I still know that there are principled Americans, even if they are a small minority perhaps.I’d still like to believe that there are principled evangelicals, although I must admit scepticism. — Wayfarer
Well, I got disappointed at how the Democrat supporters, voters and politicians who were against Bush (or Cheney's) policies after 9/11 had no trouble with Obama continuing Dubya's "War on Terror" and him increasing the drone strikes, even killing underage American citizen just because his father had been a terrorist propagandist.After all, this “character counts” and “personal integrity” and “political leadership” was central to what a lot of… evangelicals argued when Bill Clinton was president. And now that it’s Donald Trump, they’ve decided to push that aside, which means that morality for them was a means to an end, not an end. It was something to be used as a political weapon.
No matter how much you research the voter base and political trends, there happens all the time surprises that the pollsters and campaign professionals never saw coming.Does or should Hotelling's Law apply to potential democratic candidates-who would want to win, quite obviously-against Trump in 2020? — Wallows
Should be still noted that the US has a right-wing and a centrist-right wing party that share power.this concept was edifying for me in understanding why have the Democrats in the US, since Reagan, have tended to be very conservative in nature, at least to foreign eyes. — Wallows
The US basically didn't have a strong 20th Century type socialist movement at all. The Democratic Party is a Social Democratic Party, it has only a leftist wing that can well call itself leftist in the European way.Another fact contributing to this is simply the fact that dems are at a disadvantage in the US to pursue progressive and socialist policies, given the Cold War and the vilification of socialism since then (although times are changing). — Wallows
Going against a sitting President is always difficult and a risk-averse approach might not be the most successful as in order to win you have to get excitement around the candidate. Now Trump isn't the most popular President for sure, yet at least the Democrats don't look at him to be a pushover. Which is good as the condescending attitude that the media (and the Democratic party) had right from the start towards Trump was the most important reason, in my view, that Trump came to be so popular.Does or should Hotelling's Law apply to potential democratic candidates-who would want to win, quite obviously-against Trump in 2020? — Wallows
Easy. the white, evangelical/born-again Christians favour 75% the GOP. They just hate the godless Democrats, that's why. Trump is far more better than Hillary for them.I can’ t fathom how any self-described Christian could approve of Trump if they know anything about him. — Wayfarer

No system can assume that 1) everybody has a clear understanding about the issues and, above all, 2) that they would agree on what issues are right or wrong.I just re-read and realized that you may have been implying that I was being condescending towards those Americans who do not have a good grasp upon how monetarily corrupt the government of the United States of America has become in the past forty or fifty years. — creativesoul
That is true. Yet it should be noted that 'acting on their behalf' is actually a complicated matter. Serving the country or serving the people is different from serving a customer as in the private sector.The people ought be able to trust that elected officials will act on their behalf. That is their job. There's nothing wrong with trusting elected officials. — creativesoul
It's a researched fact that this isn't so in the US, that it's simply 'money talks', yet with the rise of lobbying this isn't a thing only affecting the US, but an universal phenomenon. Just how actually would our representatives take more care about 'less fortunate' people isn't so simple either as it has been a central political issue since, well, antiquity.Nah, not utopia. Just a situation where those who wield the power over less fortunate people be knowledgable and do so with great care about the consequence that their actions have upon those people's lives and livelihoods. — creativesoul
Ah this line again. Cliche b... as you said earlier as those 'pure democracies' without any minority protection basically don't exist.The United States of America is not a democracy. Rather, it is a republic. — creativesoul
Not likely. Those Pseudo-English don't have the stomach to get independent. Heck, their pro-independence politicians don't have the guts to make Scotland independent. And the English are so nice after all.Scotland, part of the UK for 300 years, could sever its union. — Bitter Crank

Yet she was a hang around member of the Bloomsbury group. (Lucky to you that she had friends that came famous like her.)Carrington painted without any interest in communicating with her audience.She just painted the images that came to her. She didn't expect to become a famous artist because gender bias in the art world so strong in her lifetime, so her art was first and foremost personal to her. — frank
I agree, yet when modeling reality, it's apparent that there are approximations and generalizations etc. that simply don't make sciences as rigorously logical as mathematics. For starters, every measurement is an approximation. Logic is of course necessary. I studied myself economics and economic history and noticed that a lot of variables are rudimentary models of very complex phenomena, like 'inflation', 'GDP' or 'aggregate demand', and that one shouldn't forget it when calculating math formulas with them.I have no problem with this. My point was that logic is necessary in all sciences. Of course, the amount of empirical data and the role of hypotheses varies widely. The point of my classical mechanics example was that it is a closed, axiomatic structure, within which one may deduce theorems in the same way that one deduces them in math. Still it is not math, and it is not true in any absolute sense. — Dfpolis
Ok, then I think I've misunderstood your point.That is precisely the notion I reject. — Dfpolis
I am saying that axioms are no different than any other claims. They are either justifiable, or not. Either adequate to reality (true) or not. Mathematics cannot be exempted from epistemological scrutiny just because it has a canonical, axiomatic form. — Dfpolis
Logical (not local). No, I'm not saying that. What I'm saying that a field that has developed from the need to count and calculate to solve real world problems doesn't have it's axiomatic foundations solely on arithmetic as it has also incommensurability and uncomputability. So the foundations aren't so narrow that everything starts from simple arithmetic.I have no idea what you mean by "totally local." Are you claiming that the concept <incommensurability> came to be independently of any experience of reality? History would seem to rebut this. — Dfpolis
Yet we can have logical problems with those too: Zeno's paradoxes and the huge debate over infinitesimals have shown that we stumble to the problems of infinity from quite normal experiences. (And those who think limits have solved all the questions, well, how about the Continuum Hypothesis then?)Most axioms are abstracted from our experience of nature as countable and measurable. — Dfpolis
A condescending attitude towards your fellow citizens doesn't help. Or you don't believe in democracy?Knowing what that change would take includes knowing that it takes the average American citizen to have knowledge about the inner workings of government that they quite simply do not have. It would take American voters knowing what the problems actually are and believing that they are able to do something about it. — creativesoul
Not to the thief. Hence a stolen car has a lower price than a car bought in the dealership.The cost of theft is much higher than the purchase price. — creativesoul
Why on Earth would you feel powerless? That's the whole problem here. Or has the Supreme Court made it illegal to vote for some other party than the two?It's equivalent to feeling powerless about the issue. One can feel powerless to change a situation that s/he does not like in the least without ever being ok with it. — creativesoul
When people believe nothing cannot be done about something, that is equivalent of being OK with the issue. I can whine about the Finnish summer having too many mosquitoes, but my dislike of mosquitoes isn't going to change anything. And if someone purposes physically draining all swamps in Finland I strongly disagree with that ludicrous idea, even if I'm not a supporter of the green party.I'm less certain that Americans are ok with monetary corruption in government, and more certain that there is an overwhelming majority of citizens who do not believe that there is anything that can be done about it. — creativesoul
The bi-partisan system is corrupt... both sides. — creativesoul
So in the way as history is a science? Some in the natural sciences would shudder at the idea, but I'm totally OK with it.That is certainly the modern usage, but not the only one. Traditionally, scientia meant an organized body of knowledge -- organized in terms of explanations reducible to first principles. So, I would say that mathematics is a science in the sense of being an organized body of knowledge -- and that knowledge is an understanding of reality. — Dfpolis
No. I think it is you who define "logical" or "logical system" in an extremely narrow way and as logical meaning as a "closed system". The way I see here math to be logical that simply every mathematical truth has to be logical. It doesn't state AT ALL that everything in math has to begin from a small finite set of axioms. What Hilbert was looking for was something else, especially with things like his Entscheidungsproblem.Second, "logical system" needs more explanation. All sciences proceed logically. I suspect that you mean a "closed system," i.e. one that simply elaborates an axiom se — Dfpolis
Ok, there's your problem right above. What you are making is a hugely reductionist argument that everything has to be deduced from the same axioms. If something doesn't fit to be the universal foundation, in your terms it has to be false and whole fields have to be false. Classical mechanics works just as classical geometry works. There being quantum mechanics or geometries of spheres etc. simply don't refute one another and make the other untrue or false. What is only wrong is the reductionist idea that everything can be deduced from one system or the other.The classical mechanics they developed is still useful and taught today, but it is not true. Unjustified foundations necessarily give unjustified conclusions. — Dfpolis
More of the same is enlarging your base? Interesting.It seems some think that enlarging his base is exactly the point. — Amity
Maw, just look at how the vitriolic discourse has gone and will (in reality) go. To argue about getting the moderates or a democratic candidate getting the Trump voters is theoretically logical, but in real terms I wouldn't be so sure.Except for not one, not two, not three, but at least four, regular NYT Op-Ed columnists written just in the last month or so (and in fact both Bret Stephens and David Brooks had to write immediate follow ups that were just as bad as their originals). Similar articles have been written about in the Washington Post and The Atlantic. — Maw
Povetry stats are typically made using a relative measure, of being some percent of the median income. Yet there is the measure of absolute povetry, you know. And you can have an indicator for income is below a necessary level to maintain basic needs, basic living standards (food, shelter, housing).This is what I am disputing. Standards of poverty are not absolute, but relative, and hence, arbitrary. I can't deal making absolute judgments based on arbitrary evidence.
You do it. — god must be atheist
NO ONE is telling in either of the two parties to be more moderate. That (being moderate) is seen as a losing strategy.What's also funny (read: absurd, tragic, rip my eyeballs out) is that NO ONE is telling the GOP be more moderate in order to appeal to more voters. — Maw
Yet it's obvious that what is infected is the Republican party. It simply cannot shake the Trump disease.Trump is a symptom. — creativesoul
It's a subtle point only. Mainly that if for every consistent formal system there exists specific true but unprovable statements, that doesn't actually mean that there are true but unprovable statements in every formal system.It does not seem different enough to vitiate my point. In any lifetime, or finite number of lifetimes, we can only go through a finite number of axiom sets. So, there are true axioms we cannot deduce. Or, am I missing your point? — Dfpolis
Fair enough.So, you will have to explain why my criticism is "totally out of whack." — Dfpolis
Here you seem to have the idea that if the axiom of choice is independent of ZF, it is somehow 'unscientific' as if other axioms would be the 'scientifically' approved. Well, just look here on this site how utterly confused people are about infinity and try to then reason that axiom of infinity is scientific. But there there the axiom is, in ZF. On the other hand, the axiom of choice (AC) has a lot of equivalent findings in mathematics like Zorn's lemma, Tychonoffs theorem, Krull's theorem, Tukey's lemma and the list goes on and on. To say in this case that all of the math in all of those various fields of mathematics are unscientific is, should I say, out of whack.The remaining hypothetical axioms can't be tested, e.g. the axiom of choice. These are unfalsifiable and unfalsifiable hypotheses are unscientific. As they are unscientific, pursuing their consequences is merely a game, no different in principle than any other game with well-defined rules, such as Dungeons and Dragons. — Dfpolis
Does the Incompleteness Theorems say really this? Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't (the first Gödel Incompleteness Theorem) say that for any 'set of axioms' or consistent formal system there exists specific true but unprovable statements. That's a bit differentYet, Godel's work shows more: it shows that there are truths that cannot be deduced from any knowable set of axioms. — Dfpolis
I agree here with tim wood, talking about scientific/unscientific here with foundations mathematics is totally out of whack.I think maybe "unscientific" in this context is wrong usage. In any case, mathematics is not an experimental science. — tim wood
There are many prerequisites for capitalism to function well starting from the rule of law (hence a functioning state) in the society. There being a board member representing the employees maybe not the most important issue here. For example the ability of workers creating labour unions and negotiating salaries collectively with the employer is a far more important issue and totally in line with capitalism.IMHO Capitalism only works for everyone when the workers have some say about their work. Like in Germany where the boards of companies must have laborer members on them. — Noah Te Stroete
Trump is more of an investor-owner than a CEO. CEO's typically are career professionals that are hired for the job and are responsible for the board, typically other people like himself. An investor that inherited his wealth isn't: it's his money, his wealth. Hence Trump has had the ability of having a multitude of entrepreneurial disasters, thanks to the Russians coming to assist him after American banks wouldn't lend him any more.Trump illustrates two personal characteristics that are relevant: First, as a CEO, he behaves in the presidency as if was a CEO--with lots of prerogatives, and not part of a government. — Bitter Crank
So basically your argument is the vagueness of the language.What we (I, and TheMadFool if I'm not wrong) are admitting is that usage of many vague labels like heap relates to numbers without difficulty in some cases, e.g. a single grain, and the problem is to describe the fuzzy border further along. — bongo fury
Ok, it's seems you didn't get my point, because I don't find anything close to my reasoning in this.Your passion against settling for an arbitrary sharp border, which we applaud, stops you from admitting this, and from appreciating that a vague category usually correlates in this puzzling way with some or other more fine-grained (often continuous) series. — bongo fury
If people get puzzled with the Sorites paradox, then yes.you think usage of heap should be kept separate from the naturals. — bongo fury
Oh it's not me, it's the logic in mathematics. You see a crude counting system, like "nothing, 1,2,3, many" is logical in it's own way, if one hasn't the need to count things more than up to three. For some animal it can be a splendid counting system: why would they need to count to several thousands? And so is with "heap of x" versus "mountain of x" as a simple scale system.You are so appalled by inappropriate reductions of systems to arithmetic that you won't hear of any such intermingling. — bongo fury
Tacit agreement is the word.The challenge of the heap game is to describe the fuzzy/tolerant bounds of this tacitly agreed range. — bongo fury
I'm just thinking how terrible the books about Trump will be after some time has gone. I mean if some authors portray the Kennedy's with a shady brush, just how shady will it be with Trump.So rape is fine as long as it's not with minors? Or grabbing them by the pussy doesn't count as such? — Benkei
Actually, didn't Trump settle with this rape victim? I remember it happening just before the election.None of this is evidence of Trump having sexual contact with underage girls, but then there is the story from 1994 of the 13 year old girl who filed suit against Trump for raping her in Epstein's apartment. From Newsweek, 11/16/17: — Fooloso4
I remember something similar. After all, one of the victims was working in Mar-a-LagoThis was also corroborated by a friend of the 13 year old girl who she told, and also by an associate of Epstein. Will have to look up the details again, but there is evidence that Trump did rape a 13 year old girl. — Maw
Not sure I understand. — bongo fury
correlation 2: an arbitrary individual threshold... a policy with some good PR (e.g. "you have to draw the line somewhere, and that's that"), but which will inevitably deprive the usage of its useful fuzziness / tolerance — bongo fury
) Hooray if, for example, you want to resist this correlation because you have a sense of clarity or absolutism about certain cases of heap and of non-heap, and a sense that the same clarity will transmit from these cases to certain others. — bongo fury
And for this you need arithmetic to apply and there needs to be a number system.That's the beauty in Calculus. You can describe incredibly complex relationships without using numbers, or many numbers. — god must be atheist
Actually, it really doesn't genuinely apply.IN this case, the fundamental law of Calculus applies, but it yields a (possibly) different value of number of sand from human to human. — god must be atheist
This again is a fallacy here, because you simply deny the existence of incommensurability. Think about it: if you have a heap of sand and a mountain of sand, what then is the middle, really? It would be something like "an amount more than a heap and less than a mountain". Is that useful? Likely not, and still you don't have any idea when a heap turns into 'more than a heap and less than a mountain'. The laws you refer to don't really solve the issue at all.In fact, the first fundamental law of Calculus only uses 2 to find the midpoint between two values. But it does not go beyond that in any more ways of using numbers. — god must be atheist
You aren't getting the point. The measurement system of heap of x < mountain of x isn't straight forward calculus as you cannot answer exactly how much bigger is a mountain of sand compared to a heap of sand. Hence you cannot add them up together and divide them into two, because you are using the number system. In order to talk about mathematical functions, you do need the number system and arithmetic to calculate functions. With heaps it isn't so!Well, to insist we must. - . If there are two points on a function... — god must be atheist
When does a beautiful girl stop being beautiful and become 'OK looking' or 'ordinary' or even be outright 'ugly'? If you cannot draw a specific line, then is the notion of being beautiful in peril?What other method would you choose to describe how a heap of sand stops being a heap? Isn't it the number of sand grains in a collection that determines the heap-ness? — TheMadFool
No.Isn't it the number of sand grains in a collection that determines the heap-ness? — TheMadFool
If you are against either of these reductions, then hooray. If your talk of "incommensurability" isn't, after all, about trying to separate usage of heap from the naturals, then even better. — bongo fury
two or more quantities having no common measure.
Therefore, to isolate one variable, the number of objects in the collection, may be a mistake. Nonetheless this is an issue for the heap paradox specifically and doesn't detract from the problem of vagueness, the central message of the paradox. — TheMadFool
Taking Colin Kaepernick to be the face of Nike was the 'controversial' trick that you refer to. That was indeed intensional: that made Nike look good, progressive and active to the younger crowd they are after.I agree with Harry. To create a controversy is one of the oldest publicity tricks in the book — Metaphysician Undercover
I did. — Metaphysician Undercover
The flag represents the political state, and the political state exists as the ideology, which is gone because we do not support it. Why ought we support that flag? — Metaphysician Undercover

:grin:In this case, we're told the teleprompter stopped working, so he had to rely on his personal knowledge of history. — Relativist
The only thing would be if he would appease the Democrats and that would create perhaps a backbone for opposition of Trump in the GOP. What is really lacking is any kind of opposition to Trump in the Republican party.It seems that Trump gets away with anything.
But it still needs to be called out. — Amity
I think one of the reasons why the Sorites Paradox is important and comes up so frequently isn't not only that we have a problem with vagueness. It's also that mathematics, as we understand it today, is built upon or founded on the practical need for counting. Hence we start with counting natural numbers. Now math has developed from this practical need, but it's logical foundations might not be good to be chained to counting. Now a heap confuses this thinking that "Let's start with counting" and we tend to just think of it as problem of mixing math with definitions from a spoken language.An important area of difference between the sorites paradox and objectivity is the former is physical and sand grains have volume and becoming a heap isn't that difficult to imagine. — TheMadFool
Reading of a teleprompter is so difficult. How could we assume the President of the United States to be able to clearly read out from a teleprompter a prepared speech. :razz:invoking the heroism of an army that defeated the British in the 18th century in part because “it took over the airports”. Lol: behold, the ignoramus president. — Amity
Yes, obviously in the category of Maw answers: "I don't care at all about this… but I'll still actively participate in this thread."A shoe was pulled from the market. It's not an actual "issue". — Maw
I believe that when you are actually in Rome surrounded by Romans. Yet even there it doesn't mean you change totally what you think and become a different person. Being diplomatic doesn't mean you change your beliefs just to appease people you talk to. At least in a democracy you can speak freely. In a totalitarian state you do watch what you say, just not to get your hosts into an awkward situation or in trouble.When in Rome, do as the Romans do. That's what I think. — frank
Could be? Seems that all it takes is a hypothetical community for you not to answer what you yourself think about it.Could be. All it takes is a community that sees it that way. — frank
Was so intimate?Again, could be. I think women's issues stand apart because a woman's relationship to her oppressors was so intimate: it was her sons, father, brothers, and lovers. — frank
