The sign of commitment is subsequent behavior, not a clear conscience. I could distinguish sincere and insincere commitment, and say that the intentional state we call belief requires sincere commitment. I am unsure precisely how to define sincere commitment. Using behavior as a criterion is pretty clear-cut. Suggestions? — Dfpolis
What do you mean 'no basis'? Trump said it. That's basis for someone who trusts Trump. — Isaac
I mean no basis in reality, of course. — Dfpolis
You call the awareness of their state "believing." I find that confusing because people also believe things they have no knowledge of. — Dfpolis
if you are going to do something that rationally requires p to be true, I call that committing to the truth of p -- and we agree that people do that knowing that p is false. — Dfpolis
The action of the object on the sensing subject effects the changes described. — Dfpolis
We identify organic unities because it was evolutionarily advantageous to do so. If it were not, we might well model the world differently. — Dfpolis
their activation is the result of the sun's action on, the sun's dynamic presence in, the sensing subject. — Dfpolis
I think we still need to be careful in identifying the experience as (as opposed to associating it with) a tree. As Paul M. Churchland notes, no neural structures correspond to propositional attitudes ("Eliminative materialism and the propositional attitudes," — Dfpolis
I am speaking of the normal perception of an existing sense object. I am not discussing pathological conditions. — Dfpolis
The real tragedy is that if only Russia would have had leaders that accepted that the empire was lost and the states given independence weren't coming back, it would have all the tools to continue with the "modern" approach to imperialism. — ssu
Sweden and Finland would have never joined NATO and the EU would have continued to disarm itself. — ssu
Donald Trump in his claims that he had the largest crowd at his inauguration and that he won the 2020 election. — Dfpolis
all who chose to believe him, knowing that there was no basis for doing so other than their own desire that it be so. — Dfpolis
People who know, but will not believe, that they have insufficient funds to buy what they want, and act on this commitment by buying it because they want it. — Dfpolis
information is conveyed to the visual association cortex for integration with prior experience. — Dfpolis
without the action of the object, none of the consequent changes of neural state, which are our visual representation of the object, would exist. — Dfpolis
I had in mind people losing their jobs and even careers. The new jobs are often lower paid, lower status, somewhere else and so on. It is serious. It may still be worth it, but it needs good, sympathetic management, which doesn't usually seem to be provided - not even by those who profit from the change. — Ludwig V
Tell me about it. It seems to be part of the left-wing personality that compromise in the name of solidarity is regarded as betrayal. — Ludwig V
I think we should agree that Russia is imperialistic in it's actions? — ssu
And you should accept the definition that dictionaries give for the word imperialism, for starters. :wink: — ssu
imperialism, State policy, practice, or advocacy of extending power and dominion, especially by direct territorial acquisition or by gaining political and economic control of other areas. — https://www.britannica.com/summary/imperialism
And you should accept the definition that dictionaries give for the word imperialism, for starters. — ssu
imperialism
noun [ U ]
politics often disapproving
uk
/ɪmˈpɪə.ri.ə.lɪ.zəm/ us
/ɪmˈpɪr.i.ə.lɪ.zəm/
a system in which a country rules other countries, sometimes having used force to get power over them:
the age of imperialism
a situation in which one country has a lot of power or influence over others, especially in political and economic matters: — https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/imperialism
And you should accept the definition that dictionaries give for the word imperialism, for starters. — ssu
Imperialism is the state policy, practice, or advocacy of extending power and dominion, especially by direct territorial acquisition or by gaining political and economic control of other areas — https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperialism
And you should accept the definition that dictionaries give for the word imperialism, for starters — ssu
imperialism
noun The extension of a nation's authority by territorial acquisition or by the establishment of economic and political dominance over other nations. — https://www.wordnik.com/words/imperialism
There are many examples of people committing to what they want to be true, rather than what they know to be true — Dfpolis
our neural representation of an object is its action on us — Dfpolis
what's the relevance? — jorndoe
Wise words. — Tom Storm
you don't mention a third category, issues that are foreseeable but not foreseen. For whatever reason. — Ludwig V
people may prefer kicking the can down the road to the inevitably disruptive process of re-design. — Ludwig V
Power structures can fall apart because of internal disunity. They need their own support to remain united. — Ludwig V
In a way, sustainability enforces itself. Unsustainable activity can't last forever. When the crash comes, there is turmoil and after a while, we start again. Maybe we avoid some of the mistakes that caused the crash. We will certainly make some new ones. — Ludwig V
Equality is a different matter. It may well be ideal, but I suspect that the best we can expect is tolerable inequality. "Tolerable" requires the power elite in a political system to recognize when they need to bend with the wind of popular discontent. — Ludwig V
NATO can't colonize (like land grab), it's a defense pact among member countries, not a country. Countries may or may not apply for NATO membership. — jorndoe
Best example of it being Russia's attack on Ukraine. :smirk: — ssu
your irony doesn’t apply to me — neomac
The problem is intellectual dishonesty. Some are pushed to such dishonesty by their intellectual self-esteem, others more by their urge to fix the world. Like in your case. That’s why I didn’t accuse you to just spread propaganda, but to talk and argue as the worst propaganda. — neomac
which of the 2 Substack articles do you want me to rely on? — neomac
it’s matter of you deciding to bring here in this forum the worst propaganda style of arguing that anybody can easily find on partisan posts of popular social networks. You could be more rationally compelling just by removing all paraphernalia of the worst propaganda without distorting the content of what you want to express (including criticising the government), if there is any substance to it, of course. Unless this goes against your militant compulsion. — neomac
Never heard of the battles against fake news and conspiracies involving social networks like Facebook, Twitter, Youtube? — neomac
ultimately all evil comes exclusively/predominantly/primarily from one single root (the US) and for one single motivational factor (it’s all about money for a bunch of American plutocrats). — neomac
we are left with the doubt that either such mainstream news outlets are overly constraining at the expense of the investigative value of Hersh’s article (as Hersh suggests) or Hersh wants to be free to take greater risks at the expense of the investigative value of his article — neomac
that some editorial fact-checking for reputational and legal reasons are common practice for investigative journalism. And that if the journalist can self-publish, he is more free to take greater risks (e.g. by taking one anonymous source or leak as enough reliable by only his own judgement). — neomac
it’s not hard to offer a plausible argument to support the idea that Hersh could have published in some American mainstream outlet — neomac
What’s harder to offer is a plausible argument to support the idea that, given very specific circumstances, Hersh was unable to publish his article other than by self-publishing on Substack or equivalent: — neomac
f one wants to self-publish, then he is expected to be the only one paying the consequences of potential legal/economic/political/reputational issues, if not even risking life. For that reason, he is more free to take greater risks by self-publishing, if he wishes so, than by publishing with a more risk-averse publisher. — neomac
I can as arbitrarily attribute to you the belief that “mainstream media must be wrong, because people not on the mainstream media are right because the people not on the mainstream media say so”) — neomac
This is horrific. We are just dying to race to oblivion, there is no end in sight.
The more this goes on, the bigger the risks of someone making a mistake, which we barely have any margin for. — Manuel
I'm imagining the equivalent of hard-coded hacks. And though it's conceivable that the models can be altered to remove such obvious discriminatory bias, less inflammatory biases, such as fundamentally different ways of describing perception or even basic assumptions about society, will presumably continue to proliferate. — Jamal
When asked to find a way to determine “which air travelers present a security risk,” ChatGPT outlined code for calculating an individual’s “risk score,” which would increase if the traveler is Syrian, Iraqi, Afghan, or North Korean (or has merely visited those places).
Something scholars of law and technology talk about a lot is the ‘veneer of objectivity’ — a decision that might be scrutinized sharply if made by a human gains a sense of legitimacy once it is automated,” she said. If a human told you Ali Mohammad sounds scarier than John Smith, you might tell him he’s racist. “There’s always a risk that this kind of output might be seen as more ‘objective’ because it’s rendered by a machine."
Interesting to that all the NATO countries wanting access to Russia's border, are all post-colonial countries — boagie
?
Finland or the Baltic States, or Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, Czechia, Slovakia, Crotia etc. have not had colonies. — ssu
The desire for a savior is strong. Once found everything is formed and reformed in order to conform to that image. It is fueled by resentment and paranoia that there are powerful forces working against them. Hence the appeal of a strong man who by shear force of will can right the world. Those who do not put him above the law are seen as the enemy harboring sinister intentions. — Fooloso4
But this is a game you are only too willing to play. Play with yourself I'm done. — Fooloso4
What evidence do you have of what accuse me of thinking? — Fooloso4
There is plenty of evidence that Trump was and is a Russian asset. — Fooloso4
I can see a lot of anti-Russian policies which emerged from the Trump administration. I'm not so clear on what Trump actually did for Putin.
What policies did this Putin-puppet put in place during his four year tenure in service of his master? — Isaac
How is the weather in conspiracy fantasy land? — Fooloso4
Look above your post the post I write. Nice to know something new. I think that's enough of an answer to your ad hominems etc. — ssu
given the clash between the US/NATO and Russia — neomac
your militant rhetoric and intellectually miserable tricks are manipulative, typical of the worst propaganda. This is a literally accurate description of your attitude in most, if not all, posts you addressed to me and not only. — neomac
I’m relying on the Western media system for the simple reason that is free and pluralistic enough that any truth against the government has more chances to become mainstream than under any authoritarian regime media system. — neomac
You repeatedly solicited interlocutors to take our politicians accountable for their blameworthy foreign policies about the war in Ukraine (and not only) and passionately made that as your main if not exclusive argumentative focus. That shows your militant urge. — neomac
To make it more explicit: people that are fanatically opposing a regime (thanks to their putative superior imagination and noble intentions), more easily find support on alternative sources of information critical of the mainstream narratives which they too oppose, of course, no matter if such sources are questionable in turn, often for the same reasons such fanatics question certain mainstream narrative (spinning political propaganda to serve cynical, if not ideologically obtuse, interests). — neomac
reason why I rely on my speculations more than yours is that they are arguably less unilateral and simplistic than yours. — neomac
I didn’t infer “is not” from a “may”. In clarifying my assumption, I talked in hypothetical terms when the subject I was referring to was “news platforms” (e.g. “news platforms, mainstream and non-mainstream (like icij or propublica), may scrutinise…”). Then I talked in actual terms when the subject I was referring to was the assumption itself: it’s not just matter of selling newspapers and newsworthiness. — neomac
the point is that mainstream publishers may choose editors and follow editorial guidelines to their liking not to Hersh’s liking. And if that’s the case, that’s a relevant difference. — neomac
they all look too much like attempts (however self-defeating) to convince people, as political propaganda is supposed to do. Unfortunately trying to deny it may also be part of the job. — neomac
I don’t think the truth of that claim can be rationally challenged, of course. — neomac
if one is self-publishing, then he is more free to take greater risks, obviously. — neomac
the fact that Substack (whose editorial principles sound promising on the papers) has become a haven for “anti-mainstream narrative” authors like him and posting a mainstream outlet denouncing substack articles is exactly illustrating the point I’m making. And, if you need it (coz I don't), similar accusations can be found elsewhere too: — neomac
First and foremost, we discuss these issues here to understand them. We discuss here a lot of issues to understand them better, to have insights and to get the feel what others think. To know and understand what is happening in international politics is very important. To have feedback on what total strangers think of your ideas is good, because people in this Forum aren't totally clueless. — ssu
Publishing companies don't tend to publish Holocaust denial literature for example and libraries don't tend to stock it. — Count Timothy von Icarus
random wackos ran plenty of newsletters about all manner of things before the internet existed, but they were difficult to access, didn't proliferate as quickly, and were far less common than social media accounts today. — Count Timothy von Icarus
it is much easier to become an author or republish — Count Timothy von Icarus
It was also easier to trace the source of information before. You could call publishers, find microfilm of old sources, etc. — Count Timothy von Icarus
it is also way easier to fake data in ways that are extremely difficult to detect. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It's easily identifiable bullshit, but that goes right to my point. This stuff replicates because it is what people want to see, it appeals to emotions. It's the reason a stirring picture of disaster X in 2013 spreads like wildfire while being represented as from disaster Y in 2023. My basic argument is that information undergoes natural selection and that truth is not necessarily, or even normally a trait that benefits reproduction. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Digital technology has made it less costly to reproduce information. Thus, there is less of an incentive to only duplicate quality information, to vet things before reproduction. This in turn changes the dynamics such that the share of veritical information goes down. — Count Timothy von Icarus
his "extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples" are a bit vague for me. — ssu
It's boring when sarcasm is the whole argument. — unenlightened
invade[d] neighbouring country unopposed — unenlightened
confusion and dissent — unenlightened
Manages to sow enough confusion and dissent to be able to invade neighbouring country unopposed — unenlightened
what their performances can teach us (by ways of analogies and disanalogies) about the nature of our own mental abilities. — Pierre-Normand
now 55% are likely to be garbage instead of just 15% — Count Timothy von Icarus
truth is not necessarily advantageous for the survival and reproduction of digital information. There are tons of articles, memes, videos, etc. in our digital ecosystem. What reproduces and spreads to more hosts is not necessarily veritical information — Count Timothy von Icarus
There is plenty of evidence that Trump was and is a Russian asset. — Fooloso4
That is, the majority of voters are dumb and blind and stupid? — jorndoe