Fair enough. Even no industrial policy is a sort of industrial policy, in effect. — Olivier5
Sure, you could always see it differently, but this is at least what she was saying at the time. — Olivier5
Thatcher hated the very idea of an industrial strategy, sustainable or not. Hers was a laissez-faire policy; she believed that state interventions in the economy were almost always counter-productive. — Olivier5
Found your shift key, huh? Well done! — Kenosha Kid
This maybe the key to unlocking some doors to...the twilight zone! Press on, o philosopher! Lead the way! — TheMadFool
The one astrophysical journal. :joke: — Kenosha Kid
...how lazy do you have to be to not even Wiki — Kenosha Kid
Relevance? — Kenosha Kid
The largeness of the unobservable universe is a requirement that the inflation yield the observable, homogeneous cosmos we see now. — Kenosha Kid
...so the argument against science is that Counterpunch doesn't understand it.
Sure. — Banno
Yes, it's a matter of mentality switching from the comparable sanity of special relativity, in which an object cannot recede from another faster than c, to the insanity of general relativity, in which an object can recede at c while riding on a space that's also receding at c (making 2c). That no object can recede from another faster than c is a rule about _inertial_ frames, not curved spacetime. — Kenosha Kid
First key thing is that the " inflationary period", while brief, was insanely rapid, with every point pretty much moving at speed c away from its neighbouring points... — Kenosha Kid
But it does. Those estimates are themselves based on inflationary cosmological models. — Kenosha Kid
Like inflation theory? — Kenosha Kid
I am raising this question because many of the fundamentals of philosophy, especially basic questions and attempts to answer the metaphysical and epistemological problems are open to challenge in the thinking of our time. It leaves me wondering if it will get to the point where philosophy is seen as an appendix of knowledge, especially that which is developed in science. My idea of a dead-end is like a cul de sac, or point in a maze, where there is no way out, or no obvious way forward. It is equal to coming to stagnation, or a standstill. — Jack Cummins
For example, much of the discoveries in humanity come from the Renaissance and scientific revolution where there was no downward existential force constraining human communication at a human to human level, thus allowing human beings to thrive emotionally and be in that state of being able to create and derive new ideas. — JohnLocke
Got anything published? — Wayfarer
I've googled it. What I appear to find is that geothermal energy is indeed an energy source, has some pros, some cons, is location dependent, is expensive. Nothing that says geothermal energy is the panacea for all the world's energy problems. — Wayfarer
so I'm wondering if it does have the transformative potential you claim it does. — Wayfarer
I think the kind of awakening that is needed, is a realignment of culture so that material acquisition is not the only aim of existence. — Wayfarer
Fortunately, I've long left behind such sophomoric arguments (see my first post on p.1). — 180 Proof
'weak atheism' doesn't satisfy me philosophically (hasn't for decades, in fact). I prefer to make the strongest case for unbelief regardless of how weak or non-existent the argument for belief may be. — 180 Proof
One can believe in something like a creator deity without believing that it interferes in everyday life. — Michael
By my logic, agnosticism with respect to any 'theistic deity' is incoherent (as pointed out here). — 180 Proof
By my logic, agnosticism with respect to any 'theistic deity' is incoherent — 180 Proof
Initially I meant to talk to all members — Nelson E Garcia
I prefer to make the strongest case for unbelief — 180 Proof
The Logic of Atheism debate got me thinking about something. If atheism is defined as a disbelief in the existence of gods, then how does logic apply to that? I’m not sure logic is needed to justify a non-belief. Non-beliefs aren’t really based on arguments, they’re based on a lack of them. Convincing arguments supporting theism are lacking, therefore atheism. If logic is just a tool used to justify/support arguments, then how could it apply to a non-belief that is based on a lack of convincing arguments? — Pinprick
Agreed, what a great book. — darthbarracuda
1. Human morality is partly objective because humans share biological traits that underlie their sense of moral necessity. It is not objective in the sense of being independent of humans, but is in the sense of being common to all humans (barring edge cases) and humanity being objectively distinguishable from non-humanity. — Kenosha Kid
3. Morality is subjective insofar as it is still us as individuals who inherit that biology and culture, and us ultimately that have to make moral decisions, gain experience based on those decisions and their outcomes, and grapple with moral problems specifically for us. — Kenosha Kid
2. Morality is also relative insofar as much of it is also mediated by inherited socialisations which differ across time and space. Historically, those socialisations have been optimised to maximise our ability to apply our social hardware to daily living, which is why there is so much similarity between the cultures of immediate-return hunter-gatherer groups. More recently, those socialisations have evolved to counteract that innate behaviour (serfdom, slavery, individualism), and even more recently they're evolving to reassert that innate morality on a global scale (equality, diversity, tolerance). — Kenosha Kid
It is precisely the view advocated by Dawkins & Dennett to liberate mankind from the delusion of spirituality. — Wayfarer
It is a simple fact that Galilean science dispensed with the notion of final and formal cause and that the notion of teleology was banished from the biological sciences. — Wayfarer
I wouldn’t acknowledge it, because I think it’s a caricature of history. As I’ve said, you hold a very one-eyed, black v white image of history but the reality is hugely more complex than you allow. — Wayfarer
The modern definition of 'rationalism' is 'provable by empirical science' or mathematicazation of same. Basically it always comes down to one or another form of positivism. The Greek rationalist tradition started with Parmenides, and was utterly different to what is nowadays known as 'rationalism'. In fact, scientific rationalism is irrational, in that it disposes with any notion of purpose, telos, the why of existence. — Wayfarer