That's probably true, though. :grin: — Luke
In principle, the subject matter is fine as a serious philosophical topic. (Or a scientific one). — Baden
Mad magazine, a US institution famous for the grinning face of jug-eared, tiny-eyed mascot Alfred E Neuman, is to stop being a regular fixture of newsstands — Amity
Yeah, I was bummed out hearing that. — Terrapin Station
With all due respect to Alex and Coco, there’s sometimes something to be said for getting your disappointments in early. — John Crace
With all due respect to Alex and Coco, there’s sometimes something to be said for getting your disappointments in early.
— John Crace
I love that statement! Maybe I'm just a lazy underachiever, but life's early disappointments certainly temper one's expectations a bit. — Marchesk
A man walks into a forum and says:
"God is love."
:lol: — Theologian
Proposition: Philosophers are humourless gits
Well, the "Snakes don't have legs and the reason for this OP" thread did get deleted... :sad: — Theologian
It was awesome. Fully of snakes and lizards and women with small vaginas.
Also, I promised to pray for someone (coughs christian2017). But it was not appreciated, and I was politely asked not to. — Theologian
The ending seems a bit warped...
Is he saying they are missing out in not enjoying failure ? Because that is what feeds us...?
Guess I am not in tune with his wit...
Or does he mean that enjoying success so early - It's not such a great thing ? — Amity
The reason for this OP is to provide the concept that perhaps an extraterrestial (Babylonian religion)
induced some of the evolutionary changes in creatures on this earth.
This is not a christian OP but a general "higher" power OP.
Snakes have been shown by scientists to have evolved from lizards. Some snakes have nubs (pythons) where their ancestors had legs. Why evolve and have your ancestors have less physical capabilities. Mammals are not tremendously less physically capable then dinosaurs but a snake is tremendously less capable then a lizard. All things held equal, i want my descendants to be more capable not less capable. We don't always get what we want. lol.
Human women have really small vaginas and child birth is far harder for a women than just about any other animal. Bugs very often die after procreating but the bugs advantage is they don't over think life like humans do. Over thinking leads to depression.
I do believe in evolution and it doesn't contradict my favorite holy book. And know, no, a careful analysis would reveal i'm not trolling.
In Steven Soderbergh’s science fiction film Solaris the replicant Snow, a replacement of one of the original surviving crew members of the space station orbiting the planet Sola-ris, has a rather interesting philosophical in-sight regarding the nature of women:
«Cos I’m thinking … women, right? Right now we got woman and woman, right? If we get
women, you know, together on the same team and all that shit, what happens? You know what happens. All kinds of shit you can’t explain happens. Like the … But good shit, you know? Mysterious, but good. Usu-ally very good. Things get solved, you know?»
I do not know whether or not Lieu-tenant Snow obtained the idea from C. D.Broad’s seminal
Mind and Its Place in Nature, but the basic idea seems to be about the same:
<<Put in abstract terms the emergent theory asserts that there are certain wholes, com-posed (say) of constituents A, B and C in re-lation R to each other; that all wholes com-posed of constituents of the same kind as A,B and C in relations of the same kind as R have certain characteristic properties; that A, B and C are capable of occurring in other kinds of complex where the relation is not of the same kind as R; and that the characteristic properties of the whole R(A, B, C) cannot even in theory, be deduced from the most complete knowledge of the properties of A, B and C in isolation or in other wholes which are not of the form R(A, B, C).>>
It may perhaps be wrong to believe that Broad thought that the ‘mysterious powers’of women are in fact emergent properties, but Lieutenant Snow nicely expresses the guiding intuition behind emergentism – in some contexts, the structural relationships between parts in a whole in conjunction with the properties of the parts give rise to novel, perhaps surprising or even mysterious, features of wholes. — Ronny Selbæk Myhre, Naturalism and the Metaphysics of Emergence
I think he's saying that for most of us, we learn not to expect too much from life, but a 15 year old having amazing success might have different expectations. Which may not be how life turns out, because often there are disappointments, tragedies, and failures. — Marchesk
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