third time. Odom apologized—it was a false alarm. An investigation later found that a defective computer chip in a communications device at NORAD headquarters had generated the erroneous warning. The chip cost forty-six cents. — The New Yorker
Only way out of the prisonner's dilemma would seem to be a supranational legal framework where all parties are obliged to disarm simultaniously. — ChatteringMonkey
Why do we treat things differently when humans are involved. Because we attribute agency to them, the ability to freely make rational and moral decisions. I think that view is at best partly true. In fact, that view is often part of the hubris. — ChatteringMonkey
When you look at the history of the two countries, and begin to understand the mechanics a bit more, it's isn't quite as insane. A 'strong man' like putin was needed to hold Russia together after the fall of the USSR. And Trump, well, he's the result of large parts of the population being ignored and not represented politically. — ChatteringMonkey
Life is unsatisfactory in many ways and sometimes one just doesn't need hourly updates on how unsatisfactory it is. — Bitter Crank
That was once a comforting assumption; it's not quite so comforting at the present moment. — Bitter Crank
In one respect, the group consensus is for a limitation of knowledge and power. — Bitter Crank
It isn't clear to me how "we" would limit "us" from learning whatever "somebody among us" decides to learn, be it benign or malignant. I can decide what I will not learn, but I don't know of a way to prevent you from learning what you wish to learn. — Bitter Crank
Somewhere, right now, somebody is openly engaging in legal research which will likely have quite negative consequences. They are pushing the envelope, maybe too far. What are "we" going to do about it? — Bitter Crank
No see, it's not black or white. — ChatteringMonkey
I like the Amish people I have met. They are, of course, quite religious and of necessity rather conservative, but they aren't naive country bumpkins. — Bitter Crank
My goal in this thread is improving upon the argument, and maybe helping you to be more effective along the way. — ChatteringMonkey
No, i'm not a politician or activist, I'm a philosopher. I'm interested in good arguments and thinking well, not in changing the world. — ChatteringMonkey
Yeah sure.... but again it's to vague to be informative. What limits is the question. — ChatteringMonkey
IN OTHER WORDS... The human situation is tragic. We are very flawed heroes and our flaws have been, are, and will be the cause of our downfall. — Bitter Crank
1) There are limits to human ability, thus...
2) There have to be limits to human power. — Jake
Jake, the problem with the theory is, as has been said a number of times, that its to general or on a too high level of abstraction, making it only partly true, and even if true, useless. — ChatteringMonkey
You just keep ignoring these points. It's only partly true because, a) like i said our 'relation to knowledge' is at best only marginally driving 'the knowledge explosion' (it's more a story of economics and goverments...), and b) it's not generally the case for all knowledge. — ChatteringMonkey
And from a policy-point of view the idea that we should 'change our relation to knowledge', is useless, because what is one supposed to do with such a general claim? — ChatteringMonkey
If you really want influence the world in some way here, you need identify individual research that is potentially dangerous, explain why etc etc... and then make concrete and realistic proposals of how to deal with that. And if you'd start that excercise, you'd probably find that a number of people are allready doing that. — ChatteringMonkey
1) When it comes to children everyone immediately gets that their ability is limited and thus the power they have should be as well. 2) When it comes to adults we completely ignore our own limitations and instead insist, "we need as much power as possible, more is better!" — Jake
Daniel Ellsberg [he Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner] documents how these planners had calculated damage on the basis of megatons of explosive power, but had not taken into account the resulting firestorms that the hot blasts would cause. — Bitter Crank
I was prepared to prove that the world is meaningless, pointless, fleeting, temporary, and transient, but then you said there isn't any proof, so... there's probably not much point in posting the formula that would prove it. — Bitter Crank
Isn't that a rather sweeping generalization? How would you know they have no clue if you had no clue? — Bitter Crank
Interesting. Is that true? I'm gay, so I wouldn't know whether "serving" girls is the best strategy for a straight guy to get laid. — Bitter Crank
What if what the straight guy wants is a "serving wench" rather than a girl to serve? — Bitter Crank
Is the world meaningless, pointless, fleeting, temporary, and transient? Well... sure. — Bitter Crank
i have lost all motivation to get into a good college, seek a career, etc.. Instead i feel more motivated and inclined to live a simple life of happiness, a life where i travel the world, make lots of friends and get lots of girls (lol). — Johnpveiga
Does anything ever get destroyed in the world? — Johnpveiga
We human beings are simply not emotionally and cognitively configured to manage the consequences of having powerful knowledge over the long run. — Bitter Crank
"This project aims to fill this gap by creating a transdisciplinary and multi-level theory of technological change and resistance in social systems, which will analyze the factors and societal forces that work against technology adoption, the consequences of this resistance, and the best mechanisms to overcome it."
"Resistance to technological innovation and new business models is, however, not new. It has indeed a long history in the West: attacks on Gutenberg’s printing press in the late 15th century or the protests of horse carriage drivers against motorized cars at the beginning of the 20th century precede the current growing discontent with technological change."
I see what you did there. Irony. — 0 thru 9