For me, a thing only perceives modifications of itself. — bert1
It was my understanding that for indirect realism there is a perceptual intermediary between perceiver and perceived. If there is none then the distinction between direct and indirect realism is redundant. — NOS4A2
I just want to know what John is directly perceiving to the indirect realist. If John is not directly perceiving the tree, what is it that he directly perceives? — NOS4A2
Then who or what perceives the tree? — NOS4A2
I suspect that he directly perceives all of the above, and everything else within his periphery. — NOS4A2
So what does the indirect realist perceive? — NOS4A2
Yep, and evidence/arguments have been posted throughout the thread already. — jorndoe
The intent is crystal clear. You simply cannot deny it. — ssu
I’m not arguing the case. — Wayfarer
The prospect of peace lies wholly and solely with the Kremlin. They have instigated this entire catastrophe. — Wayfarer
What a dictator of Russia says and does isn't an opinion. — ssu
more than 800 Russian soldiers, many of them witless consripts dragooned into the killing machine, being killed every day. — Wayfarer
People disagree about the World being round shaped. Some say it's flat. — ssu
Seems that you don't know much about post-soviet era history of Russo-Ukrainian relations. Russia wanted to have Ukraine under it's influence, even if it was actually neutral, as actually the country was in the 1990's and the 2000's, before the current war. — ssu
In a diverse plural democracy like India, you don't really have to agree on everything all the time, so long as you agree on the ground rules of how you will disagree.
Why were they doing these things? — javi2541997
I don’t understand what you’re getting at. — NOS4A2
Willing is an action performed by a thing — NOS4A2
One can search among his possessions and never find anything of the sort. Everything about my supposed rights depends entirely on the will of those who offered them to me — NOS4A2
One thing though that makes it easier to buy the Russia theory is that the risk threshold is much lower for Russia than for any other plausible actor — SophistiCat
They have little to lose, since their relationships with Europe are at their lowest point since theBolshevik revolutioncold war. — SophistiCat
European diplomats privately admit transatlantic relations are at their lowest point since the end of the Cold War, including during the 2003 Iraq War — https://carnegieendowment.org/2020/05/06/trump-has-irrevocably-changed-american-relations-with-europe-and-biden-probably-can-t-fix-it-pub-81739
they will just deny everything, like they always do, not caring at all whether they are believed. — SophistiCat
the scope and the scale of such operations have been enormous — https://www.cato.org/policy-analysis/pitfalls-us-covert-operations#
the reasons, arguments and agenda of the politicians and the military are. — ssu
Absolutely stomach-churning stuff.
I'm glad some people seem to have finally had their "Hans, are we the baddies?" moment. — Tzeentch
“In March [2020] the Government was very worried about compliance and they thought people wouldn’t want to be locked down. There were discussions about fear being needed to encourage compliance, and decisions were made about how to ramp up the fear. The way we have used fear is dystopian.
“The use of fear has definitely been ethically questionable. It’s been like a weird experiment. Ultimately, it backfired because people became too scared.”
I have not! Give me some pointers (not on reading, on explanatory frameworks for consciousness). — Agent Smith
All I'm saying is there's at least some kinda theory/hypothesis to, at a minimum, attempt an explanation. None exist for consciousness. — Agent Smith
The mechanism of taste can be reduced to chemistry i.e. there's a theory (agonist-receptor) which can be used — Agent Smith
... isn't up to you to decide on others' behalf. :grin: — jorndoe
Ordinarily, people, including children, would mask up in public social settings, not at home for example (bubble), while learning more. — jorndoe
and there was "child abuse" screamery (which it isn't, but evokes other things), — jorndoe
Hmm So that's what you made out of EricH's comments. — jorndoe
Yeah sure, you know better what Finns and Swedes think. :roll: — ssu
Of course in your logic you forget what and why that changed, just like why Sweden left it's foreign policy stance that had been the same since Napoleons times. — ssu
forgettingdisagreeing totally [about] the motivation and agenda of the European countries themselves. — ssu
I don't know if there was/is any perfect plan. — EricH
complex situation with many moving parts - and any action you take will have some secondary effects — EricH
Minor? Weaning Europe of Russian gas in favour of North American gas is not minor in my book. It's tens of billions of dollars in value per year. — Benkei
As a US citizen, what irks me is the vitriol that people hurl at the CDC for simply doing the best they could to keep everyone healthy and alive in a confusing rapidly evolving situation. — EricH
Without his indefatigable reporting, we would know even less than we do about the crimes committed by the US national security state over the last fifty years. While most of his peers in the press have been faithfully transcribing what are effectively official lies, Hersh has repeatedly challenged them, revealing scandalous government conduct that would otherwise have been kept secret
This type of explosive "investigation" based on a single anonymous source (who may or may not exist, for all we know) has become his modus operandi. — SophistiCat
Of course, none of it matters to the useful idiots who will swallow any yarn if it's too good not to be true. — SophistiCat
It's essentially a replay of the covid pandemic. — Tzeentch
This is the denial phase. The phase is prior to the last one, quiet shame. — Tzeentch