Much growth is attributable to religious indoctrination and expectations-- like Christian countries used to be, now the Muslim world is propagandizing, very successfully, the idea that a man is only a man if he has more children than his neighbour. Or some other spiritual incentive, I don't know the Koran. — god must be atheist
However, Russia-Chinese relationship is far more equal than Western media presents. — boethius
The Western media presents the war as Ukraine standing up to the "mighty Russia", — boethius
Obviously things can swing back and forth. — boethius
Russia could also use tactical nuclear weapons, — boethius
How is this in anyway clear? — boethius
2.1. Population size can't be reduced without drastic measures.
2.2. Drastic measures are opposed by democratic, humanitarian societies. — god must be atheist
If the world's population was 10,000 people in total, then the emission problem would not be there, regardless what currently used lifestyle those 10,000 people pursued. — god must be atheist
This is why I insist that it is the overpopulation that is the root cause of many, many problems and the major cause of problems we face today as a species. — god must be atheist
She doesn't say how she feels about it though. — Benkei
post-truth and all the political errors that ensue. — Banno
Imagine an infinitely large line of people or a line of people that goes all the way around earth. Every person in each scenario has a person in front and another person behind them; in addition, each person is in front and behind two other people. Imagine you are the leftmost in a group of three people from one of these lines. How would you explain that the person in front of you is the person in front of you when that person is in the "behind" of someone else? In fact, how would you explain your existence when you are someone else's behind? — Daniel
You do have logical proof though and to a lesser extent empirical. — Darkneos
It’s not overpopulation. When 7% of the global population are responsible for 50% of carbon emissions— I don’t think “overpopulation” is the problem. — Xtrix
(1) Tensed language centered on our notional now (most common);
(2) Untensed language with "timestamps" or times as parameters (common among scientists and not too uncommon among philosophers);
(3) Tensed language centered on some other time than our notional now (pretty uncommon except for the historical present -- the option you asked about). — Srap Tasmaner
sometimes it makes me question why even bother asking such questions. — Darkneos
There is one now in the sense that there is one north. But just like north points in different directions at different points, different moments of time are christened "now". — hypericin
More like reality, no amount of philosophical musing will change that. — Darkneos
How do you know? You just do — Darkneos
Of course. Just not simultaneously. — hypericin
Einstein seems to answer that the past and future exist as much as the present. If we grant this, then there is nothing mysterious about a specialness to "now" that cannot be explained by science. It is simply an illusion. After all, every single "now" has this apparent specialness. — hypericin
Yes, I got that. After a slow start. My answer is to ask a friend to look and check for me. — Cuthbert
I suppose if there is no world out there (the doubt is coherent and the hypothesis happens to be true), — Cuthbert
Is it possible coherently to doubt it? — Cuthbert
If it's true, all statements about the past are false. — Cuthbert
It may seem a bit childish to gloat like that, but in politics optics matter, and this is an apt illustration of the point made in the article. — SophistiCat
Good. So we agree to moving away from a computational, representational approach to neural networking. — Joshs
By the way, women shortage (some members are mentioning here) must be a phenomenon of the 20th century related to birth/gender controls (China, communist countries and Middle East) and massive emigration of male workers to Europe and US.
When the institution of marriage was invented I'm quite sure that there was big shortage of males, not of females. — Eros1982
by scientific you just mean descriptive of human behavi — Moliere
then human beings are simply not monogamous. There's nothing to explain because this is a false statement. — Moliere
So, "historically speaking", monogomous relationships count insofar that the penis-haver is the one who holds the power of the wallet within the household. — Moliere
This balance of power has changed in parts of the world, but that tradition is still alive and well -- and I'd say that even if we choose to re-interpret monogamy in some other way, that this is where the ideal "comes from", so to speak — Moliere
Perhaps we could say that, given the profound changeability of human cultural behavior over the course of mere centuries , we have thrown off the weight of those millions of years of unchanging behavior. — Joshs
Would engaging in a deep conversation dishonour their profession? — Banno