Comments

  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    They hid the guy all during the 2020 campaign....You and all the other Dems who are shocked, shocked that Biden's suffering the age-related cognitive impairment that was apparent in 2019.fishfry

    There were three pivotal one-on-one debates Biden was in and he won all three. One against Bernie and two against Trump.
    https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/trump-biden-debate-poll/
    https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/biden-sanders-debate-poll/
    https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/23/poll-final-presidential-debate-biden-trump-432052

    I watched all three of those debates (and the numerous primary debates) and thought Biden did fine. If he was in bad shape, as you claim, he wouldn't have won any of them.
  • A question for panpsychists (and others too)
    That's a good question. Perhaps a dream like this allows to experience a whole lot of things we normally wouldn't be able to in our "natural state" of oneness with the cosmic mind. A dream where reality seems materialistic and we seem to be a bunch of individuals in a materialistic world (and of course we decide to forget we made the decision to dream all this up) seems like an excellent way to separate from the godhead and try out some unique experiences. What's it like to be in a concentration camp? What's it like to be a concentration camp guard? A celebrity? A nobody? A king? A peasant? And so on.

    I have no way of knowing if that's what's going on, but it doesn't seem incoherent or contradictory. Just unknowable. The materialistic explanations for consciousness, otoh, are completely bonkers, at least imo.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    538 still has the race a toss-up. Betting odds on Trump are about 55%. They could probably run Biden Weekend-at-Bernies style and still have a 1-in-3 chance to win. It would actually be kind of fun to beat Trump with a braindead Biden.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    Biden's rolling the dice. If he wins, even by a narrow margin, the GOP will suffer the worst trouncing a political party has ever had in American politics. How could anyone lose to this guy??? The GOP would immediately go into circular firing squad mode. If Biden loses, Democrats will hate him and his family and his inner circle with the intensity of a thousand white hot suns. There's no middle ground here. It's either glory or infamy.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    Some of the founders wanted the presidency to be a committee job. I figure when I vote for president, I'm voting for a team, not just one person. So I have no problem voting for a vegetable over Trump. The executive would still function. It's not an ideal situation, but doable.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    The business establishment wants Trump. They hate environmental regulations.
  • Hidden authoritarianism in the Western society
    You will likely be fine even if this is more than is widely considered healthy by the literature.Tom Storm

    Yes, I figure I'm losing a couple years off my life expectancy. I'm not terribly worried about it. Ironically, it was a gaming addiction that nearly cost me my marriage.
  • A question for panpsychists (and others too)
    Mind coming from matter is indeed miraculous, and also embarrassing to scientists recently.
    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/a-25-year-old-bet-about-consciousness-has-finally-been-settled/

    I predict more scientists losing more bets to philosophers. Ditch the whole "matter" thing entirely. There is no matter. It's all mental stuff.
  • Is multiculturalism compatible with democracy?
    Why not talk about ideas and criticize those, instead of talking about oneself and invite a flurry of ad hominems?Tarskian

    OK, what is your idea about what is good in life? How does money, power, and status factor in?
  • Is multiculturalism compatible with democracy?
    What is this??? You're going to roll in with all this Chad swagger about nobility and sex and marriage and then fold when someone asks you about what is good in life? Come on. You have interesting things to say. I don't agree with any of them, but it's interesting.
  • Is multiculturalism compatible with democracy?
    I prefer to identify with the nobles than with the peasants.Tarskian

    All things considered, it's better to have money than not, but do you think being rich will make you happy? Or is a necessary condition for happiness?
  • Is multiculturalism compatible with democracy?
    Well, that's why I changed it to "priorities", but I think we have vastly different worldviews too. I'm an idealist. I think this is all a dream. I'm guessing you're a materialist.
  • Is multiculturalism compatible with democracy?
    We have very different worldviews priorities!
  • Is multiculturalism compatible with democracy?
    At that point, you don't even know the person. In that case, how can you be in love already?Tarskian

    Most people date for awhile. My wife and I lived together for about six months before we got married.

    So, what you can see at first glance, is that she is young, pretty, and eminently suitable to provide you with sexual-tension relief.Tarskian

    I actually met my wife trolling on AOL 25 years ago. It was awhile before we exchanged pics and agreed to meet.
    Seriously, it is not about "love". It is always about the interests at stake. Only people who have nothing and own nothing can afford to randomly copulate like the animals.Tarskian

    Most people aren't rich or nobility so the only real concerns are, do I like this person enough to marry, are their hangups relationship-ending, and will they be a good parent?
  • Is multiculturalism compatible with democracy?
    That is why I would never "date" western again -- which is simply a pile of bullshit -- because in the end it is never about "love".Tarskian

    This is overly cynical. If you're not in love with the person, why bother marrying them? What's the point? I would never have married my wife if I had no feelings for her, and vice-versa. It's fun to experience life together, watch movies, go on vacations, etc.
  • Is multiculturalism compatible with democracy?
    Thailand sounds all right, but the Khmer Rouge wasn't all that long ago. Aren't you worried something like that might happen again and you might get caught up in it?
  • Is multiculturalism compatible with democracy?
    Isn't the proof always in the pudding?Tarskian

    People are breaking down the door to get into America.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    This country is not going to elect a black woman, much less a politically incompetent black woman like Harris. Michelle Obama is the exception to that rule and probably the only person in the country who could rescue the Democrats, but that's not going to happen. Trump is up 3 points in the polling average. 538 has the race as even. Biden is not going to drop out under those conditions, nor should he. The Democrats still have a powerful message: white male vegetable>election stealing prolife felon.
  • Is multiculturalism compatible with democracy?
    In my opinion, the best places to live, are the ones where the government simply does not have the means to micromanage people's lives.Tarskian

    What are some places in the world that fit this bill?
  • Hidden authoritarianism in the Western society
    You're certainly less productive.Philosophim

    This was particularly amusing considering two years ago I was nominated for teacher of the year at my site for the first time. Didn't win, but I'm at a point in my career where I'm doing the best teaching I've ever done. My evaluations and administrator feedback back this up. Either I'm doing horrible in life and everyone around me is gaslighting me, or your predictions are wildly off mark.

    And yes, everyone I know is addicted to something: booze, food, painkillers, porn, weed, Facebook, smoking, sex, gambling, shopping, etc. Your views on addiction sound like something from the temperance movement and Reefer Madness.
  • Hidden authoritarianism in the Western society
    I keep it at four drinks a day. My body seems to have handled that pretty well over the decades. Vital signs were good at last checkup. If I was really becoming as self-centered as you claim, I think it would have bled into my marriage or career, but those are going well too. A lot of people are addicted to something (maybe everyone), and most people have enough self-discipline to keep it from impacting their lives too negatively. My wife, for example, is a food addict, but is not morbidly obese.
  • Hidden authoritarianism in the Western society
    I agree with all that except the alcoholic part. I've been an alcoholic for 30 years, but I'm not (I don't think) a slave to my emotions.
  • Hidden authoritarianism in the Western society
    I agree we're in an oligarchy in practice, but that's what the voters want. Every two years, we have the option of throwing all the bums out in the House, but we never do. Even in "wave" years, the vast majority of House members are reelected. The tools are there to radically change the system, and if young people ever get politically active and turn out en masse... but that's a pipe dream.
  • Hidden authoritarianism in the Western society
    It's 36th on the world democracy rating; a deficient democracy, though not yet a failed one. That might be next year.Vera Mont

    How could we be a failed democracy with free and fair elections every two years? Do you see that going away?
  • A Reversion to Aristotle
    I don't think the thesis that society is experiencing decay in some important aspects can be easily written off by pointing to progress in other areas.Count Timothy von Icarus

    That's not really my point. My point is that, on balance, there isn't some past society or time period that is morally superior/less decayed than the societies in today's first world countries. Do you think there is? If so, when and where?
  • A Reversion to Aristotle
    Modern society is decaying; and this decay is a direct result of moral anti-realism. It is hard to say why moral anti-realism has caught wind like wild fire, but I would hypothesize it is substantially influenced by Nietzschien thought.Bob Ross

    It seems you are saying that things have gotten worse/decayed since Nietzsche with the rise of moral anti-realism. But in the 120 years since Nietzsche, we have seen an expansion of civil rights that has been unprecedented. Which pre-1900 societies would you say are morally superior to society now?
  • A Reversion to Aristotle
    Before all that there was Eazy E.
  • A Reversion to Aristotle
    I notice one of your graphs concerns religious terrorism. Wouldn't you rather be a European now than during the Protestant Reformation?
  • A Reversion to Aristotle
    I think Bob is pointing to moral decay, which might itself exist along other elements of positive growth. For example, in A Brave New World we see a picture of a society that would surely get extremely high marks on virtually every metric by which modern technocrats tend to evaluate policy "success." Crime is largely a non-issue, there is no poverty, self-reported well being is surely quite high, and technology has allowed for a great deal of comfort, even largely removing the symptoms of aging. But at the same time it seems fair to say that such a society, despite these positive attributes, has slipped into the direst form of moral and ethical decay.

    And there are aspects in which the trajectory of society since Huxley's time has followed his dystopian vision, even as it generally still fails to deliver on at least the "pleasure" part of the equation.
    Count Timothy von Icarus

    Civil rights have to rank high on the "moral decay" calculus. I'm definitely not going to agree that any society or time period where gay marriage is illegal, for example, is morally superior to what we have now. That would preclude any time period in the U.S. prior to 2015 from being considered morally superior to the present.
  • A Reversion to Aristotle
    If society is decaying, it must have been better in the past. What time period do you think society was at its "moral peak"? The 1950's?
  • How would you respond to the trolley problem?
    One simple solution would be to refuse to buy products from companies who use children in that way.Leontiskos

    That would probably end up being most of the stuff we buy.
    https://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/2016/nov/24/child-labour-what-can-we-do-africa-modern-slavery

    But this is a digression.
  • How would you respond to the trolley problem?
    What about child laborers in the supply chain of our favorite products (and other workers who work in awful and dangerous conditions)? We are obviously treating them as means, but what is the solution? Live like a monk? Donate to charities to ameliorate some of the wrongness?
  • Simplest - The minimum possible building blocks of a universe
    Do you think the Hard Problem has been solved?
  • Simplest - The minimum possible building blocks of a universe
    What do you think makes ideas simple? The lack of a physical component?Treatid

    Yes. Why assert there is any mind independent physical stuff? You can't prove it, it's unnecessary to explain reality, and you run into the mind-body problem, which seems insolvable at this point.
  • How would you respond to the trolley problem?
    Any moral theory is ultimately going to have to pass some realworld tests, and since there's never a universal consensus on morality, like there is in math, all we can do is point to our intuitions that such-and-such is wrong. For example, is it immoral to walk past a drowning child when all you need to do to save them is get your arm wet? Yes. Is it immoral in trolley car to run over the person tied to the tracks if you can save a school bus full of kids, and the person on the tracks is one day away from dying of terminal cancer? No. What about a bombing raid that ends WW2 with the death of only one civilian? I would argue that all of the answers to these questions are obvious and not really disputable, and if a moral theory gives the wrong answer, it's in serious trouble.
  • Simplest - The minimum possible building blocks of a universe
    If we were to create a universe, what are the simplest possible building blocks that we could use?Treatid

    Ideas.
  • How would you respond to the trolley problem?
    disagree. You have fallen into the consequentialist trap. You think it is ok to use people as a means towards (or at as sacrifices for) good ends.Bob Ross

    Consequentalism gives the proper result in the scenario I was talking about: You bomb Hitler and end the war, even if it means the death of one innocent person.
  • Perceived Probability: what are the differences from regular statistical chance?
    Sounds familiar, but no. Probably knew at some point. Is Bayesian Probability where you estimate the probability of a hypothesis being true, or am I just mixing things up?Igitur

    Someone can explain it better than me. Maybe ChatGpt.