Let's say we establish an AI that has the purpose of interpreting the data. Its only job is to read and conclude the data to be correct. Now, it hasn't any kind of perception like humans do, and the output will be a binary "yes" or "no". "Is there a Higgs particle?", it answers "Yes". — Christoffer
And what I was talking about was that the US does not actually want to decarbonize
— Olivier5
Which is irrelevant. — Xtrix
There is no reason to believe that labor unions will help reduce global warming.
— Olivier5
There’s every reason to believe it in fact.
The perception you describe is reading the conclusion on a screen at CERN or conceptualizing the meaning of the particles existence outside of the scientific logic behind the detection of it. — Christoffer
At the very least with regards to the legislation Manchin just killed, it seemed like union workers were pretty excited about the bill, in particular for it's legislation to help the miners transition to new cleaner jobs on the coalfields they used to work on: Coal miners want Joe Manchin to reverse opposition to Build Back Better. — Mr Bee
Mostly true, but irrelevant to what I was talking about -- as quoted above. The solutions I mentioned mostly apply where people/governments want to decarbonize -- not 100% everywhere, but it generalizes well enough. — Xtrix
Without strikes, or the threat of strikes, nothing will happen. So if European unions aren't doing that, then yes -- what's the point? — Xtrix
What an utterly hopeless piece of thinking. — Banno
You lump together imagination with logic, but logic is not a human concept. — Christoffer
If we build a detector, like the one in CERN, to detect particles we cannot possibly perceive, our perception does not dictate its function, which is what you mean with what you say when you lump in human perception with science.
I noticed that the website of the American Cancer Society has:
Studies have shown that keeping a positive attitude does not change the course of a person’s cancer. Trying to keep a positive attitude does not lead to a longer life and can cause some people to feel guilty when they can’t “stay positive.” This only adds to their burden.
I do think a positive attitude, if not forced, can help make cancer easier to deal with emotionally and it can make it easier for friends and relatives to cope. Whatever that's worth. — Tom Storm
I'm speaking about the US, of course -- but it's true elsewhere as well. — Xtrix
Beg your pardon, but it reeks of defeatism. I realize you feel it's 'realism,' but the truth is that things can turn around very quickly indeed, and even heal. The window is shutting, true -- so all the more reason to do something. — Xtrix
I don't see much recognition of real actions and solutions. — Xtrix
something fascinating — Tate
I think of it as like being in a room and you're really preoccupied with something fascinating. Every now and then you glance at the walls and realize there's something wrong, but you don't pursue it. You just go back to being fascinated. — Tate
There are plenty of solutions, and people working very hard at those solutions -- and making progress. All while being told that there "are not solutions," that we're already doomed, that there's nothing we can do except continue with the status quo because leaders won't listen and corporations are too powerful, etc. The typical defeatist, hopelessness-encouraging bullshit you can see daily in the Wall Street Journal editorial pages.
So sure, we can go with your narrative and thus justify doing nothing. — Xtrix
Nothing ever comes as gifts from above. Ever. When our institutions and our leaders fail, we work harder to circumvent them and create a crisis for them. I don't see any alternative beyond giving up and guaranteeing the worst case happens. — Xtrix
Maybe I'd be dead in a nuclear fire, but I'd be burning with a minimum respect for the people who triggered WWIII. They said they cared about Ukrainian sovereignty and they fucking followed through. — boethius
WWII is Putin's favorite analogy. He sees Nazis everywhere.I just explained exactly how it had to do with Nukes. I can explain it again if you want.
Already the threat of nuclear war precluded NATO boots on the ground and planes in the air (the common sense way to "defend freedom and democracy" a la WWII, which is the West's own preferred analogy). — boethius
Of the arms and intelligence support Ukraine has gotten ... why only HIMARS now? ... and not literally the first day of the war?
The answer is because HIMARS can be introduced now maintaining a Russian win.
The most annoying part of that hypocrisy is that Western media frame the "expansion" of NATO Eastward as not-an-expansion as it was just countries joining out of their own volition, NATO agency and planning had nothing to do with it. But ... again ... why not Ukraine? They wanted to be let in too? — boethius
Russia using nuclear weapons is completely realistic. — boethius
Even the small gesture of a no-fly zone was taken off the table due to the threat of nuclear weapons. — boethius
A realist simply doesn't let their subjective values taint their attempt at objectively estimating and predicting actions and consequences on the world stage. — Tzeentch
I am concerned with how states act and why they act that way. — Tzeentch
As a realist I'll say that that's exactly what they'll do. (Note: there is no "should" in there) And lowe and behold, you just summed up United States foreign policy. — Tzeentch
So as a realist, are you saying that US presidents should keep on making profitable deals with dictatorships, human rights be damned? Kindly confirm whether this is what you mean by "realism".Two advisors present you with options. One of them recommends that you punish the foreign government, arguing that the United States should prioritize supporting those who are fighting for human rights and freedom around the world. The other encourages you not to intervene, arguing that it is more important to preserve your relationship with the foreign government, which encompasses billions of dollars in trade and a security partnership that has helped maintain regional stability for years.
This difficult decision reflects two schools of thought in foreign policy: idealism and realism.
to suggest such ideals should be a driving factor behind the decisionmaking process is, you guessed it, typically idealist.
This couldn't be farther from the realist perspective that argues actions and consequences, not ideals, are what matter. — Tzeentch
Why would you send thousands and thousands of one's soldiers into battle — Agent Smith
but do I really need to explain to you the difference between realism and idealism, which is where we fundamentally differ? — Tzeentch