Is it somehow more noble to work 20 or 60 hours per week?Mad people are those who go blindly through life, working 40 hours a week in some menial job, fully invested into this 'life' of materiality. So much so, that no question of enigma remains, no hint of awe. These great swathes of dull, anaesthetised people who live as if they are already dead. That is mad. It is not knowledge they possess, but a dangerous forbidding of knowledge. — emancipate
Your post also melts away belly fat.Scientists hate him, see this one trick that makes reactionaries apologise! — fdrake
Merely agreeing on the problem can be problematic. Witness the debate over anthropogenic global warming, which probably pretty cleanly, though not perfectly, splits across left/right lines: many on the right don't even think AGW is happening, and so talk of solutions to this nonexistent problem is therefore moot.We can agree on a problem, yet we have a difficult time to agree on the solution. — ssu
It's times like this that I wish Sarah Palin were back running the show in Alaska. It was only her steely resolve, diplomatic finesse, and deep knowledge of the intricacies of geopolitics which kept Russia at bay (did you know you can see Russia from Alaska? Really see it!).It would be great to see the response by Americans and in the media. Because as the Russians routinely check the response times of the USAF, if the aircraft remain grounded, the Russians will surely violate US airspace — ssu
We more or less did it to ourselves, but the majority of voters did not vote for Trump, as Clinton won the popular vote. Recall how Trump was fulminating about voter fraud and how quickly his baseless allegations were dropped. He lies so often, and pushes so many conspiracy theories, baseless assertions and half-truths, that each one in turn is so quickly forgotten, and then it's on the next piece of bullshit. That that we had a sitting American president asserting without evidence widespread voter fraud which tipped the balance of the popular vote - which would be a big deal if true, to put it mildly - would once have struck at the heart of our democracy, but is now a distant memory. It's a new normal, and the new normal isn't good.The only redemptive aspect of our national encounter with this vicious and cruel manipulator and liar is that we did it to ourselves. — tim wood
Well, re: Powell, there was the whole "making a case for Iraqi WMDs in front of the UN" thing.Mattis and Powell I know of no bad news about. — tim wood
Well, there's John McA...ah, never mind.I cannot think of even a single Republican that I can feel right in thinking of as an American. Can you? Can you name one? — tim wood
Even if this somewhat sanitized picture of the relationship between Catholicism and evolution is true, it does not tell the whole story. For one thing, even just restricting our view to Christianity alone, evangelical Christians and their Protestant cohorts generally are much less hospitable towards evolution than are Catholics.Well, both the Church of England and the Catholic Church have declared evolution and big-bang to be compatible with their beliefs.
Also it is instructive to note that according to Catholic doctrine, faith is unnecessary. The truth may be achieved through reason. — Inis
I don't impugn your posts for their omission of Galileo. Not every discussion of science and religion must mention him.But of course, I am conveniently ignoring the persecution of Galileo, as atheists must ignore the many cases of corrupt atheist science.
Yes, and the theory of evolution and religion have lived happily ever after since then... :smirk:Let's not forget that Newton was deeply religious and according to the French, Lamarck discovered evolution, and was religious. — Inis
Does it always, though? Science does sometimes seem to concern itself with particular events, the conditions for which may not have been replicated at any other time or place (consider its studies of particular geological epochs, or particular events in geological history, such as the Permian-Triassic extinction).The scientific method deals with universal statements — Inis
I'm not so sure about that. You should hear some of the Republican politicians grovel before Rush Limbaugh, for instance. Having right-wing media turn on you can likely damage your popularity among conservative voters.The ineptness of Trump to handle anything is present here as other persons would have understood that these right-wing talking heads need far more his approval than the other way around. — ssu
I agree. It would be a peculiar situation, to say the least, if a logical truth could be put to an empirical test (as Aristotelian physics can be).I don't know. It seems to me that only a defeasible statement can be meaningfully tested. How do you test a tautology (or a contradiction)? — SophistiCat
Oh, I know...I was referring specifically to the one object/two object dispute, and how the nature of the tether (e.g. rigid vs. slack) affects the parameters of the thought experiment.There seem to be quite a lot of references to the thought experiment in the literature — SophistiCat
In thinking about this topic recently, an ill-formed thought has been niggling in the back of my mind that there is something logically suspect about being able to disprove a supposedly contradictory statement (or a statement which implies a contradiction) through empirical means. Even if one holds the view that Artistotelian physics can be disproven a priori through thought experimentation, I doubt anyone would object that it can also be experimentally disconfirmed. So, empiricism and pure rationality would each be sufficient, but unnecessary, for such a disproof.Unlike in Galileo's thought experiment, there is no logical reductio here. — SophistiCat
Not something I ever claimed. But the mere fact that we're discussing the wrongness of Aristotelian physics means that very smart people can sometimes go wrong. And I'll say one last time: just because someone disagrees, it doesn't mean they don't comprehend. You can stamp your feet all you want, but all you're doing is coming across as looking very juvenile. So, I'm done with you.Oh, to be in the presence of those with bigger brains than Galileo! — Inis
I largely agree with your treatment of this question, Sophisticat. However, the above assumption (i.e. that the falling bodies behave as if they're separate bodies until the string is taut) seems debatable to me: as the weights were connected by the tether prior to their being dropped, they've always been "one body," and thus it could be argued that the composite body comprising the two weights plus tether would always fall faster than either body alone, given that they've always been one object for the purposes of this experiment. (I am familiar with this thought experiment, but not well-versed in its detailed treatment in the literature. I wonder how much of a point of contention this particular issue is.)Consider Galileo's setup: two bodies of unequal weight tied by a light string and dropped from a height. If at first the string is loose, the two bodies behave as separate bodies (notice how we are already importing our physical intuitions into the thought experiment!) — SophistiCat
This is painting with a very broad brush. Doctors' professional lives and compensation vary greatly depending upon where they work, which field of medicine they work in, their patient population, and myriad other factors (never mind the usual stressors which go along with nearly any job). And practicing medicine comes with wrangling with insurance companies, and paperwork, paperwork, and more paperwork, which is hardly a gratifying task for most people.Being a doctor is a great job, and a very rewarding profession. — andrewk
There is some precedent for ex-generals becoming President, and pretty good ones at that. I can in fact think of 3 off the top of my head (viz. Washington, Grant, and Eisenhower). Presumably, one must resign one's military commission (or already be out of the service) before becoming President, so they are technically civilians when elected.I'd just as soon generals stayed on base. Civilians are supposed to be in charge of the government. — Bitter Crank
Even if I accepted the logical force of Kant's argument, it would have little effect on my practical reasoning. I would still lie, and accept that I was thereby doing something unethical in order to save my friend or loved one. Even if I accepted a similar maxim such as "stealing is always wrong," it wouldn't stop me from, for instance, stealing bread to save a starving family.Suppose a murderer is at your door and asks you where your friend is. Your friend is hiding in your house, but the murderer is going to kill him. Should you tell the truth?
Kant argues that you should tell the truth because the maxim of lying can't be universalized. — Happiness
Wow. And the late 1990s were the time of the dot-com bubble, so he was really missing the forest for the trees...Believe me, I had in the late 1990's an assistant yelling at me that the whole idea of there existing or happening speculative bubbles in the modern financial markets was a totally ludicrous idea and hence not worth studying, because the financial markets work so well. — ssu