Well, you seem not to hold philosophy in high regard compared to natural sciences. But just like "pure math" isn't at all dismissed by natural science, I think especially analytical philosophy and formal logic has it's place also.I just can't think of a single advantage in rejecting the fruits of the most productive period in the history of scientific thought and empirical research in favor of recycling past ideas. Ideas, which themselves were, of course, to a great extent informed by observations and scientific ideas of their time and times past. — SophistiCat
You don't notice just how illogical you are.The US needs not lose its “status”, nor must it remain absent from world affairs while retreating from the mess of its former interventionist policies, which arguably exacerbated the problems to begin with. Afghanistan and Iraq were deadly mistakes. And, as critics of Trump’s foreign policy often fail to mention, until Trump came along ISIS was marauding across the land with near impunity. No amount of hopey-changey rhetoric or Biden’s finger-wagging could stop any of that. — NOS4A2


Well, John McWhorter describes this as a religion. It's not open for debate, but a belief system where everybody criticizing it obviously is a racist.I think it's dangerous to fall into the trap of "differences between group outcomes = discrimination." - I suppose the other problem is that "Wokeness" as an ideology has a bad habit of taking what it wants from positivist social sciences, and then flipping to critical theory whenever it suits an argument. The issue being is that people are going to get turned off from the arguments because it's essentially pseudoscience. — Count Timothy von Icarus
For starters, remembering just what you said there: the current state of science isn't the last word or the truth about nature. Hence don't make your philosophy totally dependent of the current science of the present.Well, what would we base it on then? We obviously cannot assume that the current state of science is the last word and the whole truth about nature. — SophistiCat
There is a reason why so-called fundamental physics is often thought to have an intimate connection with basic metaphysical questions (cf. physicalism, metaphysical and ontological grounding...) For example, while it is not a given that the ontology of fundamental physics has some sort of metaphysical priority, it is a popular enough notion. — SophistiCat
Well, if philosophy means love of wisdom, the link to science should be obvious. Just as PhD is is short for Doctor of Philosophy. Yet the problem is that when philosophers have a broader view, that makes it far more difficult to understand things you are handling.Still, if we view science as a branch or outgrowth of philosophy, then professional scientists, as a rule, have a much more narrow specialization than professional philosophers. — SophistiCat
Yet Is philosophy just thinking about nature? Natural sciences answer more directly to what nature is, yet any question of "what should be" and you need philosophy.Conversely, when you look at the history of thought, most important new developments in the thinking about nature were driven by developments in science. — SophistiCat
And don't think it won't have consequences.Yes, when the US leaves some area the US leaves some area. That’s the entire point. — NOS4A2
Was it Kant earlier that went a bit astray when referring to Euclidian geometry and not knowing that later non-Euclidian geometry would be a hot topic in math? Philosophers can relate to science, but basing philosophy on science can be a tricky thing as our scientific understanding can change a lot. Still, why the connection?Obviously, Darwinism and Einstein's relativity have had a pronounced effect on philosophy (for better or for worse). — SophistiCat

Not happening even that light thinning. Even tripple the death toll and it wouldn't have any effect on the demographics.. Perhaps Corona is the earth ridding itself of us, and if so, we have it coming, but likely not. I suspect more of a light thinning will be the end result. — Book273
Or take a bit pessimistic view, it's the only way the whole system could handle the vast number of cases. Otherwise it simply wouldn't work. You can argue that it is hence "more efficient and cheaper".High conviction rates are secured by forcing pleas in the overwhelming majority of cases. This makes the system work much more efficiently and cheaply, but it also has created a system where heavy potential punishment is used to force pleas from innocent people. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Well, people who were themselves put into concentration camps hardly aren't the first choice for moral condemnation in my view.And then there's the Boers... — Benkei
The colonized and the colonizer are quite different, typically. With exception of perhaps prior colonies like Canada, Australia or the US. I was thinking about the difference between First World countries that a) had colonies and those that didn't have them. And especially those that did fight against the freedom movements in their colonies (UK, France, Portugal) and those that didn't do much (perhaps the Netherlands). War is a costly endeavor, which is why now days European powers typically fight wars through NATO.x% GDP on military spending doesn't translate too well to its effect on the long term differences in total GDP per capita between colonised and coloniser countries though does it? — fdrake
Those that are the wealthiest now have had to focus on maintaining a competitive export oriented industry. They have to compete on the open global market, not to rest on their laurels and have income from raw materials from the colonies take care of the government finances.The wealthiest, highest functioning European states, the Nordics, Austria, Switzerland, Denmark, etc. had fairly limited or no colonial aspirations. Meanwhile, Russia exerted and still exerts control across a huge amount of natural resources in Central Asia, and later held sway over Eastern Europe, and remains a low functioning and poor state. — Count Timothy von Icarus


This is the structural problem in the US political system of having just two options. Yet the two-party system is quite aware of this huge problem.That swing isn't even possible in the US because they don't offer such a wide variety of political options. Let alone that they perceive the gap between Democrats and Republicans as huge when in fact it's a tiny crack in the political pavement. — Benkei
Eisenhower was a Republican, so what is your contradiction?the idea of an "Eisenhower from the right" being a contradiction in terms. — tim wood
American political parties are quite malleable as their basic objective is simply to stay in power. There can be a lot of turnarounds.What do you disagree with and why? — tim wood
I'm not so sure that many just how static the whole political landscape is in the US.I believe there are a lot of good, decent, sensible Republicans - but they've all migrated to the Democrat Party as refugees. — tim wood
Why is it for Americans so difficult to understand that everybody doesn't think as they themselves do, even if you just had an election there where 79 million voted for Biden and 73 million voted for Trump?In a nutshell, the Donkey is about you, and your well-being, and the GOP is about itself and getting as much as it can no matter what it takes, or from whom or how. — tim wood
I disagee.An example of how far the Republican party has fallen, the national highway system was Eisenhower. No Republican today could even formulate the underlying concepts of such a thing. — tim wood
No, yet as it is naturally compared to it's neighbors, Sweden looks worse. Perhaps if it was next to Belgium, things would look better. Here's the situation in Europe, and you can see how Sweden compares to Norway, Finland or Denmark:Is Sweden any worse off than some of the notable European countries like Italy or France who did lock down? Sweden is 25th in European countries per million for cases, and 11th in deaths. Then again, Norway and Finland are much better. — Marchesk

The sheer incompetence of the Trump administration and campaign is staggering. — Michael
Oh, I didn't know that, but having looked into it, I get it now. — Baden
Very interesting to know! It's actually a very interesting world for investing, and basically where a lot of the actual money lies around compared to the stock market. One medium-to-large size insurance company would influence the stock market if they would put all of their assets into the stock market.I know everything about sovereign bonds. I issued them for 5 years at the Dutch State Treasury Agency. So fire away. — Benkei

About bonds.I don't know shit about bonds and I have a share in some property and some cash. Does that work? — Baden

Well, I'd still diversify. — Benkei
Do note the lower part of the graph showing the volume of trades. Now the transactions are over the 30bn range, however before 2018 the transactions don't even show in the graph. This tells it was then peanuts compared to now and then simply a small group people used / saved bitcoins.The other is that if you were a long term holder pre 2017 and held on, then the brutal crash following the bubble, in the long run, didn't sink your investment. — csalisbury
And hasn't the internet and tech stocks also been profitable? Yes and no. Yes if you have picked the few winners, yet many mutual funds investing in tech stocks got a real beating first at the turn of the Milennium and then during the financial crisis. Knowing to pick netflix and not pets.com is trickier than it looks at hindsight.The only good rationale for investing in bitcoin is learning and appreciating the value of the technology - trying to buy on the dips and sell on the peaks to get-rich-overnight might work occasionally, but is more likely to fuck you up. — csalisbury


Think so?the US almost had the Taliban/Al Qaeda beat in Afghanistan. — The Opposite



Likely not.If the US disappeared today, the reality is that China and Russia will terrorize the world into submission whilst Europe cowers in a corner. The US is a necessary nuisance and for this reason its imperialism should be maintained, but not accelerated. — The Opposite


At the end of the war USAAF was running out of targets, so they were also targeting individual houses. And I remember Chuck Yeager in his memoirs telling that they got orders designating a small patch of land in Germany to each fighter, where they should attack everything that moved. At least in his memoirs Yeager told that they thought the order to be so bonkers, that they just flew around and left the rare civilian driving his bicycle alone.(although I'm pretty sure they didn't bomb many farmers). — jamalrob
My view and the view in my country would be a bit different, of course.Also, I'm just curious: was Stalin a hero as well?
My own position on this question is about the same for Stalin as for Churchill: the cause of fighting the Nazis was a good one, and we can be thankful that they were victorious, and they certainly had personal qualities that helped the Allies win, but to call them heroes doesn't seem right to me. Most Russians are proud of their victory against the Nazis, but they're mostly not very enamoured of Stalin himself. — jamalrob
Real estate price are the classic way to speculate: if economic activity is going to increase somewhere, it will likely be seen in real estate prices.But, for investors not looking at stock price, but say real estate properties, the criteria are different. — Caldwell

Learn geography, NOS4A2After checking your statement that “not ONE of those Gulf States have ever deployed a single soldier to fight Israel. Ever”, I found that to be false. Sudan sent a few thousand soldiers during the Yom Kippur war in the 70’s. — NOS4A2

Sorry, but that's not true.Soviet Russia never had any direct battles with the US in the Cold War, therefor the end of those tensions wasn’t much of a breakthrough, because it wasn’t a “meaningful” conflict. — NOS4A2
Actually, especially Saudi Arabia and Israel have already found each other as both fear Iran. Saudi-Arabia here is important as the largest GCC member, which also creates the opportunity for smaller states simply to start normalizing their relations.But “normalization” and the brokering of diplomatic relations between Israel and some Arab states is a huge accomplishment. — NOS4A2
