Well, you simply have to prove it in mathematics. If you show that either all or some the axioms of ZF are incorrect, then that is that's a positive breakthrough.What has been done in set theory is an abomination to the principles of sound design — Devans99
Does the number 54 exist in reality? Show me where the real 54 is.Infinity only exists in our minds, not in reality. — Devans99
REALLY? You think that defining something in math is something like 'writing it down'?It is never possible to fully define an infinite set - there is not enough paper in the world — Devans99
Beware of the alt-dark side, Tiff.]I ask once again, is anyone here willing to believe me that we have an issue at my States Southern border? — "ArguingWAristotleTiff
Wrong. They do. The cardinality of aleph-null and aleph-1 is not the same.Infinite sets have no cardinality. — Devans99
Really?I do not agree with the bijection procedure as a valid way to compare two things. — Devans99
Because the proof is a reductio ad absurdum proof.How can a procedure that is meant to demonstrate equality produce such obviously wrong results? It is because infinity has no size (it is unmeasurable) so it is impossible to compare the size of infinite sets. — Devans99
So now you are dismissing totally set theory. Good luck with that.It has no size. Infinite sets do not have a cardinality. — Devans99
Well… what is your definition of a number? Numbers you see are used to measure something and when you have something that isn't measurable / countable, you have bit of a problem.A reasonable, working definition of infinity:
‘A number bigger than any other number’ — Devans99
Well, I'm a proponent of Absolute Infinity, but before going into that, a question:It is clear then that there can only be one such number - if there was a second infinity then both would have to be larger than the other. — Devans99
And this is the most crucial thing to understand here.hey sure do!
And what does it mean when negative PR can so easily overcome the positive?
They all become terrified of offending anyone, they take less risks, and only feel safe while pandering to a common denominator. It's a chilling effect in my view, and is not a good thing for democracy. — VagabondSpectre
But it sure works, because the institutions fear those PR shit-storms so much!when we treat the existence of ideas and viewpoints as themselves harmful and a threat, and therefore seek to prevent others from hearing or expressing them via applied social pressure, then we're drawing a rather aggressive line in the sand — VagabondSpectre
Virgins can talk about sex too, you know.I alwys laugh till tears roll down my goiter when I read yanks discussing Marxism. — Ricardoc
Objectivity I say. That you can test them if the assumption is correct or false.As the term is conventionally defined in philosophy, why aren't physics claims metaphysical claims? — Terrapin Station
I think it is extremely important to understand 'what is behind physics' and there indeed is a need for metaphysics.A long-standing assumption in philosophy is that there is a need for metaphysics. But is it true? Why do we need to sort out whether the universe is material, non-material, both, or neither?
What do you think? Terrapin Station — frank
Nietzsche and Heidegger post-modernists?From personal experience, whenever I have brought up ''post-modernist'' thinkers (e.g. Nietzsche, Heidegger, Foucault, Derrida, etc.) there has always been a look of caution if not outright trepidation in the eyes of my philosophy professors. — philosophy
Scruton is a traditional conservative thinker and his hounding just shows that traditional English conservatism isn't so hip (never has been). What a surprise that leftists find him annoying.I think this is about right. Having read a few of Scruton's books, I would defend him as a subtle and humane thinker. However, I wouldn't defend his long-standing anti-immigrant views or his anti-anti-smoking writings, and I often disagree with him, e.g., on sex, politics, and music. But mostly I'd want to see these things addressed in debate, certainly not with offence-finding witch-hunts, misrepresentation and banishment beyond the pale. — jamalrob
Ah! And we hit the jackpot: Scruton is for Fox hunting! He obviously likes the sport.Really ? Like this ? On Foxhunting: ---- No mention of the fox. — Amity

Now that the Generation Z has reached the campus and makes it's own sillyness apparent, I always emphasize not to judge a whole generation by it's loudest actors. Yes, stereotypes do tell something true, but shouldn't be generalized. What also ought to be noted that the 'Preppy Progressive' tend to be in the top universities, which have a history of 'being woke'. And why wouldn't they feel so important, when they made the cut to an Ivy League University.The Preppy Progressives transfer their deserved but denied guilt over being nothing without Daddy's Money to those whose opportunities are stolen through that heiristocratic appropriation. With the delusion that they are Born to Rule, they seek distortions of history in order to force Whites to feel guilty. They hate their fathers while continuing to still believe what their fathers told them, before adolescent rebellion on everything else, about their inherited superiority. — TheSageOfMainStreet
You obviously don't understand meritocracy and basic economics and actually my point about meritocracy. You see, a meritocracy doesn't mean every is just fine.How could you possibly state honestly that we live in a meritocracy unless you actually believed that the weather in Southern California produced superior individuals? — TheSageOfMainStreet


Do you really think that this is just about the elections?No, it's just pointless. Some people are really dug in on this point and it's not productive to argue with them. Impeachment and collusion and obstruction are not the issues on which the election will be decided. — fishfry
How does it work for a Dutchman?I've decided to stop arguing with this point. - like I say ... keep it up till election day. See how it works out for you. — fishfry
Bashing? My point is that journalists have to pick their sides. Not always, but especially when the issue is a hugely political one. When they don't behave so, it's actually their readers/followers and fanbase that are the most wrathful, hence the readers are the ones forcing the journalist to pick one side and the narrative of that side.Several more paragraphs of Greenwald bashing hardly bear on the topic at hand. — fishfry
We are already doing away with physical money, with the cash and coins.Could we do away with money? — Andrew4Handel
There was a time when you did have actual hereditary privileges. Yet there is a difference with having classes and having a caste-system. The problem is the meritocratic nature of our society. Even if meritocracy has it obvious positive sides, it does have also the negative sides.Until hereditary privileges are identified as the perpetual cause of societal decline, we will keep sliding into the pit. — TheSageOfMainStreet
I don't understand exactly what your point is here. Please elaborate.Those born in the 1% have an incredibly illogical twenty times the representation in the present 1% that a rational distribution would result in. — TheSageOfMainStreet
In the 60's it was typical in the leftist Finnish university circles to brag about finishing all volumes of Das Kapital.Foucault is best quoted but never read., Has anyone actually finished a book by Derrida? (Cross out 'finished'.) — Ricardoc
All that testosterone among young female teens today, btw.I was pointing out that suicide and aggression are not due to men apparently “not being able to cope” but due to testosterone (less risk aversion included in this). — I like sushi


Oh that's easy. For instance in Social History.Where do they teach post-modernism outside of itself as a philosophical foundation? — Christoffer
Yeah!Hey guys, I suddenly had an amazing idea!
Let's all extol the suffering-earned-virtues of our race, gender, and sexual orientation, and then whoever wins the most virtue gets to dictate what the important issues are, what's moral, fair, and who the bad quays are...
Genius, right? — VagabondSpectre
Oh don't be so modest.I suppose the silver lining with Trump is how well the other institutions of Government and the Justice department are standing up against his tyranny. — Wayfarer
Starting from the students who are taught post-modernism, yet don't know anything else about philosophy. Besides, interdisciplinary studies demand too much from ordinary students.Maybe because most people don't understand post-modernism? — Christoffer
The unfortunate truth. This is why academia in the social sciences is dying a slow death. But that's what you get when you throw out objectivity as a method.there are no social phenomena - merely what our masters wish us to see. — Ricardoc
Until you get your democrat in power? I think the Presidency will manage on Trump.You’re watching the destruction of the office of the President of the United States, live and in real time. This is happening. — Wayfarer
Yeah well, not actually intended as a jab. :roll:...and the observation that the USA seems to have fallen behind the other countries in recent times, and the UK may be showing the same trait. — Pattern-chaser
Of course. That's this kind of inherent assumption. But it's better to start "In the US feminism is a response to disillusioned white women..". Women's right movement has been a truly universal movement. Would you start talking about the history of the Labour movement and just and only look at the US?Of course I'm commenting on the feminism promoted in the United States... — Anaxagoras
That just like above, even if it surely was a slip up, one should start from accepting that women's movement was and is quite international. Many times the hot potatoe issues have been something totally different from the Western of US experience, just as in South Korea and Japan. I've not noticed many women-only train cars in the US.Can you rephrase the question? — Anaxagoras
Again this is such an American viewpoint. What is the intersectionality of being Korean in South Korea where 96% of the people are Korean? The ethic minorities after the Koreans are 1 million Chinese, about 150 000 Vietnamese and 140 000 Americans. So if we take race into the question, should we look at those that are women and African Americans in South Korea? Especially those who are part of the US Armed Forces confined in the US bases that are basically little America's, it would be quite strange. I guess some can indeed experience also racism, yet I do assume that South Korean feminists are more interested in changing their own Korean culture and it's views at women's roles etc.Because of the lack of intersectionality that exists in western feminism, many women of color around the world have identified oppression in relation to the cultural issues respective to their places of origin. — Anaxagoras
See Why Russia wants to disconnect from the internetRussia is preparing to temporarily unplug from the internet in a test of the country’s cyberdefence capabilities, according to reports.The disconnection is expected to take place sometime before April as part of the preparations for a draft law aimed at making Russia more digitally independent.
The legislation, known as the Digital Economy National Programme (DENP), was submitted to parliament last year and would “require internet providers to make sure they can operate” if foreign countries attempt to isolate the the Runet, or Russian Internet, according to US news site NPR.
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Under the plan, Russian ISPs would “redirect web traffic to routing points within the country and rely on its own copy of the Domain Name System (DNS), the directory of domains and addresses that underpins the global internet”, reports science news site TechCrunch.
The BBC says these routing points, which are “essentially a series of thousands of digital networks along which information travels”, are “notoriously the weakest link in the chain” of cybersecurity. Russia wants to “bring those router points that handle data entering or exiting the country within its borders and under its control”, so that it can then “pull up the drawbridge” to external traffic if needed, the broadcaster continues.
Politics with a defined practical necessity where the decisions don't have anything to do with the identity of the people.Re identity politics, can someone enlighten as to what other kind of politics there is? — unenlightened
In order to use anything that is 'post', one has to understand and know just what was before it, the thing before the 'post'.Can anyone think of any positives? — Ricardoc
Look, I came from China. Marxism is shi-. — YuZhonglu
I don't. Sorry if I look like that.Don't take yourself so seriously. — Baden
OK, I watched the whole thing and thus I hope I'm not coming off being too concerned of this, but...I saw a tiny segment as I pointed out above where Peterson got owned and then I made a joke. — Baden
Here we go with the US centrism in everything...historically, feminism is a response to disillusioned white women in U.S. society who were tired of white male patriarchy. — Anaxagoras
So what do you think about Feminist movement let's say in South Korea, with the minjung feminist movement? Or the women's suffrage movement in Japan? Those women weren't white.I understand that people tend to shy away from definitions especially definitions that pertain to the discussion of race relations but frankly I believe that the development of feminism is nothing short of addressing not the issues of women in general but more specifically feminism addresses the problems with white women, and the same can be said about the men's rights movement. — Anaxagoras
Perhaps by starting with that women's rights have not been an issue only for European whites right from the start?I believe when we address the evolutionary root causes of oppression whether based on gender or race and allocate that to it being a human problem in which all humans suffer and we try to identify with it on a human level, we can begin to relieve ourselves of the racial and gender specifics and begin to address suffering as a globally human problem and not a gendered one. — Anaxagoras
Who is a Marxist anymore?So Peterson emphasised the equivocation as a criticism of Marxism, Zizek emphasised the equivocation as signalling the death of Marxism as a political project. — fdrake
Taken what you said literally would be very condescending. They still were in the same Century, you know.but it is the lateness rather than any special political talent that allowed them to bypass the steam age, for example. — unenlightened
Even if I'm not a huge fan of Stephen Pinker, on this issue I do agree with him (even if he ignores the first and second Congo Wars in his statistics).I get the feeling that for most of the people, life has become better overall, though it is hard to judge. — unenlightened


“You may have your own personal idea of Hell. Mine is an eternity trapped in a room with Jordan Peterson and Slavoj Zizek.” — Nathan Robinson, Current Affairs
