For me it's purple too. How about Purple rain as background music?That's not purple, at least as my screen sees it. — Bitter Crank
?I believe it is you who makes the fundamental error, to be more precise, the fundamental attribution error, the assumption that what Trump does reflects who he is. — NOS4A2
Ah! Even a condescending remark to the discussion.It’s relatively easy to modify the css code of your browser and override the color, should the red remain and be unpleasant for you, FYI. — praxis
What on Earth are you talking about? Or are you being ironic?Hong Kong should see an opportunity to direct their energies towards a future where the core tenants of Mao'ism and quite frankly a version of stat'ism into a working methodology. — Wallows
Now, with this in mind, I don't think a direct opposition towards the powers that be in Hong Kong will ever amount to much, apart from some theatrical resignations. — Wallows
These are the best, thank you Wayfarer :lol:SINGAPOREAN DEMOCRACY
You have two cows. The government fines you for keeping two unlicensed farm animals in an apartment.
AMERICAN DEMOCRACY
The government promises to give you two cows if you vote for it. After the election, the president is impeached for speculating in cow futures. The press dubs the affair "Cowgate".
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS
You are associated with (the concept of "ownership" is a symbol of the phallo - centric, war - mongering, intolerant past) two differently - aged (but no less valuable to society) bovines of non - specified gender.
Yet oversimplification is a problem especially if we just want to get a simple model and then assume it can tell more that it does. One can obviously argue that the behaviour of a group is the aggregate of the actions/intensions of it's members, but that doesn't mean that from the behaviour of an individual we can say everything about the behaviour of a group. And once that group grows in size, has various instititions and so on, the complexity grows to such levels that the individual / small group experiment has little use.Experiments like Milgram's and Zimbardo's are undoubtedly over simplifications, but that is necessary in any descriptive modelling. We have to simplify complex interactions to produce models. — Isaac
Well, thanks for StreetlightX for giving that response of Zimbardo. From that I took away that the guy is a self-centered asshole.Zimbardo was brash and too much of a showman for my liking — Isaac
Let's say both with Brexit and in the GOP primaries things didn't go as planned. At least the Democrats could handle the somewhat similar revolt by containing the popular Bernie Sanders, but the Republican party didn't and Trump's win came especially to Trump as a surprise (which is evident from his pre-election night posturing). Same thing with Brexit: those who issued the referendum in the first place were endorsing the "remain camp" and got a nasty surprise. That the left lost simply comes from the fact that there's no dispute what the leanings of the Trump supporters and Brexiteers are. Now populism can get a stranglehold on the left too, but this time it's right-wing populism.It is not simple, partly for reasons that are even contained in your statement: both the left and the ruling elite lost!? — boethius
Indeed it's a new phenomena, I agree with that.Trump and Brexit are not "simple losses" for the left, they are a new kind of political phenomena (in our political time at least). — boethius
Uhh...no. Trump and nuclear weapons isn't an issue. Trump is simply such an inept leader that he simply cannot do such trouble. And what is rarely mentioned is that Trump supporters don't like the neocons and the hawks in Washington. He hasn't leashed yet out against Iraq, and there is no push for a new war inside Washington DC. Iran is a difficult enemy, it's not Syria, Libya or Saddam's weakened Iraq.Brexit is also simply not as high stakes as Trump; leaving the EU isn't remotely on the same level as putting a person like Trump in charge of nuclear weapons — boethius
It might not, but are we able to really answer your question? How are the Brexiteers depicted in the UK?Though it's a truism on the left that Brexit mirrors Trumpianism, and there are similar issues for sure, I am not yet ready to give the British so little credit as to be in a Trumpian level delusion — boethius
Central in the training of guards was to exercise their power over their prisoners so that they would readily obey orders, prevent rebellion and eliminate escape attempts. My instructions to the guards were that they should maintain law and order, and also command the respect of prisoners.
In the power dynamic between them, guards should have most, while prisoners had little
or none.
Just like the Romans called one place Germania. Copied in the similar way. Yet Modern Germany and 'the Germans' is even a younger thing than the talk about the British. I assure you that during Roman times there weren't Germans as we know now living there. There is a difference between 'the Germans' and 'Germanic tribes'.Britannia was the name of the Country when it was part of the Roman Empire. There must surely have been some reason, like being British? — iolo
Look, every other health care system IN THE WORLD is cheaper than the US system. And A LOT of these health care systems even with their flaws make the people under these systems to live longer and be healthier than Americans.The problem is one cannot have a good, cheap, universal, private healthcare system. — unenlightened
But the racial—indeed racist—images that pop into his head upon hearing certain words is not evidence that the speaker intended him to think that way. “Welfare queen” might just allude to people on welfare, no matter their color. In fact, Nurnberg’s admission that he thinks “racial images” when he hears the phrase “welfare queen” says a great deal more about his own racism than that of the speaker’s. — NOS4A2
The important thing is that they leave you room to deny the associations to yourself and to others. And they provide the opportunity for a kind of rhetorical jiu-jitsu in response, where you turn the charge of racism against your critics. Somebody taxes you with racism for a remark about bands of youths in hoodies, and you indignantly point out that Mark Zuckerberg wears a hoodie too — and they're the one with race on the brain.
Could not have said it better myself.Wondering why there's so much general agreement, even between cultures who have never met... ethical naturalism may be a useful way to think about that. Wondering whether to spend more on health care even at the expense of people's financial autonomy...I doubt ethical naturalism will be anything other than a pointless distraction. — Isaac
And actually it sounds totally logical. No matter how tolerant the society is, to be in a gender minority will likely cause bit of difficulty among people and some anxieties.Sure. The conclusion in the abstract is an appeal for greater equity, not a warning against recognising non-cis genders. — Banno
All that we can understand, imagine, believe, and do is dependent on the anatomy and physiology of our brains, which are products of natural selection as much as our limbs and our other organs. We try to maintain ourselves in existence for as long as possible—to achieve a respectable span of 70 or 80 years—and to produce offspring who will themselves be capable of producing offspring. It is pointless to ask what the purpose of our existence is.
The abstract doesn't cover all what a paper says, so I don't know everything what Ketchen Lipson et al say.The actual article does not support your interpretation.
McHugh is not himself without controversy.
You talkin' shite. — Banno
Across mental health measures, a significantly higher prevalence of symptoms was observed in GM (Gender Minority) students than cisgender students. Compared with 45% of cisgender students, 78% of GM students met the criteria for 1 or more of the aforementioned mental health outcomes. GM status was associated with 4.3 times higher odds of having at least 1 mental health problem (95% CI=3.61, 5.12).
Or they just choose something from the plate of rotten choices given to them. And just whine about the choices being bad, but not doing anything themselves.The problem isn't irrationality, it's more about basic apathy, the belief things won't improve and there's nothing you can do about it.. Ill-informed and irrational people don't vote for what's right but for what they want. — TheMadFool
At least for me it's important that we aren't nowhere near the peak of glaciation: there's not a glacier where my house is now.We're in an ice age. — frank
Nah.It is technically possible to lower the levels of CO2 and methane fairly quickly. It would just mean slamming the brakes to the floor on the world economy and producing a political-economic-social train wreck. — Bitter Crank
Actually you are wrong, unenlightened.One might rationally be in favour of all the above, but in general, one cannot have all 3 at once; something has to give. — unenlightened
What side on an argument would say they are hysterical (too)?Just for the record, the meme that ‘both sides of the climate debate are hysterical’ is straight out of the climate change denial playbook. — Wayfarer
Tribalism is this catch-all that we are served at the present. As if our society would truly be so rigid and not as permissive as it really is. Naturally it doesn't have to be like this. Where did we lose our individuality or is individuality only allowed when we think about our hedonistic and narcissistic me-myself-and-I lifestyles?Simply put, it's tribalism.
A member of a different tribe gets integrated fully if and only if s/he not only accepts the societal and personal institutions and morals, but also accepts the religion of the tribe adopting him or her. — god must be atheist
You can tell yourself this as much as you want, but it won't make it more real.This is a primal and indelible instinct in humans.
I am an atheist, and as such, try to destroy religionism and recruit more members to my ideology.
The religious do the same thing. Recruit members for their ideology, and destroy other ideologies.
This is so much human nature. Nobody can override this. Not the MODs, nobody. This is the bread and butter of humanity. — god must be atheist
A divided vision. How to manage ?
It is not the case that the EU is blind to the problems of expansion. The problem might be that some people can make such blind assumptions and run with them.
The trouble is when the anti-EU brigade, like Farage, start to demean and destroy the EU from within its system.That is what I don't get. It troubles me. — Amity
This analogy doesn't work. — Benkei
Until there is a technological revolution, when the whole concept changes.So, to cut short - given the fact that all future tech-progress must increasingly become susceptible to the old law of ‘Diminishing Returns’ — Robert Lockhart
100% true.It was neither physics or engineering. It was politics. — fishfry

(an answer to Pattern-chaser from page 3)And isn't that the problem this thread complains about? It may be aimed at religious threads, but it surely applies to all of them? We can approach it from a number of directions, but what it comes down to is a lack of courtesy. There is an unwillingness to oppose the argument without insulting the arguer. This is bad philosophy. VERY BAD philosophy.
Why don't we make this better? We can, if we choose to.... :chin: — Pattern-chaser
It is a thread to discuss the disruptive and disrespectful behavior of atheists and anti-religious posters on this thread. — T Clark
That is how the debate is portrayed, unfortunately.The thing is, there has been, and still is, very little substantive criticism of the EU. Much of what is touted as "criticism" is, in fact, either nationalism or straight up lies. — Echarmion
Why would this be a surprise? The EU was formed by national governments. It's wasn't formed by Napoleon (or Hitler), but with genuinely sovereign states coming together and through co-operation between them. Why then do you find this to be the problem? It's like some movie fans creating a fan club and then someone coming and objecting to the fact that the fan club is made of movie fans!The truth about the EU is that a lot of it's faults, like the power of the commission and the relative lack of democratic legitimacy, exist because they work in favour of the national governments. — Echarmion
The sea shore, a river or a sea does exist physically just like a mountain range. That they are a border between two states is something totally else.But surely there are also borders that exist because they lie between different things, like the sea-shore, which bounds the sea (or the land, depending which way you're oriented)? — Pattern-chaser

?As I understand it borders are physical. It would simply exist whether we agree or not. — TheMadFool
So you aren't talking about evolution, but a repeat of abiogenesis: basically you are looking for a single cell organism to 'pop into existence' somewhere where there isn't life before. First problem is that we don't know exactly how it happened. Secondly, perhaps the places where abiogenesis happened have already life, which has made it a bit difficult to have that 'pristine state' where it would happen again...Where are the brand new, so to speak, organisms that, forgive my limited vocabulary, pop into existence like, presumably, the very first single-celled organism that came into existence a couple of billion years ago? — TheMadFool
Still I don't get your reasoning. It's as if you have made up your mind that somehow the evolution of new species has stopped.Please read my replies above. — TheMadFool
When enough people agree on there existing a state, that state and it's borders do exist. Sometimes people have problems in understanding the existence of human institutions and think they wouldn't exist because they are just 'made up', 'invented' or 'agreed upon'.Borders I hope are objective and disagreeing on it wouldn't make it magically vanish. — TheMadFool
