Let’s start with technology and science. Do you think we can reasonably say there has been progress in either of these fields? — Joshs
Why are you being difficult? You're well aware of the significant medical, legal, scientific, and economic improvements over the last few centuries. — Judaka
Why should I play this game with you? — Judaka
Pinker provides mountains of evidence for overarching general progress in history, what kind of counterargument is there? What you cynically call magic and assumption is simply a belief in charts that plot points and show progress. — Judaka
I’m not going to address the evidence here, at least not yet. — Jamal
If there's something to be critical about, I will be. I've said enough times that there's a lot to be critical about the West, including my own country. — ssu
it's you who seem not to understand that as countries have agendas, they can easily also go with the truth when it fits their purpose. — ssu
The original question that Benkei raised was if it's possible for a non-state entity to do the operation, meaning it's impossible to plant explosives at that depth by anybody else than nations. — ssu
It seems to me that atheists submit to authority in their thinking as much as religious people. — Jamal
Are you talking about being militant in some political movement or party that are against
one's Western country's involvement in this war? — neomac
And how would you "fight back hard enough and quickly enough to stop it" in more detail? — neomac
I don't understand how much confidence you can put in the idea that you ... would be able to provide a powerful fast response... against the abuses of the evil people that govern us ..., and yet without being as abusive or worse than them. — neomac
outside of philosophical debate this type of approach to worldly affairs is, in one word, weak. We're dealing with actors that will take every opportunity to bullshit you, and here we are waiting for that distant moment when we arrive at crystalline certainty (a pipe dream) to call out said bullshit.
That's crippling insecurity masquerading as intellectual rigor. — Tzeentch
As usual “unwavering faith” or “unreserved faith” are ways to caricature my views — neomac
your helpless craving for pinning roughly everything bad is happening primarily on the US. — neomac
Ironically, your attempts to discredit the US is what makes people like me feel like sympathising with the US leadership more than our brains would recommend. — neomac
I just can't for the life of me figure out how this fits into the picture that Russia probably did it, and that the US certainly didn't do it. — Tzeentch
But one senior US official and a US military official both said Russia is still the leading suspect – assuming that the European assessment of deliberate sabotage is borne out – because there are no other plausible suspects with the ability and will to carry out the operation.
“It’s hard to imagine any other actor in the region with the capabilities and interest to carry out such an operation,” the Danish military official said. — https://edition.cnn.com/2022/09/28/politics/nord-stream-pipeline-leak-russian-navy-ships/index.html
If you give people who desperately do not want to face the obvious something to latch onto, they will. No matter how improbable it is. — Tzeentch
Within any given religion, there are classic forms of thinking (philosophies?) that allow for a heuristic approach. Within the context of any given religion, there are pluralities that mirror the pluralism of Enlightenment thought... In Islam, for instance, the variance of jurisprudence should at least cause us to stop and consider it. — Noble Dust
I don't think (but I don't know for sure) that a muslim would agree. Rationality exists in Islam. It's just not the same rationality that we know. To a muslim, rationality is arguably based on jurisprudence. — Noble Dust
I guarantee you any member of an ulema would roll their eyes at best at this characature. — Noble Dust
What they have faith in is the entire narrative of their belief system, with all it's wrinkles and curiosities, in the same way you have faith in whatever belief system you hold. — Noble Dust
actually — SophistiCat
Saakashvili [Georgian President] said Russian officials have tendered veiled threats in the past, and given the natural gas crisis created in Ukraine earlier this month when Russia temporarily shut off the flow, the president said it "just looks fishy."
The connection to Russia is solely circumstantial. "U.S. intelligence agencies believe the Russian government was behind the Refahiye explosion, according to two of the people briefed on the investigation. The evidence is circumstantial, they said, based on the possible motive and the level of sophistication
They literally wrote an entire article without ever addressing how bizarre it is to just keep referring to the alleged perpetrators as just a "group". Like that's a thing. "Yeah you know, one of those Groups we've all been hearing about in the news. You know Groups, they sail around the world destroying international undersea energy infrastructure." — Caitlin Johnstone
Yet not impossible for someone without the training. — ssu
all of a sudden there's a flood of murky intelligence leaks in media. What's up with that? — SophistiCat
This fits with what I was saying recently about meritocracy. — Jamal
it's not so hard to destroy a pipeline. — ssu
Wouldn't he just say that in actuality, the Enlightenment was only realized in nation-states, and especially in the US, where he and his friends stand at the pinnacle of history? — Jamal
I share Pinker's animus towards some of that progressivism. — Jamal
Which assumptions are hiding under the surface? — Jamal
when "anonymous officials" report on "undisclosed information" about "anonymous groups" about which "much is still unclear" they're all reporting in tandem. — Tzeentch
It's reported in Germany at the same time based on German intelligence leaks — Benkei
The ARD capital studio, Kontraste, SWR and ZEIT spoke to sources in several countries for their research.
According to information from the ARD capital studio, Kontraste, SWR and ZEIT, a Western secret service is said to have sent a tip to European partner services in the autumn, i.e. shortly after the destruction, according to which a Ukrainian commando was responsible for the destruction.
U.S. officials suggests...
U.S. officials said...
U.S. officials said...
U.S. officials declined to disclose the nature of the intelligence...
U.S. officials say...
U.S. officials said...
U.S. officials described...
U.S. officials have not stated...
U.S. officials who have reviewed the new intelligence said...
Officials said...
... officials said...
After sorting and categorizing tens of thousands of data points and poring over hundreds of individual articles, blog posts and columns, I can only say with high confidence that the number of anonymous-source stories published by the Times in 2015 approached 6,000, out of roughly 88,000 individual articles, blog posts and columns from both the paper and wire services. (To view the full set of Times-authored anonymous-source stories for 2015, plus news desk and front-page analysis as well as a breakdown of bylines, go to this public Google Doc.) But I’m convinced the exact number is unknown by any mere mortal (or editor on Eighth Avenue). — https://fair.org/home/journalisms-dark-matter/
A serious and good philosophical work could be written consisting entirely of jokes.
how does it show that the elements of experience have any ultimate material constituent? — Wayfarer
It will then point out that whatever you claim is an ultimate constituent or object, can be nothing other than a consistent form of experience, something that appears invariant through time in your experience of the world. And that's not to deny the reality of such experiences - they're repeatable, governed by laws, observable by third parties, and so on. But they're all ultimately experiential in nature, that than ultimately material in nature. — Wayfarer
the price of ignorance is paid every day by the young men dying on the frontline, and civilians suffering under the war. — Tzeentch
Why not just say what you mean? — praxis
I also noticed, while doing my SEP trawl, that many of the articles on Eastern philosophy use it like this. — Jamal
The philosophical point of that, is that the natural sciences, which are concerned with 'what exists', are not concerned with 'the meaning of being' in the philosophical sense. — Wayfarer
It's the philosophical standard. — Jamal
being (n.)
c. 1300, "existence," in its most comprehensive sense, "condition, state, circumstances; presence, fact of existing," early 14c., existence," from be + -ing. The sense of "that which physically exists, a person or thing" (as in human being) is from late 14c.
I’m no political analyst but one of DeSantis’ tactics seems to be redefining ‘elite’ to mean anyone, anyone with a pulse, who merely upholds the tyrannical woke progressive pseudo religious ideology in some way. — praxis
Trump and DeSantis don’t appeal to facts or reason. For politicians, on both sides of the aisle, who just want power and wealth it’s not in their interests to actually tackle the problems of the people. — praxis
Google, Amazon, Ikea, Apple and Nestle are among those failing to change quickly enough, the study alleges.
Says the "grown-up" who thinks — ssu
Is there any question who the bad guys are here? — RogueAI