Honestly if you can't even bring yourself to treat the people you speak to with the bare minimum of respect you can fuck off.
2h — Isaac
All of which will never change so long as people continue to support the blackmail of "don't criticise the pharmaceuticals, people might stop taking medicines!". — Isaac
World Health Organization approves malaria vaccine
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2021/10/new-malaria-vaccine-explained-by-the-who
In 2019, 386,000 Africans died from malaria, of which 274,000 were children under five, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). In the past 18 months, there have been 212,000 confirmed COVID-19 deaths.
Now the WHO has approved a malaria vaccine for children for the first time, after a successful pilot scheme in three African countries: Ghana, Kenya and Malawi.
RTS,S - or Mosquirix - is a vaccine developed by British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline, which acts against P. falciparum, the most deadly malaria parasite globally, and the most prevalent in Africa.
WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called it a "historic moment" and a "breakthrough for science, child health and malaria control".
“Using this vaccine on top of existing tools to prevent malaria could save tens of thousands of young lives each year,” he added.
Am I believing something wrong? — Wayfarer
I think that really encapsulates the philosophical situation. It makes empiricists nervous, and empiricists hold sway. — Wayfarer
If the math involved in structural engineering has worked for a hundred plus years, it seems very implausible to think it would suddenly cease working — Janus
If a system is inconsistent, then the system contradicts every statement in the system, not just the law of excluded middle. So it is pointless to adduce the law of excluded middle in this way. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Yes, the liar's paradox statement is shorthand for the overall argument. — T Clark
Rereading this thread ... — 180 Proof
What was Banno's question? — SophistiCat
This whole discussion started from the question of whether the liars paradox has any implications for the design of bridges, i.e. if the paradox undermines the basic aspects of using math to solve problems. Thoughts? — T Clark
Again, retracting the law of excluded middle does not provide contradictions. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Inconsistent mathematical systems are a thing. — Banno
It feels good that Wittgenstein agrees with me, even if Turing and you do not. — T Clark
The law of excluded middle is thus a kind of useful fiction. — Joshs
Whether or not Wittgenstein means what I said he means, I think this shows that the author of the article thinks Wittgenstein means what I said he means. — T Clark
Did you read the Wittgenstein quote? Do you understand what he’s trying to say? — Joshs
We don’t have to drop the law of the excluded middle, it deconstructs itself. — Joshs
I think what Wittgenstein was saying is that the trivial inconsistencies associated with the paradoxes don't matter. Are meaningless. There's a good chance I'm wrong about that, but that's how I read the article Banno linked to. — T Clark
(emphasis mine)“Why are people afraid of contradictions? It is easy to understand why they should be afraid of contradictions in orders, descriptions, etc. outside mathematics. The question is: Why should they be afraid of contradictions inside mathematics?”
In relevance to this essay, Alan Turing (1912–1954) strongly disagreed withLudwig Wittgenstein’s argument that mathematicians and philosophers should happily allow contradictions to exist within mathematical systems.
Things in engineering are usually defined as sometimes overdetermined or positively redundant, in practice.
Epistemic closure of mathematics or its inability being used in practice doesn't prohibit a computer from modelling a bridge — Shawn
The more I think about it, the more I believe that the kinds of paradoxes we're talking about have no connection to anything outside our minds. — T Clark
Allowing contradictions in how you do calculus would cause all modern bridges to fall down. Does that matter? Is it different from the point about foundations? — Srap Tasmaner
On the one hand, I think I agree with Turing about contradictions mattering, but on the other hand it does seem clear to me that practice and intuition is the foundation of theory not the other way around, and you don't really need the theory, even when it comes to mathematics, insofar as foundations counts as the theory, to practice. — Srap Tasmaner
Foundations of mathematics is nearly a separate field of study, and unnecessary for the doing of mathematics. — Srap Tasmaner
I don't know enough about this stuff to point to examples, but Turing's general point that allowing contradictions can be dangerous is almost certainly correct, precisely because of the emergence of computers. — Srap Tasmaner
