Does more money bring more friends, sex, more stable relationships? It may, but the people I know who have lots of friends, sex, and good relationships are on the low end of the economic distribution. Good looks, health, a strong sex drive, and a pleasant personality help more than money. — Bitter Crank
If one has great wealth, not just "some wealth", one can arrange to have people surround one with what looks like friendship, sex appeal, and good relationships. In that sense, money can get one those things. But none of this is "the real thing". One's 'friends' and 'bed mates' are playing a role. — Bitter Crank
Is it as hard for the average person to have friends, sex, love, and achievement as $50,000 extra? Achievement seems like it might be the most difficult commodity to obtain. It seems like the opportunities to freely achieve are fairly restricted. — Bitter Crank
I don’t believe character is very concrete / set in stone. Sure there are some traits that seem to be a part of our deepest identity and are difficult to shift but if you dislike a particular part of yourself or maybe desire a specific trait for yourself, there’s nothing but some hard graft between you and it. — Benj96
some of our best analytical or critical thinkers were pessimistic. — Benj96
I wouldn’t be too hard on yourself about changing it, don’t be so pessimistic lol — Benj96
When people perhaps shouldn’t be focused on the idea of continuous happiness (a sort of nothing can go wrong for me) and focus more on contentment (things will often go wrong for me but it’s okay I’m not adverse to it and won’t try to control things as I’m peacefully anticipating both good and bad). — Benj96
We know people can be sad longterm. We call it depression. But longterm happiness is somewhat elusive. — Benj96
Humans, have self-reflection and greater awareness of actions, thoughts, and can use language. — schopenhauer1
I can understand certain claims for consistency of veganism and antinatalism, as they are often rooted in the same moral sentiments. — schopenhauer1
Humans should actively be helping non-human animals, not terrorising them and then rationalising our bloodlust. On consequentialist grounds, we should uphold in law the sanctity of life. — David Pearce
For large slow-breeders, cross-species fertility-regulation via immunocontraception is feasible. For small fast-breeders, we can use remotely tunable synthetic gene drives:
https://www.hedweb.com/quora/2015.html#killed — David Pearce
I wouldn't be surprised at all if there were some striped kangaroos.
— Down The Rabbit Hole
I think you mean you would be surprised. — TonesInDeepFreeze
On the other hand, if an outlandish or "out of thin air" existence claim is asserted, it doesn't seem reasonable that the denier would have as great a burden to prove false as the assertor has to prove true. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"There exists a fish with blue fins and a green body."
I don't assume that is true and I don't assume that it is false.
"There exists a striped kangaroo."
I assume that is false. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It is to move from agnosticism.
— Down The Rabbit Hole
Why? To me, you need a reason to believe something. If there is no reason, then disbelief is warranted. That is to say that the truth of the belief in question can be rejected, or denied. — Pinprick
I don't have sufficient evidence to claim fairies don't exist. Do you? What is it?
— Down The Rabbit Hole
— Pinprick
It isn’t needed. — Pinprick
Do you have any evidence that they do exist? — Pinprick
I just meant it wasn’t a factor for determining burden of proof — Pinprick
I once wanted children, but was largely driven by societal norms and the feeling that I might actually do an OK job teaching another person about the world. But since getting older have felt that my DNA might not be suitable for a very ideal life and the world is clearly overpopulated as it is. — TiredThinker
I think Occam's Razor might make god/s less likely, but it is not enough to shift me from agnosticism, to an active belief that there is no god.
— Down The Rabbit Hole
Are you also agnostic on the existence of fairies? I think you’re using the wrong razor. — Pinprick
I don’t think the difficulty of providing proof is a factor at all. — Pinprick
Maybe there is something more fundamental than the RQF (if the theory is correct) I just see no reason for there to be, as it begs the same questions as the RQF.
— Down The Rabbit Hole
Right. Which is to say, Krauss has no ultimate explanation. — fishfry
I'm debating Krauss's nonsensical claim that the RQF + the laws of physics are "nothing" — fishfry
I understand what you are saying about the abuse of the word "nothing". — Down The Rabbit Hole
I take no position on the nature of the world. — fishfry
"Sacrifice" makes it seem like it's necessary for the happiness of the majority and that I wouldn't stop it if I could.
An "acceptable consequence"? Yes. "Sacrifice"? No. — khaled
Some people are going to get heart attacks from surprise parties. Doesn't make surprise parties wrong. — khaled
Yes. Agreed. But Krauss has no ultimate explanation, just a description of a speculative next level down. And do note that the RQF idea is speculation, not accepted or proven theory. I don't see how anyone can call it an ultimate explanation. But I already said that and perhaps we can agree to disagree. — fishfry
Us caterpillars may never know
— Down The Rabbit Hole
I'm not sure if you meant that as irony or lighthearted criticism of my position, but that is in fact my position. — fishfry
Willy's a bit cynical here. More of "Well, it's an 'option' (wink, wink)." — schopenhauer1
At the moment of conception, there is a rapid expansion of cells, like a Big Bang, only on a biological scale if you will. Looking at our observable universe, we see what conception looks like on a cosmic scale. Since space is infinite, there may be an infinite number of Big Bangs, but we’ll never observe them from earth because of the enormous distances involved. The light from a universe 100 billion light years away, won’t arrive on earth for another 86 billion years. — Present awareness
I hope you'll check out some of the links I gave and google around for more. A lot of people have written pro and con about Krauss's book. I'm out of my depth, I've said everything I know. — fishfry
But I do wonder why you think Kraus has any sort of "ultimate" explanation when it leaves unexplained the primeval existence of the RQF and the laws of physics. Why do these things exist, and is their existence necessary or contingent, and have they always existed or did they come into existence? And how did that happen? Maybe God created the RQF and the laws of physics. But then you have to ask the same questions about God. Turtles all the way down. Questions that can never be answered.
I'm just saying that he has a nice account of how the world might have arisen from the RQF, and there's value in that, but I don't see how you can feel that this is in any way "ultimate" when it immediately raises so many obvious questions. — fishfry
I'd love to win against the program I play chess against, but losing never causes me to suffer. — David Pearce
The universe is not expanding, objects in the universe are simply moving away from each other and the space within which they are moving, in is infinite. — Present awareness
Krauss does not have an ultimate explanation. Do you agree with that? If the question is why are there elephants, we say animals. Why animals, life. Why life, organic molecules. Why organic molecules, atoms. Why atoms? Protons, neutrons, and electrons. Why protons and neutrons? Because quarks. (The electrons don't have internal parts as far as we know). Then we ask why quarks, and Krauss tells us: quantum fields. And if we ask why quantum fields, Krauss says, "That's the ultimate explanation. Why are you so stupid?" He has an arrogant jerk kind of attitude as it happens. — fishfry
Now why do you think the RQF is an ultimate explanation? After all in 1900 they thought atoms were the ultimate explanation. This was right before relativity and the quantum revolution. — fishfry
His belief that this is an ultimate explanation is wrong. — fishfry
The difference between me and Laurence Krauss is that neither of us knows how the world got here, but he thinks he knows and I know I don't. And he's wrong, and I'm right. — fishfry
Therefore nothing will ever be "an absolute proof" aka something that can't be wrong or a mistake. — Qmeri