I think you are misinterpreting some of what I'm trying to say. It isn't about the END OF CHINA but more about the END OF THE CURRENT WAY CHINA DOES THINGS. Or in other words China will some time in the future need some kind of paradigm shift in order to properly adjust to the way things are done in the modern world. This isn't all that shocking when you think about it since both the US as well as other countries will likely need a kind of paradigm shift in order to operate effectively in the modern world as well as things become more complicated in the future.China is and will never be done. They survived the revolution of Mao, the starvation crisis of 60's, and the financial problems of the 80's and 90's. Sooner or later they end up searching a solution for the problems. We should not say "they will not last this decade". It is extreme. Keep in mind that despite they are not a democracy at least the National People's Congress is responsible. This is why they always survived from all the problems: Because their philosophy is being courageous in hard times and the principles points of Confucianism and Taoism. These doctrines are centuries years old they still remain.
Xi Jinping has something that no Western leader does: Rectitude. — javi2541997
Rectitude? Following the principles of Confucianism and Taoism? I disagree with your assessment of Xi Jinping and those following him.This is why they always survived from all the problems: Because their philosophy is being courageous in hard times and the principles points of Confucianism and Taoism. These doctrines are centuries years old they still remain.
Xi Jinping has something that no Western leader does: Rectitude. — javi2541997
I know it may sound like a stupid position to have but I believe that extending peoples lives serves a larger purpose than merely giving the people the luxury of living longer.Seriously, many people probably experience varying degrees of derangement in the final hour(s). If death isn't swift, there may be successive organ failure and a rapid build-up of toxic substances which amplify the dying process. So yes, it could be pretty unpleasant for a while. But then it is over and the curtain of silent oblivion descends forever.
Rather than focusing on stretching out life, even life without end, an actual attainable goal is to live life in the knowledge that life is short. Make the most of living while one can.
Old age can be a burden, true enough, but I know people (like myself) who are very much engaged in doing what makes life meaningful and interesting to them. One can and should prepare to die with as much serenity as possible, but not dwell on it. — Bitter Crank
Death is the cause, IMO, rather than the effect of aging, regardless of how long the organism lasts. The difference in species longevity it seems is primarily a function of the degree to which biological aging (e.g. cellular senescence) lags behind chronological age. I've speculated for decades that a "fundamental cure for cancer" might be derived from discovering the exact (genetic) mechanisms in cells which switch on or off senescence and thereby allow for tissue / organ specific control of aging. CRISPR might be a plausible technique for such an intervention. TBD.
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/655900 — 180 Proof
The fact that cancer cells, certain stem cells, etc. are immortal isn't really all that important since it is already a given that single cell organism (such as bacteria) have the means to be able to be able to divide/grow indefinitely without having to deal with the issues of aging, or at least it being a real problem for them. Just as I said before "if" they didn't, they would cease to exist. Many single cell organism have evolved to the point were they have incredible means to deal with various environment hazards such as radiation, vacuum, etc. One strain discovered has been called the "Conan" bacteria.Stem cells? I think they're immortal. Cancer cells are too.
I think Bittercrank may have been onto something regarding the ability of a mortal population to adapt to changing conditions? — Tate
I'm feeling the effects of Hayflick's Limit. — Bitter Crank
Ok, here is a question that would be interesting for someone to provide an answer to:There's a jellyfish that's considered to be biologically immortal because it occasionally reverts to a younger stage and starts over. For the rest of us, it's Hayflick's limit. — Tate
Christianity has an explanation: Original sin which God punished by issuing a death sentence to Adam & Eve and their descendants viz. us. :snicker: That kinda squares with the fact that we put extreme criminals (those who've committed heinous crimes) to death.
What doesn't add up is our nociceptive system - why does it exist if not to prevent/avoid crossing the river Styx? Clearly, it isn't working all that well, oui mes amies?
Too, the whole thing reminds me of villainous masterminds killing all his/her subordinate henchman after a certain objective (more life i.e. offspring) is achieved. Jibes with the theory of evolution I'd say. — Agent Smith
The only reason you believe death is inevitable is because all of your life you have seen anything that lives eventually dies. Before the invention of the airplane an other technology, people had only seen bird an other animals fly but never human beings so it was easy for them to assume that human being would never fly since they never had before.I can't see the connection, but anyway. The "argument" above is almost the same with the classic "If my aunt had balls, she'd be my uncle"! :smile: Mine, if you can call it an "argument" too, is not hypothetical. It's factual. — Alkis Piskas
I only ask that read some of the stuff I just posted (as well as some of what others posted), think abut what we are trying to say, and then post back with what your thoughts are on it the subjects that are brought up.Well, you can evade taxes! :smile:
OK, joking aside, I really don't see what are you trying to find out or establish in your topic ... — Alkis Piskas
dclements In a word, entropy 'kills' all complex organisms eventually. And lacking a well-understood theory of the cell (and, therefore, e.g. the human body as a whole system), at best we're only taking shots in the phenomenological dark treating symptoms and not the underlying problems which result in death. That said, here's an old post where I speculate (wantonly) on the topic:
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/384334 — 180 Proof
I have heard about both the supposedly immortal cancer cells that continually grow and are used in medical research and about CRISPR. To be honest, I don't know much about them other than that they exist and may help in solving certain health issues and/or may help provide insights into how to extend human life.A line of research currently being looked at is HeLa Cells.
From Wiki:
HeLa is an immortal cell line used in scientific research. It is the oldest and most commonly used human cell line. The line is derived from cervical cancer cells taken on February 8, 1951,[named after Henrietta Lacks, a 31-year-old African-American mother of five, who died of cancer on October 4, 1951. The cell line was found to be remarkably durable and prolific, which allows it to be used extensively in scientific study.
The cells from Lacks's cancerous cervical tumor were taken without her knowledge or consent, which was common practice in the United States at the time. Cell biologist George Otto Gey found that they could be kept alive, and developed a cell line. Previously, cells cultured from other human cells would only survive for a few days. Cells from Lacks's tumor behaved differently.
The (horrible imo) Elon Musk is making some progress with neuralink.
CRISPR tech is very interesting.
The most interesting claim coming from the scientists involved in current transhuman technologies is that the first person to live to between 135 and 175 years is alive today but many such scientific claims in the past have proved unfounded. — universeness
Again like Alkis Piskas's post, this is just an appeal to authority/antiquity. While there may be issues if the human population getting too big, for the purposes of this thread I'm not bothering to address such an issue because it is an entirely different subject on it's own.I wish technology is not able to solve the nature of passing away. Death is one of the purest conditions of humankind. If we develop worthy plans and projects is precisely for this reason because our time on the earth is limited. When a person passes away, it flourishes a different concept about him: the one you had when this person was alive and the one you have now when is dead. — javi2541997
And a few hundred years ago people where saying that if man was meant to fly God would have given us wings. Both that argument and yours is really just an appeal to authority - this is the way it is now and it is what we know so why bother to question such things.Are you asking Why life is life?
Because life includes death by definition (implicitly at least). — Alkis Piskas
This sounds more or less the old conventional way of thinking when it comes to "life extension" - proper diet, avoiding high risk activities, getting shots for the flu and other diseases, etc., etc. which may or may not extend a persons life for maybe another 10 to 20 years and has been taught for around the last 100 to 200 years about.Most of the increase in life expectancy over centuries has to do with nutrition and sanitation. I'm sure immunization and anti-biotics have had a big role too. Insect and rodent control also. At the same time, I don't think the maximum age to which people live has changed much. The three score and 10 years specified in the Bible is still fairly accurate.
I think the technology associated with longer life is probably at a whole different level affecting different bodily systems than that required for disease control. — T Clark
Fermi's Paradox isn't really a "paradox" since there are many, many reasons why we haven't been contacted by E.T.s yet. The first one is that we HAVE been contacted but it simply hasn't been recorded and/or made public. While this may not sound likely it is a given that up until recently many things that have happen haven't been recorded or even if it was recorded such records have been lost. Even if aliens have visited us hundreds of years ago, such recorded would likely not have survived to the present day and/or believed by the scientific community since stories about real events were often mixed with myth up until a few hundred years ago.So why haven't we encountered aliens already? Or have we? Here are some discussion-points which some of my students have proposed:
1. they have found us, but they have observed that the Earth resembles a primitive swamp where the inhabitants eat each other and slaughter each other, often on slight provocation. Especially strangers, or anybody who is "different". Would you jump into a swamp with alligators, while saying "take me to your leader?"
2. they have seen us, but their government has designated us a "Planetary Park", and their environmental laws forbid them from interfering in pristine, primitive environments.
3. they have passed by but they haven't stopped because by their standards of civilisation we are not sufficiently interesting (gasp! Could it be that we are NOT as fascinating and special as our religions have led us to believe?)
4. they have never found us because at any one time, on average, there are only about a thousand civilisations in the galaxy and the nearest is 3,000 light years away. We're just a needle in a haystack.
5. they have never been here because, barring the discovery of an alternative physics, the difficulties of interstellar travel are insurmountable for any being with a finite life expectancy.
5. actually, they HAVE been here; the small minority of unresolvable UAP phenomena are, in fact, genuine. — alan1000
Classic.
https://archive.today/20211025032625/https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/24/technology/amazon-employee-leave-errors.html
https://gizmodo.com/amazons-aggressive-anti-union-tactics-revealed-in-leake-1829305201
https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2021/06/01/amazon-osha-injury-rate/
https://www.cnet.com/news/amazon-u-k-accused-of-sweatshop-conditions/
https://www.thestar.com/business/2020/06/26/amazon-delivery-drivers-in-canada-launch-200-million-class-action-claiming-unpaid-wages.html
https://web.archive.org/web/20200824215335/https://www.aspi.org.au/report/uyghurs-sale
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2019/dec/02/new-study-deems-amazon-worst-for-aggressive-tax-avoidance
https://www.vox.com/recode/2019/9/9/20857030/amazon-employees-walkout-environmental-policies
... maybe pick another bookseller? — Isaac
I guess we don't really know if she and her husband somehow made tons of money on the trip, but then again we really don't know if he trip was just another piece of the Saurian's plans to gain more power to help them get control over the governments around the world and eventually allow them to rule over all of us.How do we know that Nancy Pelosi's Taiwan trip isn't designed to make big sums of money for her and her husband? — Agent Smith
If one is the biggest super power in the world and wishes to remain so, they must be willing to defend themselves (and their allies) against all potential advisories at any given time. It has nothing to do if they really want to fight or in the mood for it on any given day, it is about it being a given that at any moment if they let themselves look weak enough for a potential enemy to strike and/or take advantage of any weak link in their global defense strategy then said enemy will most likely use it.It should be obvious that in such a scenario the United States may not want to defend Taiwan if it means sparking WWIII, hence they pursue strategic ambiguity. — Tzeentch
You called Taiwan a trivial issue for the Chinese, which it clearly is not.
Thereby you are making the same mistake as the West has made in Ukraine. Assuming things to be trivial, when the reality is that Russia was prepared to go to war. Taiwan is of similar importance to China. The fact that the issue has been hot for over half a century should tell you enough.
You need to read my posts more carefully. — Tzeentch
I don't know where you get that idea. Germany attacked Poland in 1939 by making the people in Germany think that Polish soldiers where trying to at a German radio station. The US started the second war with Iraq in 2003 under the pretense that Iraq was "working on weapons of mass destruction", and Russia started a war with Ukraine this year under the pretense that the people of Ukraine were abusing/"terrorizing" it's Russia speaking (and/or those with Russian background) citizens.Because countries cannot make navies out of thin air. — Tzeentch
If you could provide some sources for the times China has warned WWIII with those countries mentioned, I would appreciate it. I do know that for them Taiwan is the "red line", and Tibet too, though this latter region is now more tightly under state control, as I understand it. — Manuel
I could be wrong, but IMHO we need to so call "poke the Panda" every so often in order to remind China that they can not control people outside of China the way they can inside their own country.One thing is what Xi wishes, another is what he is able to do. Very different things. As far as two days ago, the White House was not happy with the visit to Taiwan and even FP magazine thought it was a bad idea.
As for the actual threat here for China? You're right, there isn't a threat per se, it's not as if Pelosi can grant Taiwan nation-state status in the UN or something, it's more the symbolism that can be interpreted as China not being able to control its one red line, with its dream of unification and whatnot.
In short, this visit is pure provocation. And we still should recognize that China could not take over Taiwan in a week, regardless of anything else. It's playing with fire just to see who has a bigger d***. Not good statesmanship, imo. — Manuel
They could definitely use a little more gravitas. — Tate
If you really believe that the US military might stand back while China invades Taiwan because they "recognize" the "One China policy" then I got some people you need to talk to who have some beachfront property in Arizona they wish to sell to you at a great price.As far as I know, the United States pursues a strategy of 'strategic ambiguity' in regards to Taiwan, meaning that they haven't made it explicitly clear whether they will defend Taiwan or not.
Didn't Biden say recently during a press conference they were committed to defending Taiwan, only for that statement to be recalled, reasserting their position was ambiguous as per the Taiwan Relations Act?
US State Department Walks Back Unusually Strong Comments on Taiwan — Tzeentch
That is almost as bad as thinking that the US wouldn't want to fight after the Japanese attacked us at Pearl Harbor. If you know anything about US history, military doctrine, as well as the average mindset of the average American you would realize we are a war loving, gun-tooting, psychotic bunch of people frothing at the mouth (or at least when you compare us to the average person in the rest of the developed world) who are ready to go to war any time another country tries to step on our toes. And of course China invading the US would definitely would be an example of China stepping on our toes/challenging our position as the global super power.No. It's not like that. The United States has not made it clear whether it will protect Taiwan in case of a military invasion and explicitly has made no guarantees to do so. But it still might. That's the idea behind strategic ambiguity. — Tzeentch
Your argument is a strawman since I have said nothing to indicate that I believe that either Taiwan, Ukraine or Crimea have only symbolic value. In fact, nowhere have I even mentioned anything about Ukraine or Crimea in this thread so it is a given that you can only assume I might have such a position (just as you might assume that of anyone else on this forum) since I have said nothing on such matters.Again, you're falling into the same trap the United States and Europe have fallen into with Russia. You assume that Taiwan, just like Ukraine and Crimea, has only symbolic value, and that those symbolic values only matter to crazy dictators in power.
This is plain short-sighted and wrong. The fact that both of these issues have been hot topics for decades, Taiwan for over half a century, should tell you that we're not talking about benign matters, but in fact matters that a country like China could actually go to war over.
Will they go to war now? It's not likely, I'll grant you that. According to some projections China is not expected to be ready to invade Taiwan until 2027. But projections can be wrong, and China could just be waiting for a pretense to strike. Consider also that China may have more instruments to start a conflict besides an all-out military invasion, and that retaliations against Taiwan or the United States may take a different form. — Tzeentch
Jane Mayer documents this in her book Dark Money. TLDR: in the last few decades, enormously wealthy billionaire dynasties (the Kochs, for instance) in America have financed countless political action committees, think tanks, lobbying campaigns etc in an effort to abolish government intervention in a ludicrous right-wing libertarian "free-market" capitalism that could easily be described as fascist. — _db
As far as I know, the United States pursues a strategy of 'strategic ambiguity' in regards to Taiwan, meaning that they haven't made it explicitly clear whether they will defend Taiwan or not.
Didn't Biden say recently during a press conference they were committed to defending Taiwan, only for that statement to be recalled, reasserting their position was ambiguous as per the Taiwan Relations Act? — Tzeentch
But they won't look very tough if the United States just goes ahead with their plan and they do not retaliate in any way. They'll look like chumps. — Tzeentch
They're nothing but hot air, until they're not. We've seen in Ukraine what it can lead to when the biggest bully on the block - the USA - ignores warnings from other nations they are going too far. — Tzeentch
Stop and think for a second, what real "threat" is there for China if Pelosi goes to Taiwan? The real answer is simply there isn't any, other than it shows to the people in China (and the rest of the world) that the people outside of China does not have to kowtow to Xi Jinping wishes if they do not want to.I don't agree. There is no need for provocation at this level, hell, even that dimwit at the New York Times, Thomas Friedman - for once - said that this was reckless behavior.
I don't like China's government. Doesn't mean it's smart to do these types of maneuvers. Taiwan has gotten plenty of help from the US, so there is no imminent threat of a take-over made by force, without an extremely bloody conflict. But then that would bring the US in, and we're at a stalemate.
Given population projections for China, I very much doubt they are going to dominate the world. The US has by far a much stronger military force. This being scared of China makes sense, for those countries that fall within China's reach. Not the US or Europe, or Latin America, etc. — Manuel
Not sure what the strategic interest in Taiwan is. Pelosi is like, "Whatcha gonna do about it?" — Tate
It is better for the US and our allies to pay little to no attention to China's threats, so I believe it is better for Pelosi does go to Taiwan. Because China likes to think it is the biggest superpower in the world it likes to make threats over everything and anything. Once you start kowtowing to such threats you begin to embolden those running China to make even more threats and act in even a more intimidating manner.:up:
All this could have been avoided if Pelosi hadn't planned this visit. As you mention, the relevant actors. especially China, must react somehow, otherwise they would look weak in the international stage. But what type of action they would take, is far from clear.
Very dangerous. — Manuel
If China really wants to attack, they will attack but it is pretty much a given they would be complete fools to do so. Unlike Ukraine, the US has pledged that if China invades Taiwan we will get involved and help defend them against China.If Pelosi visits and the Chinese government doesn't back up their threats, they will look weak.
But then again, what could they do? Attack?
Regardless, this will be a big event in China-US relations.
If China is forced to back down it will damage relations and fuel animosity further, greatly increasing the likelihood of a military conflict over Taiwan in the near future. It could spark a Crimea/Ukraine-like situation where China, like Russia, is instilled with a sense of urgency to secure its outstanding claims before it's too late.
If China backs up their threats somehow, we could be looking at open war. The question is if in such a scenario Japan and South Korea would enter the war on the US-side, which would be a complete disaster and likely spark mass conflict, if not WWIII. For the US not to get involved military would be unlikely, considering their naval assets in the area, but they also never officially guaranteed Taiwan's independence (I think?), so perhaps there is a way out, though unlikely.
A very volatile situation. I don't think the United States is in a position to be waging any kind of war currently, and they are banking on the power of their deterrence to score a victory for the Biden administration - not unlike the Ukraine-situation. A dangerous gamble. — Tzeentch
You are partly right, the money in our pockets are merely "IOUs" from the government and they are only worth something if the government and other powers that be say they are worth anything. At any time they can either print out so much currency that the money in your pocket isn't worth anything, or take the money through either taxes or other means.Pretty sure fiat currencies are owned by the government anyway. So technically all of NOS4A2’s money is the government’s. If he doesn’t want them taking any of their money back then he should manufacture his own goods and barter them for the things he needs. — Michael
I'm not sure but the days of making big money through exploitation are over i.e. the rich-poor gap is increasing alright but by other, more benign, more honorable, methods. What these are is currently beyond me, but the bottom line is the rich have nothing to be ashamed of, conversely the poor have nothing to complain about! :snicker: — Agent Smith
The idea of class war need not demonize the rich but only describe a tendency of the rich to maintain their luxuries and privileges at the expense of outsiders. Indeed, the poor are often encouraged to emulate the class consciousness of the rich. One way to clean my own room as a shrewd prole is to form free associations with other such proles and do what the rich do, team up explicitly in order to better squeeze politicians for tax money, protections, and privileges. — Pie
"Collectivism" as if it's a bad word. Lol. — Benkei
Class war is very real and very damaging to the world. Don’t pay attention to those who pretend it doesn’t exist — they’re unwitting puppets for pure tyranny. Always have been. — Xtrix
Another day a government failure, another call for the government to fix it. By now we’ve relinquished so much social power, and converted what little responsibilities we used to share with one another into state responsibilities, that I fear it’s too late to do anything about it. So far gone are we that we now pretend voting for this-or-that politician or this-or-that piece of legislation is tantamount helping The Poor, even though politics and charity are wildly divergent activities.
The problem with the class war idea is that it isn’t true, and worse, pegs as good or evil one who may be the opposite—it’s unjust. Better to approach the blame game on an individual basis, to witness if one helps the poor or not, rather than making such determinations from which tax bracket or party they occupy. I wager you’d be surprised. — NOS4A2
It has become more apparent as the working poor have lost their economic power, and the social welfare gains of the C20th are rolled back. But don't worry, it's all going to get much worse. — unenlightened