• Coronavirus


    It makes me wonder how things would go if Trump were re-elected into a depressed economy in 2020. I understand that Democrats are often elected in bad economies because they employ effective methods like Keynesian economics. This worked out for Obama, for instance. So maybe the Trump administration simply isn’t equipped to deal. Lowering taxes for the wealthy further, if that’s even possible, and slashing away more vigorously at regulations and entitlements won’t work, I understand.
  • Coronavirus
    Do you need to be coerced to practice physical distancing?NOS4A2

    Wrong question. Do most Americans need to be coerced? I think they do. In any case, you’re not taking power dynamics into account. For instance, if someone refuses to work in unsafe conditions due to the virus, is it okay to fire them?

    I was ‘coerced’ to participate in jury duty this month. What if they didn’t cancel it?
  • Coronavirus
    It’s a stupid and bad faith argument because it is not about preferring death to recession. That’s a false dilemma. The argument is that we do not need to tank the economy and suppress basic liberties to teach people wash their hands, to sneeze into their sleeves, to self-quarantine, or to physically distance themselves from others.NOS4A2

    Do you honestly think that the economy won’t tank regardless of what the government does? Or that people would adequately social distance themselves without coercion?

    Corona has shown what a house of cards the “entirety man made” economy is.
  • Coronavirus
    True, but I will never stop driving the point home that capitalism is ruled by parasites that will fuck workers not just at every opportunity, but especially in times of crisis when things are especially terrible for everyone.
    — StreetlightX

    As opposed to what? Socialism?
    Nobeernolife

    We live in a world where Trump is elected POTUS, and this in the midst of things that Streetlight is pointing out. To me that’s a strong indication that socialism would fail miserably in the US.
  • Coronavirus
    The coming economic collapse, and the reason many of us will be without work and homeless within a year, is entirely man made.NOS4A2

    The Great Recession a decade ago was entirely man made. You lived through that. If this downturn is similar in severity, would you prefer the death of 1.25 - 2 million Americans in order to avoid it? White House estimates show 100 - 240k deaths with social distancing and 1.5 - 2.2 million without.

    This of course assumes that the economy would somehow not be effected by the pandemic if it were somehow ignored, and also that no one would adopt social distancing without direction.
  • Coronavirus
    Nothing new, according to the Second Thought video you posted, though accelerated.
  • Coronavirus
    Fines for bad haircuts?Baden

    I’d be immune.
  • Coronavirus


    But if we acquiesce to such draconian measures who knows what else will slide down the slippery slope. :mask:
  • Cultural Sensitivity vs. Public Health
    Yeah, he had to. What would you and your "mainstream" media say if had held it up because of all the pork?
    We`d all need earplugs in that case.
    Nobeernolife

    Depending on which pork, a lot or nothing, I imagine. The Democrats held it up because they didn’t like parts of it at one point. Your media had something to say about that.
  • Cultural Sensitivity vs. Public Health
    So, who in the Republican Senate and Congress are you ready to Guillotine? — boethius

    Probably a whole bunch. For starters, everyone who signed off on those, what, 800 pages of pork that they all squeezed into the Corona emergency fund. Anyone who signed off on that atrocity, no matter what party, deserves your bonfire or the French solution.
    Nobeernolife

    Your orange hero signed off on it too.
  • Coronavirus


    Right, it’s divisive in nature, essentially promoting what it ostensibly condemns.
  • Coronavirus


    The government has enormous resources at its disposal. You suggest that it’s an unreasonable expectation that it could effectively deal with both issues?
  • Coronavirus
    He's just lobbing back the gratuitous attacks on the president and the GOP in general.frank

    I’m certain there’s a better way of doing that than pointing out the administrations inabilities.
  • Coronavirus
    When asked about Cotton's early warnings [about coronavirus], McConnell said: "It came up while we were tied down on the impeachment trial. And I think it diverted the attention of the government, because everything every day was all about impeachment."

    Can they walk and chew gum at the same time? Seems to indicate incompetence.
  • Coronavirus


    They closed all parks and some beaches yesterday but trails are still open in the county. They’re monitored though, whatever that means.

    I guess Pfhorrest is sleeping in. Around where he lives is a great area for plein-air painting, incidentally.
  • Finding fulfillment and happiness in light of our evolutionary nature?
    I'm not sure. We can delay these things in the expectation of future happiness but just as the happiness from sense pleasure doesn't last, I think the same goes for less obvious things.Nichiren-123

    In many circumstances, people do selfless things with no expectation of reward or happiness. Indeed, in many situations, they do selfless things with the expectation of pain, suffering, and even death.

    For instance you could spend long, hard periods studying for a qualification. (i.e delayed gratification and making sacrifice) but the 'high' from achieving your qualification will fade away as well, over time.Nichiren-123

    In this example, a person is not doing it to get an achievement high. You say yourself that they're "studying for a qualification."

    I'd appreciate if you could put forward your exact view on the subject so we can compare and relate?Nichiren-123

    I need to understand the questions in the OP before I can answer them.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)


    It was a neo-nazi and white supremacist rally organized by Richard Spencer and Jason Kessler. To say that there are good people on both sides is to say that these are good people.

    180328-weill-alt-right-implosion-tease_x4uzz2

    Trump is unable to condemn part of his base. It’s just that simple, I’m afraid.
  • Riddle of idealism


    Really weird. I wonder how a Preformationist would explain evolution.
  • Finding fulfillment and happiness in light of our evolutionary nature?
    The problem is that, as we've both agreed on, is that sense-pleasure is not sustainable. However, at the same time, it's what we've evolved to do. We've evolved to seek out pleasure at every opportunity.Nichiren-123

    Hold on a second, we haven't agreed on this. I wrote, "We simply didn't evolve to sit around and pleasure ourselves so it will necessarily be unfulfilling." We've evolved to do many things that are unsatisfying, at least in the immediate short-term. We've evolved to delay gratification and make sacrifices.

    Will you acknowledge this?
  • Coronavirus
    I hope that doesn't mean that I'm paying for it somehow. It's the LA Times.
  • Finding fulfillment and happiness in light of our evolutionary nature?
    Finding lasting, stable well-being and fulfillment without relying on sense-pleasure sounds like a much more realistic thing to achieve...Nichiren-123

    I'm not sure that I understand what you're saying. A person may pursue sense pleasure or they can pursue well-being or a sense of fulfillment. They could pursue all of these things. I think we can agree that the exclusive pursuit of sense pleasure can be problematic because it's not "in accordance with our evolutionary make-up," as you say. We simply didn't evolve to sit around and pleasure ourselves so it will necessarily be unfulfilling.
  • Coronavirus
    Surfer fined $1,000 for ignoring coronavirus closure in Manhattan Beach

    And that was for crappy waves. If there's a swell in the next few weeks at the peak of the virus and with more stringent isolation measures there's gonna be a lot more of this.
  • Finding fulfillment and happiness in light of our evolutionary nature?
    Can we escape the mechanisms for happiness we’ve evolved to have?Nichiren-123

    'Mechanisms for happiness' is an odd distinction and could probably use clarification. Is happiness sense pleasure? Is it a sense of well-being or fulfillment?

    Or is energy better spent learning to live in accordance with our evolutionary make-up? Learning to be happy by following our nature?Nichiren-123

    Is there a choice?
  • Where have I gone wrong - Or have I gone wrong?
    ... it would in fact be false to say that anything exists, absolutely, outside of any perceiving being.finob

    Isn't this self-contradictory? Facts, the duality of truth and fallaciousness, existents, inside/outside, etc., are all the concepts of a sentient being.
  • Coronavirus


    If the preferred result is moving out rather than paying rent, just start coughing a lot.
  • The Long-Term Consequences of Covid-19
    An advisory from county doctors yesterday. I think @Pfhorrest lives in the county too.

    If we are able to sustainably reduce social contact by 60%-70% and improve testing and treatment, the aforementioned epidemiologic model [no social distancing --> 18k ventilators needed by day 58 and only 180 currently available] suggests we could improve from that worst-case scenario of 18,000 ventilators needed on day 58 to a much more manageable peak of 475 ventilators on day 170 of the outbreak. That extra time is critical for our hospitals to build ventilator capacity and allow for the development of novel treatments. Thousands of lives would be saved. The key is sustaining the recommended reduction in social contact for that prolonged period of time.

    *Oops, wrong topic.
  • News about God must be atheist -- his partner reporting here
    Tricksters are a wile breed. He'll be fine.
  • Coronavirus
    I feel like you are trolling me. :down:ArguingWAristotleTiff

    The juggling act, as NOS puts it, is between human lives and the life of the economy. I would expect that someone who brands themself with phrases like "loving people" wouldn't be so quick to support juggling lives.
  • Origin of religion and early hunter gatherers
    I don't see myself as making "promises" when using other's labels to label myself. I'm describing myself with a symbol that approximates my ideas - so that others will know where I'm coming from.Harry Hindu

    Why do they need to know where you’re coming from? But more to the point, what happens when you don’t behave in accord with the label? You’re labeled a fraud and are no longer considered part of the group. They say that during the vast majority of sapien existence that would have been a death sentence. That’s quite an incentive to be consistent.

    Science, on the other hand, seems at first glance to be unique among mankind's activities. It is objective, making use of methods of investigation and proof that are impartial and exacting. Theories are constructed and then tested by experiment. If the results are repeatable and cannot be falsified in any way, they survive. If not, they are discarded. The rules are rigidly applied. The standards by which science judges its work are universal. There can be no special pleading in the search for the truth: the aim is simply to discover how nature works and to use that information to enhance our intellectual and physical lives. The logic that directs the search is rational and ineluctable at all times and in all circumstances. This quality of science transcends the differences which in other fields of endeavor make one period incommensurate with another, or one cultural expression untranslatable in another context. Science knows no contextual limitations. It merely seeks the truth.Harry Hindu

    You’re arguing for utilitarianism?
  • Origin of religion and early hunter gatherers


    It sounds simple, maybe too simple to be useful. For instance, institutional facts may arise out of collective intentions but are not our collective intentions shaped, at least in part, by institutional facts? An extreme example might be something like a death cult where the institutional reality overrides what might be considered the strongest natural impulses.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    He said "good people on both sides" about the pro/anti statue protesters, and NOT about the neonazis. Very clearly. Which you would know if you actually read the transcript, instead of listening to the fake media lies. The fake media narrative is a total lie, and one of the most shameful ones.Nobeernolife

    So there was a group of protesters supporting the removal and a group against, and the neo-nazis just happened to be in the neighborhood attending a home decor tiki torch convention or something?
  • Origin of religion and early hunter gatherers
    Government is an ultimate authority and very often even more so when there is no religion.christian2017

    So you accept without question whatever your government tells you?
  • Origin of religion and early hunter gatherers
    I'm really not sure we can say that atheists don't subscribe to faith and not even in the sense that they are at all different from religionists.christian2017

    I agree that an atheist can be just as irrational as any theist, if that’s what you’re suggesting. And we do indeed all have shared fictions, some deeper and more influential than others. Religion tends to cut deep. I assume that’s because it offers structure, ultimate authority, and big promises.
  • Origin of religion and early hunter gatherers
    Many would say when you die you don't feel or feel pain or happiness.christian2017

    But not necessarily atheists, who hold that a god or gods don’t exist. An atheist may subscribe to a metaphysics that in some way allows for a continuation of being after death, for instance. Maybe something like simulation theory, or Buddhism minus the gods.
  • Origin of religion and early hunter gatherers
    How would you prove social critters don't have some irrational or fictional beliefs related to images considering they can't communicate with us. I'm not saying they have religion but they do have irrational or fictional beliefs.christian2017

    I'm sure social animals can be conditioned to have maladaptive responses to situations and in that way be considered irrational. And social animals can communicate with us. My dog and I communicate daily with body language and verbally. We don't philosophize about the existence of God together but our communication has the virtue of lacking all human bullshit, at least from his side.

    At the very least you could say they aren't the best at survival nor can they predict certain things as well as we can.christian2017

    Just looking at dogs, it's estimated that there are almost a billion in the world. There are 7.8 billion sapiens. So canine survival ain't too shabby by comparison. In some ways, dogs are better predictors than we are because their minds aren't preoccupied with ruminating about human bullshit. Dogs pick up on subtle patterns that most people would miss and they respond instantly to those patterns.

    I think you mean abstract thought or mental simulation rather than prediction.

    As to "where this is going": we are all supposed to keep an open mind or rational people tend to push people off of sites like this.christian2017

    It is a philosophy forum, after all.

    Considering atheism argues for an eternity without feeling, i'm not sure there would be negative repercussions to find out there was no god or afterlife.christian2017

    The repercussion is commonly believed to be, in a word, nihilism.

    Not sure what you mean by "atheism argues for an eternity without feeling."
  • Coronavirus


    Much more practical, though you run the risk of the elderly person not fully grasping the gravity of the situation, in which case things could quickly get awkward.

    "Would you like help with your groceries?"

    "What, dear?"

    "I said, would you like help with your groceries?"

    "I'm sorry, you'll have to speak louder."

    "WOULD YOU LIKE HELP."

    "No thank you, my doctor said to stay away from kelp."

    "Uh, okay... HAVE A NICE DAY"
  • Coronavirus
    What would you do? Avoid her?NOS4A2

    Avoid, unless I had a high degree of confidence that I wasn't a carrier (I don't currently), or if I wore a mask and gloves that I had a high degree of confidence were uncontaminated. We are talking about someone who is old and feeble, right?
  • Coronavirus
    Our world was in need of a crisis because the unexpected consequences are bringing us together and that is huge.ArguingWAristotleTiff

    Climate change, mass extinctions, pollution... Oh, sorry, I got hysterical there for a moment.
  • Coronavirus
    Carrying someone’s groceries does not entail me violating any “rule”.NOS4A2

    It entails getting within transmittable range of a vulnerable person, in your case, unless you two coordinated otherwise. It also entails direct contact with things that she will be in direct contact with, unless you were equipped with protective gear.

    What would you have done had she accepted your irresponsible offer?