if they exist in people's brains — ToothyMaw
Could you explain "matters"? And do you mean you support or oppose the taboo? — Apollodorus
Is it possible to define the total number of possible beliefs that can be formed via interacting freely with one’s environment as a mathematical set? Or, even more simply, can things like beliefs even be expressed as belonging to a set? It seems to me that they can if beliefs or the forming of beliefs take the form of brain states or changes in the structure of the brain, but I’m not sure. I am trying to axiomatize something greater than this, so out of context this question might sound kind of bonkers. — ToothyMaw
it is about family relationships and betrayal of trust or duty. — prothero
But suppose a person may decide to marry or enter into sexual relations with a close relative that is unlikely to result in children being born, for example, if both partners are of the same sex, beyond a certain age, or otherwise unable or indeed unwilling to conceive or procreate. — Apollodorus
I’m sure a lot of you would disagree and I’m wondering if someone can provide some sort of defense for treating homosexuality differently from incest. — TheHedoMinimalist
Not true. The 10th man's job is to simply disagree whether or not he has good reasons to do so. — TheMadFool
No I didn't. I stated the obvious. We're engaged in the enterprise of mimicking nature and quite badly at that. A simple proof that's the case: Birds have wings, airplanes have wings. Bird wings came first. — TheMadFool
Cherry-picking. Confirmation bias. — TheMadFool
I'm just the 10th man. — TheMadFool
To that I'll say no aircraft can match a falcon's grace, skill and agility in flight. — TheMadFool
Do we know enough to say for sure what had happened or is there some wishful thinking going on? — Gregory
The fossils are real no doubt but the rest of paleontology is imagination. This isn't a flaw as much as it's a challenge worthy of true genius. — TheMadFool
There is still controversy around the 'out of Africa' theory. — Wayfarer
But life and mind are the products of a properly complex causality - one where management of instability is the general core principle. So life thrives on the edge of chaos. The more tippable the physics, the more profit there is for the information that can tip it. — apokrisis
Non-totalitarian nations which are founded upon a respect for, and a safeguarding of, the God given rights of the individual and democratic constitutional forms of representative government had better wake up and prepare themselves for an extended era of stiff competition with this future, formidable adversary. This non-Communist China. — charles ferraro
Your Thoughts? — boagie
This dilemma creates a neurological state of fear vibrating in the chest caverns of all persons affected, and the consequences are hefty in the resulting creation of a bureaucratic insurance state which is, essentially, manifest desolation of the Republic. — Sha'aniah
the most viable current theory is a sort of diversely pluralistic monism explaining perception as conventional chemistry infused with distinctly quantum dynamics, most essentially the superpositions or blended wavelengths which bring about complex assortments of color and feeling within matter. — Enrique
I won't object to that. Different strokes for different folks. — TheMadFool
Here's my personal take on psychology for your consideration. — TheMadFool
It's not designed for cities of people who don't know one another, can't possibly help everyone who needs it, and have no reason to assume reciprocity. That seems to me where social biology fails and moral philosophy enters. — Kenosha Kid
One of us hasn't got your post right. — Kenosha Kid
This is just a misguided question, giving too much significance to a word. It is said that there is a being, God, which created the universe and has the power to shape it as he wills. Some might say that he can kill himself and others might say that he can't. Whether you want the term "omnipotence" to include being able to kill oneself or to include being unkillable (even by oneself) or to contradictorily include both is irrelevant. — Michael
Whatever had the rats in the experiment free their fellow rat (even save a bit of food for them), I wouldn't be surprised is also an aspect of human moral behavior, or perhaps proto-morals of sorts. — jorndoe
But if you insist, then your burden is to demonstrate against what seems obvious, that areas of psychology are not science, and show them science. If psych. is to be all science, then all of it must be science. — tim wood
In English, Science means those subjects which use hypotheses, — Corvus
Truth be told, my criticism is particular in being directed against Freud but I'm using military tactics - liquidate high value targets. Attacking Freud successfully as I think I've done leaves psychology leaderless. Psychology should collapse unless psychology is the mythical Hydra. — TheMadFool
you're just ignorant about psychology as a discipline. — Ying
You're beating around the bush. I'll make it easy for you: name one psychological theory that matches up to a scientific theory and we can begin to discuss it. — TheMadFool
The reality is that psychologists themselves act as if psychology _is_ a hard science like physics or chemistry. That's how much credit is given to psychology, that's how much credit they believe they deserve. — baker
However, unlike patterns in physics which are inviolable (laws), those in psychology are statistical i.e. all we might be able to say is most people think a certain way. — TheMadFool
That's exactly the point! Psychology isn't/can't be a science. For it to come anywhere close to being a science, it needs people to be honest when reporting their thoughts, feelings, intuitions, whathaveyou and as we all know, honesty is (not) the best policy. — TheMadFool
Paint the wall both yellow and blue in stripes. The wall's not blue (scientific) - genius. It's not fucking yellow either is it? Moron. — Isaac
