↪Andrew M We had a weekend everyone went to the beach despite the clear advice by the government and experts to stay home. That was in the same week everyone applauded the health care workers in the evening from their homes. My neighbour who is an anesthesist said to that :" Everyone who went to the beach should've raised their middle finger at the health care workers instead".
The next day a law was passed that allows police to fine people.
Personal responsibility is all well and good when other people's lives aren't at stake. In this situation not so much. The risk is too abstract when a people see .2% CFR. — Benkei
Again I don’t think it’s that black and white. You are literally not helping others, protecting others, or soothing any suffering by hiding in your house. You are hiding. You have retreated. You have cowered. Those who are helping people are the first line in this pandemic: doctors, nurses, “essential workers”. So let’s stop pretending we are in some way morally better because we hide in our bedrooms. — NOS4A2
In my mind the utilitarian calculus is the one that claims to save lives by denying basic civil liberties and human rights while ruining the very means with which we provide for our families. It does not follow that such measures need to be enforced in order to practice them. Do you yourself require a police-state and a ruined economy to physically distance yourself from others, to practice hygiene and to follow common-sense steps to avoid infection? — NOS4A2
The vast majority do survive COVID-19, so that was never the issue. — frank
And this makes absolutely no sense to me. We're in the middle of a pandemic and we're trying to figure out what works and what doesn't. How on earth could politicians have been ahead of the game without time machines? — frank
You're kind of talking to yourself here, which is normal. We're all inhabiting and animating myths in the face of the unknown. It's how we deal with the stress of that when sickness and death have been raised up.
In the old days, people would have sacrificed animals or walked through the streets beating themselves with barbed whips trying to control it all. But the trick of mythology is that people don't recognize it as fiction. They think its science, and it is in a way.
And so I talk to myself also, living out my own myth. — frank
If I could just vent for two seconds here. We hope it's a matter of human will. I don't think we know that yet because we aren't through it. The assumption that our leaders are supposed to be geniuses with time machines has us turning on each other already. If it turns out that nature really does have the upper hand here, the arrogance of assuming that humans were supposed to dominate it and just failed because they're stupid or evil can have potentially ugly consequences like scapegoating. — frank
But just as the virus grows rapidly, so it can be killed off rapidly. That is done by eliminating all paths of infection and waiting a few weeks (the infectious period).
— Andrew M
I dont think that's going to happen. China came down off lockdown and went right back on. I think it has multiple options for transmission. — frank
The choice between stopping the virus or protecting the economy is a false choice. If the virus is not stopped, then health systems will be overwhelmed, the dead bodies will pile up, and economies will be devastated anyway.
— Andrew M
For the US, yes. For less developed countries? I’m far from convinced because they lack the basic infrastructures to police this or the beds, staff and equipment to treat the waves of patients. — I like sushi
↪ssu There is certainly a degree of hysteria. Such is the internet!
It’s a serious condition though, and not to be take lightly. I think lockdown policies for some countries could be far more damaging than letting the virus do its thing - see above.
What bothers me is how developing countries are attempting to react like other developed nations when they quite clearly don’t have the economic clout to do so and run the horrible risk of taking on two terrible paths at once instead of one. — I like sushi
I would think South Korea is the other extreme. Where they use your phone data (and they know it's yours, with name and everything) to warn everybody with a cellphone in your vicinity that you have or are suspected to have Coronavirus. — Benkei
We had too our first death after implementing the lockdown. Yet I'm not sure if Sweden is totally opposite to New Zealand. I think there's a lot more variables than the policy measures taken especially if you haven't chosen the South Korea / Singapore option right from the start. — ssu
Welcome to the reality of hidden exponential growth. In three more days, the US will have at least 200,000 confirmed cases.
— Andrew M
I calculate about 150,000. But it's going to be bad one way or the other. — Baden
Let's see then on next Monday what the figures are. (Let's see who got closer! :death: ) — ssu
I'm just waiting when our dear neighbor Sweden will change it's policy and quarantine Stockholm. I think there the only Nordic country with schools open etc. and going with herd "immunity". — ssu
[bold mine]Coronavirus: US could become new epicentre of outbreak amid ‘very large acceleration’ in cases, WHO warns
"Over 46,000 infections and 530 deaths recorded, putting America on course to overtake Italy in number of cases.
...
Authorities have suggested the US is on track to eventually overtake China’s nearly 82,000 infections." — Michael
I'm giving it three days.
— Andrew M
82 000 has already passed in reality.
— ssu
Yes it has. — Andrew M
In last 24 hrs there've been prominent US voices calling for a stop to social distancing, citing rationale that they're worse than impact of COVID itself. It’s worth looking very closely at that claim, where we are in US COVID epidemic and what happens if we stop. 1/x
...
These big social distancing measures take time to work. The impact of big interventions in Wuhan China took about 3 wks to start to reverse things. And then everyday after the situation got better. In the US, we're about 7 to 10 days into this, depending on the state.10/x
...
Anyone advising the end of social distancing now, needs to fully understand what the country will look like if we do that. COVID would spread widely, rapidly, terribly, could kill potentially millions in the yr ahead with huge social and economic impact across the country. 15/x
...
We also need to put every conceivable econ program in place to help those being hurt by these social distancing measures. And move ahead rapidly to get our country far better prepared to cope w COVID before people recommend we abandon our efforts to slow this virus. 24/x — Tom Inglesby - MD, Professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
So, the US today* had almost twice as many new Covid cases as anywhere else in the world. Sounds like a good time to stop social distancing and open everything up. :vomit: — Baden
A key member of an expert panel advising the Government's response to COVID-19 has voiced her frustrations at Australia's staged shutdown approach, warning the death toll could potentially rise if the Government did not take a "go hard, go now approach".
Raina MacIntyre from the UNSW's Biosecurity Program is part of an expert panel from Australia's leading universities, which recommended an immediate but short lockdown to curb cases, an approach the Government did not take.
"I was hoping we'd see a more comprehensive lockdown for a short period of time, but that is not the approach we're taking," Professor MacIntyre said.
"It's more a trickle sort of approach, a little bit by bit, which won't be as effective at stopping the transmission in the community."
...
"If you don't control the disease, your economic losses are going to be far greater and the recovery time is going to be a lot longer."
...
Professor MacIntrye said Australia would be naive to "assume we have everything under control", and that there was still time to bring the situation under control.
"It's not too late. China was having thousands and thousands of cases a day at the time when they implemented the lockdown. But they brought it under control, so it is possible," she said.
"And unless you stop 70 to 80 per cent of people contacting each other, you're not going to stop the transmission." — Coronavirus expert advisory panel member calls on Federal Government to lock Australia down
But I am a firm believer in the right to try and that has to be made available to those who want to try a test that might still be in trial. The fact that there is community spread suggests that herd immunity might be measurable.
...
I realize that the suppression is necessary to flatten the curve but we could be protecting our first responders with antibodies from people who have been infected and have recovered, no? — ArguingWAristotleTiff
As far as numbers go, it seems like the those who'd ape the president's just-thinking-aloud about the keeping the US 'open for business' are, in practice, willing to forgo roughly 600,000 lives.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-03-23/economic-shutdown-is-estimated-to-save-600-000-american-lives — StreetlightX
We extend the canonical epidemiology model to study the interaction between economic decisions and epidemics. Our model implies that people's decision to cut back on consumption and work reduces the severity of the epidemic, as measured by total deaths. These decisions exacerbate the size of the recession caused by the epidemic. The competitive equilibrium is not socially optimal because infected people do not fully internalize the effect of their economic decisions on the spread of the virus. In our benchmark scenario, the optimal containment policy increases the severity of the recession but saves roughly half a million lives in the U.S. — The Macroeconomics of Epidemics - Eichenbaum, Rebeloz, Trabandt
As the COVID-19 virus spreads throughout the world, governments are struggling with how
to understand and manage the epidemic. Epidemiology models have been widely used to
predict the course of the epidemic.1 While these models are very useful, they do have an
important shortcoming: they do not allow for the interaction between economic decisions
and rates of infection.
Policy makers certainly appreciate this interaction. For example, in their March 19, 2020
Financial Times op ed Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen write that
"In the near term, public health objectives necessitate people staying home from shopping and work, especially if they are sick or at risk. So production and spending must inevitably decline for a time."
I'm giving it three days.
— Andrew M
82 000 has already passed in reality. — ssu
Until we can start testing communities we won't know where herd immunity exists. If we can ID those people, we can send them to our front lines of needs. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
"Authorities have suggested the US is on track to eventually overtake China’s nearly 82,000 infections." [from article] — Michael
Probably not a good idea for Trump to start easing restrictions. — Michael
The Koreans I spoke too had voluntarily locked down because they were so scared. So, there's that too. — Baden
It isn't easy, but South Korea (and others) have done it.
— Andrew M
...and South Koreas death rate is 8 times higher than Japan, that has not done it. So that proves what? — Nobeernolife
With just 102 cases, New Zealand is ordering a full month-long lockdown. This is the hammer. This is intelligence applied to policy. And this will work. — Baden
When you just think that nearly all dangerous epidemics and pandemics have come from China, perhaps they really have had training, they have learned something and have an incentive to do something about this... especially as the country has become wealthy. — ssu
South Korea cases have exploded, but have you wondered why Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, Thailand or Hong Kong haven’t?
All of them were hit by SARS in 2003, and all of them learned from it. They learned how viral and lethal it could be, so they knew to take it seriously. That’s why all of their graphs, despite starting to grow much earlier, still don’t look like exponentials. — Coronavirus: Why You Must Act Now
Plus his data is all sourced. He's just giving the most clear and sensible interpretation. — Baden
Sorry again, but that guy really has no authority to speak on such matters. — NOS4A2
I think overestimate how easy it is to introduce "comprehensive testing and tracing". Especially if you are in a free society and not in Communist China. — Nobeernolife
Afaik, there is no European county that has duplicated the very fast and radical reactions of the governments of Taiwan, Korean, and Singapore. (And mainland China of course, but their reaction came after 2 months of denial, suppression of news, and outright lies). — Nobeernolife
I'd argue that a community should wait until the virus is present to start shutting down businesses. The goal is not the stop the spread, it's to slow it down. If you close businesses before the virus is there, you aren't slowing anything down. You're just hurting the economy. — frank
This article provides a very interesting perspective on the spread of coronavirus, its containment, and prospects for returning to normalcy.
Summary of the article: Strong coronavirus measures today should only last a few weeks, there shouldn’t be a big peak of infections afterwards, and it can all be done for a reasonable cost to society, saving millions of lives along the way. If we don’t take these measures, tens of millions will be infected, many will die, along with anybody else that requires intensive care, because the healthcare system will have collapsed. — Relativist
How do they know if a test is a false positive? Wouldn't they need some other, better, test to show that it's positive? — Michael
Given that some people are asymptomatic, you can't look to symptoms as a measure. — Michael
Out of 20,338 people tested in Britain for covid-19 164 people have the disease. The test itself is 97% accurate. You take the test and it comes back positive. What's the chance you actually have it based on this single test?
Apparently the answer is something like 21%? — Michael
The group verified the test in the absence of SARS-CoV-2 isolates or patient samples but confirmed its specificity against 297 clinical samples from patients with various other respiratory infections. This formed the basis of shipments of 250,000 kits, which the World Health Organization (WHO) dispatched to 159 laboratories across the globe in recent weeks. — Nature - Coronavirus and the race to distribute reliable diagnostics
The samples contained the broadest range of respiratory agents possible and reflected the general spectrum of virus concentrations encountered in diagnostic laboratories in these countries (Table 2). In total, this testing yielded no false positive outcomes. — Detection of 2019 novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) by real-time RT-PCR
I figure there'll be flattening as more stringent measures are imposed, so my figure involves a continued fall-off in the log curve along recent Italian lines. — Baden
To me that looks like it'll peak before 100,000 cases. Scale up to America and they should slow down and peak before 1 million (I'm guessing in a couple of months) presuming increasingly strict measures (short of "hammer"-like moves, which still seem unlikely on a national level). — Baden
This is true, but there is also the crucial moment measured in days just when the pandemic got rolling on. When it started in Italy, Europe or the West hadn't got the pandemic hysteria. Now when it has truly started in the US, the population takes action. — ssu
And just how successful that "social distancing"? If we take into consideration that China has roughly about 24 more times people than Italy, then it wouldn't be that China has less deaths. Yet month ago when the epidemic started in Italy and when there were only a handful of deaths the actions were taken only regionally. The CNN journalist one month ago were reporting from a Venice quite full with tourists going around. — ssu
That 0% hides an exponential growth curve. Those case and death numbers are doubling every 2-3 days.
— Andrew M
So the 0% is bad? — Hanover
I'm extrapolating purely from the reported US case numbers in the table here.
— Andrew M
And that is a great looking logarithmic scale growth to extrapolate from.
But notice that the information itself has an effect here. When you get greater numbers, you get greater panic and more drastic measures. That will have an effect on the forecast and the extrapolation may need what in economics and statistic is called a Dummy variable.
For example, now New York City has 43+ deaths from corona virus. What do you think the effect would be if it would be in few weeks it would be 400 or 4 000? I figure the amount wouldn't be quite high when the lockdown and the curfew will be enforce by police and the national guard, which will stop people walking in the street. — ssu
It shows that 0% of the US cases are serious. — Hanover
Any thoughts on why our math differs here? Perhaps you have a longer doubling period? Anyone else want to check the numbers?
— Andrew M
Do you take into account the effect of "social distancing" and the lock downs? — ssu
You see for a logarithmic scale to continue, you would need to have people mingle as they did few weeks ago. Or put it another way. Why are there less new infections than before in China. Surely there would have to be tens if not hundreds of thousands dead by now. So is the Chinese authorities just covering up everything? Do you think that is possible in our time? — ssu
Thanks Andrew, that seems to be one of the most sensible articles about how Covid-19 should be handled that I have seen. — Janus
Putting all I've read together, including Andrew M's excellent article, unless extreme measures are taken, the US is going to hit half a million cases by about the middle of next month. Probably 250,000 identified and 250,000 downstream. — Baden
Is accidental true belief praiseworthy?
— Andrew M
In the same sense it's praiseworthy when you play the $1 lottery and win $1,000,000 It's the same $1m whether you worked your ass off your whole life or whether you got lucky. Worst case you lost a $1. — Hanover
In what sounds pretty much like a hunch based upon some anecdotal information, Trump is touting hydroxychloroquine as a likely cure for the coronavirus. He is trying to fast track its approval and start curing an ailing world. He was heavily criticized at his news conference as being a bit reckless with advocating unproven treatments and in creating false hope.
Suppose it works? Will he not be a great savior? — Hanover
For example, after extensive paraphrasing, the blogger ends up with the following thesis:
(1) Relativity of simultaneity + all observers’ 3D worlds are real at every event = block universe
I take it from the context that "observers" here are not meant literally, but rather as virtual probes that could potentially be dropped anywhere within the spacetime block. Oh, wait. Well, he does go on to state the obvious: that the second premise already presupposes the conclusion. — SophistiCat
But then for some reason he backtracks and adds that the first premise is needed as well, although he doesn't explain why. — SophistiCat
Some background:
Kristie Miller, Presentism, Eternalism, and the Growing Block, A Companion to the Philosophy of Time (Wiley, 2013)
David Ingram, Presentism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Steven Savitt, Being and Becoming in Modern Physics (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Dean Zimmerman, Presentism and the Space‐Time Manifold, The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Time (2011) — SophistiCat
That no inherent meaning can be assigned to the simultaneity of distant events is the single most important lesson to be learned from relativity. — David Mermin, It's About Time
In other words, because one is human, he is necessarily rational and moral, the manifestations of it being given merely from the subjectivity of the individual. It is clear from that, that irrational or immoral is nothing but a relative judgement between agent and observer of the agent. — Mww
So here we have two things you’ve denied: assigning agency to a faculty, and using Aristotle to refute the Cartesian mind. In the first, correct me if I’m wrong, but you objected to my assertion that understanding is the named thinking faculty, yet here you seem to grant that the intellect names a mental activity. So either intellect is not a faculty or thinking is not an activity. — Mww
And in the second, Aristotle himself asserts mind as substance, just as Descartes. So either Descartes is talking about mind as indivisible matter (which he isn’t) or they are employing the conception of substance differently. But substance is fundamental for both, Aristotle as a category, Descartes as a continuance, hence refutation, of Aristotle’s final cause. — Mww
Besides, it is really confusing: mind (intellect) implanted within the soul makes the soul of higher rank in the mental echelon, but it has already been said it is better not to let soul do anything important in the human animal. — Mww
This twofoldness within the meaning of thinking causes an unavoidable confusion, which can be compounded by translations that are not attentive to the difficulty. In particular, the use of the word "mind" can muddle things beyond repair. The idea of mind is an orphan left behind by the Cartesian shift in the conception of body. The mind is a kind of container, isolated and self-enclosed, in which thoughts, desires, and feelings - all the remnants unconnected with extended body - are found. The closest thing to it in classical philosophy is the birdcage in Plato's Theatetus (197A - 200D), but that image is a parody meant to expose the absurdity of considering knowledge a stock of possessions rather than a living activity. — Joe Sachs - On the Soul
The confusion that is not a product of translation has to do with whether there is an intellect at the foundation of the world, as well as an intellect that is part of the soul. Three times Aristotle refers to "what is called intellect". Once this is in relation to the assertion in Plato's Timeaus that there is a soul of the world; Aristotle claims that the functions given there to a world-soul really belong to what is called intellect (407a 4). A second time, it is connected with Anaxagoras's positing of an intellect that rules all things; in this case Aristotle adopts the word and the argument made about it, but applies them to something within our souls (429a 22). The third time, the phrase is equated with the reasoning part of the soul (432b 26).
The twofoldness described above, of discursive and contemplative thinking, is, for Aristotle, inseparable from the distinction between an intellect and an intellect on which the world as a whole is founded. Aristotle never doubts that the discursive intellect that thinks things through belongs to the embodied soul, and decays and dies along with it (408b 25-29). But the discursive intellect is bound up with a contemplative intellect that must be in us but not of us. If it were not somehow in us, our thinking would not be what it is; if it were wholly within us and subject to our limitations, no thinking would be possible at all. This is the claim made in Book III, Chapter 5. — Joe Sachs - On the Soul
Putting all these together, I get that the knowing being can be a subject (as conscious object), cannot be predicated of anything else, and is not in itself a dual. — Mww
But the conjunction of representations into a conception is not to be found in objects themselves, nor can it be, as it were, borrowed from them and taken up into the understanding by perception, but it is on the contrary an operation of the understanding itself, which is nothing more than the faculty of conjoining a priori and of bringing the variety of given representations under the unity of apperception. This principle is the highest in all human cognition...”
(1787, B134-5) — Mww
Alice didn't observe something and then infer that Bob won the race - she simply observed that he won the race (contra both the Reductionist and Duplicationist who wrongly think the same thing has been observed regardless of whether Bob won or not).
— Andrew M
So is this the point Ryle is making? That Alice makes no inference connecting winning and running? Does anyone actually hold with that? Ya know, doncha.......if Alice makes no inference, that is the same as denying Alice her rational capacity for judgement? Does anyone think Alice makes no judgements? — Mww
Agreed, but the only way to test is to already know what the differences in the test results mean, which presupposes a set of criteria. If we want our criteria to set some standard, we need some certainty from it. Because there is no apodeictic certainty under empirical conditions, we are left with what form certainty would have if we could find it in the empirical world. And where does the form of certainty live? In pure logic. And where does pure logic live? In human judgement, which is itself the conclusion of reason. — Mww