Well, real median household income is higher than in the end of the 20th Century. Whopee. Of course this rise started during the last Obama years, but still has gone up.The proles are doing really well in this economy, and Trump always speaks highly of the working man and woman, much more so than the Democrats. — NOS4A2

Workers aren't an unified class, weren't even during the last Century. Even if especially one political side thinks it represents the workers.Will Trump’s GOP become the party of the worker? — NOS4A2

Exactly.Talking in terms of "the elites" is fraught with misdirection.
Talking in terms of what's in the best interest of American citizens and what's not is much better. — creativesoul
You mean debt relief? Well, I think the trick was to stabilize the global monetary system, but NOT to get that trillion dollars into the real economy.The lending institutions in '08 could have been saved by simply paying off the mortgages. It would have been a helluva lot cheaper, and caused a helluva lot less harm to average Americans. — creativesoul
I fully agree.That hate of political party is not natural. It's learned... it's taught... it's fed... — creativesoul
I would go with the more narrow definition of it being the juxtaposition of "the elites" being against, oppressing or forgetting "the people". And the populist is the one fighting for the people against "the elite".What counts as populism? — creativesoul
Great, we both agree on something.Which is what I have been saying. When the set of axioms lead to an inconsistency, it is the set is that is inconsistent. No one axiom is inconsistent, or false. Nor is any one axiom inconsistent with another. The set itself is inconsistent.
And I never compared two systems to each other. — JeffJo
And notice the word "could". Could doesn't have the same meaning as is. I've only said it could be a possibility that in the future it is shown to be inconsistent. You see, there was a purpose for ZF - set theory to be made: It was to avoid the Paradoxes. It was made to avoid the pitfall that Frege's naive set theory had fallen to. I don't blame the axiom, in my view Infinity (and hence an axiom for it) is an integral part of mathematics. All I've said that we haven't understood infinity well. Even if ZF doesn't directly answer Cantor's hierarchial system of ever larger infinities, it's still there. Yet how much has there been use for Aleph-2, for Aleph-3, or Aleph-4? Cantor, a very religious man, thought that there could be an Absolute Infinity, but that was only for God to know. All I'm saying is that there could be surprises and new insights in this issue.And you still have not demonstrated an inconsistency with Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory, You have supposed it could be inconsistent, and blamed it on the Axiom of Infinity possibly being false. Which is preposterous. — JeffJo
Creativesoul, you have just aptly defined the landscape where populist movements and basically populism, be it from the right (or the left, in some other cases), cherishes and where populist fervor can get a stranglehold on politics.The problems in American government that led to Trump are solved by looking at America. Trump is a symptom. Americans need to learn that. The way was paved for Trump's rise. Reagan, Arnold, and Jesse were all similar candidates in that they appealed to voters who did not trust career politicians.
The problem now includes the governmental and political pundits' near complete disconnection from a very very large swathe of Americans.
This is reflected by the commonly held belief that all politicians are "in it" to line their own pockets. That none of them could be trusted to do what they promised. That all of them have some ulterior motive. That all of them are monetarily corrupt. That all of them sided with those whose interests were in direct opposition to the average American voters' best interest. — creativesoul
Trump was surprised how "the drain the swamp" thing echoed, but anyone else that understood the political landscape it's no wonder. To fight corruption is an issue that both left-wing and right-wing activists would happily agree on. Naturally they hate each other so much, that they don't even notice this.Hence, Trumps claims to drain the swamp, played off of these beliefs.
Trump tapped into that... as well as other common beliefs. — creativesoul
Then the issue would be to have TOTALLY DIFFERENT PARTIES. Period. No matter how much any candidate is "outside" the system, as the candidate of the two parties there simply won't be any change. Voting Trump hasn't changed anything. And voting Bernie won't either.Biden is just another Democrat who has been monetarily corrupted by major multinational corporate interests. In the most important ways, there is little to no difference between Democrats and Republicans. Both parties have enacted legislation that caused demonstrable financial harm to workers and everyday citizens. Both parties have bailed out the financial and business sectors by virtue of increasing the tax burden of the workers and everyday citizens. Both parties have taken drastic measures to end public assistance programs. Both parties have failed the American people. — creativesoul
Yet the erosion of people's agency is seldom solved by those with extremist views. In my view the cure is good governance and solutions that work, not populist rhetoric or idealist views.Capitalism with a human face doesn't require democracy. There's no meaningful difference voting for a centrist or republican where it concerns the slow but certain erosion of people's agency. — Benkei
A bit off the topic, but I cannot restrain from commenting this...I mean, the last time every government across the world agreed on something it was an economic crisis. Trillions were spent, not for a clear goal, but to improve people's trust in the financial system at the expense of taxpayers for the benefit of the rich capitalist. No vested power offers an alternative to that sort of injustice. Risks have been socialised but profit is still private. Under the guise of capitalism we have a really fucked up form of socialism. — Benkei
But it's the Party, all those superdelegates etc, that make the decision. So let's see what happens. Biden the "boring" might indeed just what only you need to win Trump.Several have jumped on me before for saying this, but I still believe Democrats' chances are best by nominating a centrist like Biden. At any rate, that's who I'm planning to vote for in the Texas primary. — Relativist
You and I don't have much to do with this, of course, yet the topic is interesting.What's the point of voting for a centrist knowing nothing will change then? Might as well vote Republican then... Same difference. — Benkei
First, there's a great difference between an individual consumer and aggregate demand. And all those finished goods and services demanded in an economy aren't used just by 'us' as consumers. The demand side has within itself also producers and companies too as buyers. Add into the equation Global demand, the demand from other countries that make the exports of a country, which naturally are of huge importance to export oriented countries.But if the buyer/consumer really had that much effect on the market then we probably wouldn’t be in the situation we are in now, that is the general cost of living versus wages versus a consumerism that seems to be insatiable. — Brett
Yes. Taxes and wealth transfers have been invented. But how you calculate 'public harm' is quite difficult when you think of it.By talking about incentives, I mean exactly making sure that the market price accurately reflects the real price. If non-renewables are causing a public harm, then that cost needs to be factored into the market cost of them (by making the producers and/or users of them bear that cost -- which is a matter of politics, since this is a tragedy of the commons situation) so that there will be appropriate market pressures to transfer away from them. — Pfhorrest
Remember that the market isn't made just from the producers/suppliers/industry owners. That's just one side of the coin. There's also the aggregate demand, the buyers, consumers etc. Is as important.Very simple, maybe a bit too simple. Who will own future energy? What will they charge, what will their bottom line business practice be? — Brett
You are forgetting the most important way that proper systemic incentives are created (and to forget this is typical for our time). That is the markets and the market mechanism. Once renewable energy is cheaper than fossil fuels, there is no turning back anymore to them.Science tells us what solutions are possible, engineers have to actually make those solutions happen, entrepreneurs have to fund those engineers in order for them to be able to do so, and politics has to create the proper systemic incentives (some combination of carrots and sticks) to make it more obviously in those entrepreneurs best interests to pay the engineers to use the science to fix the damn problem already. — Pfhorrest

Right. So you don't do anything with them. Well, neither do I.I don't "do" any quantity of whatever it is you are implying with them. — JeffJo
No, the set of axioms are inconsistent when they aren't consistent with each other. You don't compare two different axiomatic systems to each other.I also don't suppose that they could be inconsistent because they contradict a "universal truth" that I want to others to accept as blindly as you do, and dismiss an individual Axiom in the set solely on the basis of that unsupported supposition. Which is exactly what you are doing. — JeffJo
As typical, voters vote basically on the economy, which actually hasn't so much to do with the Presidency, but has to do with the business cycle.That said, present consumer confidence is a predictor for a Trump win. — frank
What democrat wouldn't be portrayed both as an elitist and a commie btw.Completely different situation. Sanders is very popular and polls better against Trump than most other candidates. Corbyn ended up being very unpopular, largely because he was caught in the Brexit vice not because he was progressive.
(I could see Warren turning off independents and white rural voters though, especially as she'll be portrayed both as an elitist and a commie.) — Baden
At least I'm trying to understand your point. (Which you think is impossible, I guess)That's the first thing you've gotten right. And the fact that you will disagree is why you won't ever understand what I am saying. — JeffJo
That geometry is different in two dimensions and more dimensions is evident yes. Yet we do speak of Geometry, even when there is Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometry.There are three different fields that use contradictory Parallel Axioms (hyperbolic, elliptic, and Euclidean geometry), yet the way we think about them in math is the same. — JeffJo
Fine. So in this case we will you just the definitions of "consistent" and "inconsistent".Qualities a *****SET***** of Axioms can have include "consistent" and "inconsistent," but not "true" or "false." — JeffJo
Here's a game about the philosophy of mathematics.
Players take turns to add rules.
Your turn. — Banno
It isn't about the skills of the employess or adaption to new organizations and work.I imagine this to be a huge clash of cultures and those workers caught caught in the middle and didn’t have the skills to adapt. That doesn’t exonerate the company but I can’t think of two more diametrically opposed attitudes about work. — Brett
Oh to just me?Search yourself, not this forum, for the answers to your political / ethical questions, and don't bother posting your answers because they will only be applicable to you. — Harry Hindu
And I know that I may not be the sharpest razors here when it comes to math and hence I'm happy if I am shown to be wrong.It's hard to argue with that. :chin: — John Gill
The roots of the case date back about two decades, to a period when the company, then known by the name France Télécom, was still part of the government's Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications. Once a state-run monopoly, the company sold off most of its shares and underwent a process of privatization in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
That process left its employees in an uncomfortable situation: still enjoying the strong employment protections of civil servants, but working for a management structure newly constrained by the marketplace and looking to shed costs to compete.
Oh I agree totally with you, Harry.There is no objective morality. What is right or wrong for you isn't necessarily the same for me. Any ethical standards we might agree on will be based on us being members of the same species and or culture. — Harry Hindu
So changing the axioms isn't changing the way think about math?No, we have not. We may have changed the Axioms. — JeffJo
Right. So are against something the idea that if something is inconsistent (in math/logic), it is false, because that would be a 'universal truth'. I guess you oppose talking about "The Law of excluded middle" because for you it's just one axiomatic system.A ****SET***** of axioms can be inconsistent, which only means that at least one of them disagrees with one or more of the others. Not that any of them is "false." And claiming otherwise is claiming that a universal truth exists. — JeffJo
Feel free to think that there is nothing that we could understand better in mathematics any time ever. All I said that what one could easily see even from this forum is that we do not understand infinity yet.All you have to do is come up with an example showing this to be the case, rather than argue in an abstract way about it. Maybe you have, as I haven't read all the posts. Good luck. — John Gill
Do you understand Turing's answer to the Halting problem? Just as Cantor's diagonal argument shows that not every infinite set of numbers can be put into 1-to-1 correspondence with the Natural numbers, so do the various undecidability results, starting from Church-Turing thesis, show that indeed there are mathematical objects that cannot computed. Not everything can be calculated/computed by a Turing Machine.Since mathematical logic consists only of the constructive activity of rule-following, the idea that mathematical logic can capture the non-constructive notion of "non-computability" is a contradiction in terms. — sime
Very nicely put.Abuse of power is what got us here in the first place. You can call it a "political process" like Mitch McConnell et al., but in reality when he turns around and says "I'm not an impartial juror, and I will take cues from the president's defense lawyers", it unambiguously undermines the whole separation of powers line that republicans love to flout. — VagabondSpectre
Quite circular reasoning you have there, Jeffjo.Now that's a strawman argument. You need the AoI before you can even try to understand this thing you want to call "infinity." — JeffJo
The axiom of infinity could be wrong in the way that it is inconsistent with the other axioms of ZF, for example. It is you that is making the case of some eternal truth as you don't take into consideration at all that the now used axiomatic systems could be inconsistent. I'm really not making the case for some universal truth here either. My point is that from the historical perspective we have thought about math one way and because of new theorems or observations we have changed our way of thinking about math. Why would you assume that now at this it wouldn't be so as earlier?You have also said that the AoI could be "wrong" and that we need to discuss whether it is. — JeffJo
You tell me. All I understand is that if something is inconsistent, we can say it's false.Not ultimately false, or absolutely false, but some other kind of "false"? What kind? — JeffJo
True jorndoe, in my view it's a field we likely could find something new. The Church-Turing thesis is quite vague in my view. I think the most important issue here in the most simple format is Cantor's diagonalization. It seems with logic has a lot of peculiar things happening.There are a bunch of areas in computer science on computability and such, e.g. ...
Computational Complexity Theory (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Computational complexity theory, Computational complexity (Wikipedia)
NP-completeness, NP (complexity), P versus NP problem (Wikipedia)
Within some limits you can write code to handle infinite sets.
Nowhere near what mathematicians routinely do, but some things are possible. — jorndoe
This is a straw-man argument. Just like we cannot escape theories in other fields, we cannot escape axiomatic systems. What my point was that as we have things like CH, we don't understand Infinity yet clearly. Hence there is the possibility that for example the axioms of a axiomatic system that we think is consistent might be proven inconsistent. Just as the fate of naive set theory. I don't understand why you won't believe our understanding of math could continue to change as it has changed in history.Get this point straight: The Axiom of Infinity cannot be proven to be true, or false, outside of some set of Axioms. — JeffJo
No, the axioms are inconsistent to each other in the defined axiomatic system.And you would be wrong to do so. All it shows is that the set is inconsistent. — JeffJo
Wrong. As I said: "I'm not looking for some ultimate truth. The question is if a set of axioms, an axiomatic system, is simply consistent. I just happen to be such a logicist that I think that something that is inconsistent in math is in other words false.I believe your words were that that his discussion should establish whether the AoI is self-evidently true. Nothing is further from the point if this discussion. — JeffJo
We ought to treat the existence of non-computability and incommeasurability much more seriously than we do. Yet mathematicians push them aside and think somehow that they are 'negative' or something that ought to be avoided.re you really that concerned with non-computable functions or non-measurable sets? Material like that in math is referred to as "pathological" frequently. — John Gill
So political correctness isn't political or what? I'm not sure what you mean.It seems to me that you have politicized his OP. — Harry Hindu
It has already happened and continues to happen in the West. Just visit the rust-belt in the US. You have few hubs where the economy has centered and otherwise the country is "Fly-over-country". Those areas that pin their hopes in politicians like Trump.So, you foresee alienation from society via unemployment as an undesirable consequence of mechanization. — TheMadFool
In the 60's people believed that the Space Age would be right behind the corner. The makers of the 1968 classic "2001 - A Space Odyssey" genuinely thought that they made a very realistic portrayal on what life would be in 2001. And why wouldn't they believe it? If you looked at what had happened in 33 years from 1968 from the year 1935, Space Age by 2001 looked quite possible. How long has it now been since man has left low Earth Orbit? I think 47 years. In few years it will be 50 years. And all that talk about going to Mars with internet billionaires wanting to go there are just one stock market crash from being fairy tales.This image of the future of man and machine existing in harmony is very appealing to me. — TheMadFool
How, in your opinion, would we make the necessary transition if complete mechanization becomes a reality and I'm thinking of true general AI here. Humans would become obsolete in the truest sense of the word and assuming such general AI wouldn't opt to exterminate humans, what would be our role in such a world? — TheMadFool
What would be so terrible if it would be so? Now it isn't, I agree with that wholeheartedly, but just making a hypothesis here. Could there be an universal foundation for Mathematics?More importantly, if axioms were a matter of self-evident truths, then there would be just the one mathematics — SophistiCat
Perhaps you didn't understand my point.And you still haven't grasped the very simple fact that no field of mathematics claims to be "correct", or that another is not. Only that no statement is can be shown to be true without first assuming a set of unsupported Axiom, and proving theorems within that framework.
And it is quite clear that you have no interest in any formalism but your own. — JeffJo
Do note that mechanization is a phenomenon that has been with us since the industrial revolution. Industry, but also agriculture has transformed dramatically with machines doing the work. This has created huge transformations in the workforce and in our societies, yet it hasn't created roaming hordes of poor people.One key determinant in this imbalance between jobs available and job-seeking people is mechanization. Machines are more efficient and cheaper than a human workforce: to find employment in such an environment is nearly impossible. Also, machines seem to occupy the employment sector that requires the least of skills, their only advantage being their efficiency and cost. This ultimately means that humans can find employment in areas where machines haven't entered the scene and such jobs require a level of training and skill that is both beyond the reach of many and also highly competitive. — TheMadFool
And unemployed doesn't need alms, he or she needs a job.That's a poor view of charities and again reflects a deep flaw in the economic system that prevents us from giving real assistance to the poor and allows us actions that keep the poor poor. — TheMadFool
Yet this is something that isn't contained to science. In other workplaces similar events can happen. Being a comedian is especially difficult in these times.Science cannot flourish in such a culture. — NOS4A2
Are scientist somehow a special case in this era of cyberbullying? I don't think so.Sure but the seriousness of compromised research does not lessen the seriousness of the politically correct bullying of scientists. — NOS4A2
