Heh. I don't dislike them, but I'm no good at them, and never did any beyond Little League baseball and CYO basketball as a young teen. Enough was enough. My point was that sports have been extremely important to humanity forever. From the ancient Greeks putting a war on pause because it was time for their Olympics (I heard they did that. I don't know if it's fact, but have no trouble believing it.) to Aaron Judge getting paid $40,000,000 per year. People compete against each other. I doubt anything drives us harder than striving to win.This doesn't resonate with me at all. I have never watched or played any sport. I dislike games and sport with something approaching a passion. — Tom Storm
Or getting in the ring/cage to fight each other, rather than beating each other up on the street and going to jail for it.I do agree with the point that many men are aggressive creatures and as long as they are running around on the field like thugs chasing after a ball, they are not out on the streets rioting. That's a cartoon summary with perhaps some truth to it? — Tom Storm
Yes, it does. But you can turn away from them. Is the reason you faced every challenge you faced, and overcome every obstacle you overcame, because you had no choice? It was absolute necessity, sometimes even life or death, that you do it each time you did? It was never because you saw a challenge, and just wanted it?I think this is the impulse i lack. I have never had any desire to challenge myself or do any of the kinds of 'growth-based" righteous middle class rituals you read about in self-help. That doesn't mean I haven't had to face challenges and overcome obstacles, but this happens without planning. — Tom Storm
How can we know anything that is mind-independent? I am looking at the computer screen and I can only do this because my brain generates a model of reality. Our perceived reality could be real or simulation or hallucination or dream or illusion. How can we know with 100% certainty which of the five options is the correct option?if you're referring to something extra-self, then show us something
(existentially mind-independent, objective, applicable to us all) — jorndoe
I don't understand what you mean by this. Please explain. Thank you.if extra-self, then explain your interaction therewith
(that others may differentiate you and the claimed) — jorndoe
Certainly this – what you describe here – is mind-independent, no?... my brain generates a model of reality ... — Truth Seeker
I think that if we could work out what is fact and what is opinion, it would help us get on with each other better. — Truth Seeker
Are opinions not beliefs? — Relativist
Certainly this – what you describe here – is mind-independent, no? — 180 Proof
You seem to be describing the role of Philosophy in a world of divided opinions. Modern Science has found that the job is easier if you focus only on the objective material world. Today, Science works on the "easy" problems ("what is?" ; "how does?" ; Quanta), and leaves the "hard" problems ( "why?" ; "whence?" ; Qualia) for Philosophy to contend with. Both approaches are supposed to "decide" on the basic of observation and reason, but measures of success are easier to quantify when we objectify. And resolution of opinion-based conflicts are easier to find when we agree in advance to accept ambiguity in our answers. :worry:How do we decide what is fact and what is opinion? There are more than 8.1 billion humans on Earth and our conflicting ideologies, religions, worldviews and values divide us. I worry that we will destroy ourselves and all the other species with our conflicts. I think thatif we could work out what is fact and what is opinion, it would help us get on with each other better. — Truth Seeker
I worry that we will destroy ourselves and all the other species with our conflicts. — Truth Seeker
I think that if we could work out what is fact and what is opinion, it would help us get on with each other better. — Truth Seeker
What do you think will ensure global cooperation instead of global annihilation? — Truth Seeker
What do you think will ensure global cooperation instead of global annihilation? — Truth Seeker
True enough, we are not running out of space, and mass starvation has not ensued. — BC
Emissions from food production, already considered one of the biggest contributors to climate change, have been underestimated for decades, potentially skewing the pledges that countries have made under the Paris climate agreement to cut their greenhouse gas emissions, according to new research.
In a study published this week in Environmental Research Letters, researchers found that the food system was responsible for as much as 40 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions from human activities.
“When you count it all up, across the food system, it’s enormous,” said Cynthia Rosenzweig, a researcher with Columbia University’s Earth Institute and the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies. “So it offers countries really enormous opportunities.”
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