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Everything posted by TheVat
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https://apnews.com/article/trump-election-2024-rhetoric-germany-antisemitism-31002afb91b642c0314223d19e51f427 Trumps social media account shares a campaign video with a headline about a unified Reich This was not a campaign video, it was created by a random account online and reposted by a staffer who clearly did not see the word, while the President was in court, Karoline Leavitt, the campaign press secretary, said in a statement. In related news, an urgent call goes out for optometrists to aid Trump staffers with sudden severe vision impairments.
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Well, being a mass murderer (google Raisi extrajudicial killings 1988) is not always an endearing quality in a head of state. I would imagine there are many in Iran who aren't real fond of him. I admit I didn't shed any tears, on hearing the news.
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Reality seems to correspond to properties of observables that are the same to any observer. (properties, rather than intrinsic qualities or substance or whatever) So statements that are "inter-subjectively" true are the ones that correspond to reality. All else is opinion and subjective. That's my best guess. So glad I could share these thoughts on Islam! 😁
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Over the years I've gotten the impression Iran is quite proud of its technical proficiency. Persian pride in their history of scientific and engineering mastery goes back a long ways. Reuters described how Iran has gotten around the sanctions on aviation parts by smuggling in components and reverse-engineering them. So this will be a national embarasssment as well as tragedy, for Iran. And as @MSC and others note, there will be politicized takes on what happened by countries who have a dog in the current ME conflict.
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Why do certain social situations seem embarrassing?
TheVat replied to Scientific_potato's topic in General Philosophy
The "it's Wendy's" response comes from cultural norms about social boundaries when people are eating, AFAICT. The idea is that Wendy's, not being a dinner theater or rowdy tavern or singles bar, is a place where you are focused on interaction with your dining companions (or if solitary, with your food). IOW, the principle is to not have people at other tables too aware of you. Maybe this kind of boundary setting is partly from the idea that meals are peaceful occasions where food is best enjoyed when we can focus on the sensual enjoyment of it. Subcultures differ on the degree of peace, for sure. But there is a common thread, starting from the traditional family dinner table, of not bringing up contentious topics or shouting or roughhousing, etc. That said, I see plenty of violations of these unspoken rules at many fast food places. Once in a while, my eating partner and I find it a source of amusement. But mostly it's just annoying. Guess I would cast a vote for quiet or quiet-ish eating. -
Depends on the species. Franklin's 50/500 rule is often cited for humans (I just wrote on this on another thread but can't find atm) and that top number is seen as what is needed for longterm viability and sufficient genetic diversity. Lower numbers and a species can wither. Too much inbreeding, losses of useful genetic variants to genetic drift, etc. Most mutations are deleterious, about 75-80% of single nucleotide variants, so the lucky dice roll of a positive mutation (roughly 1-2%) that adds useful diversity is going to be rare in too small of a population. I've seen debate on the number, but there seems to be some agreement that 500-600 is enough for humans. I know NASA has funded some studies on this, with a longterm view to understanding what are viable populations for establishing colonies on other worlds.
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Why do certain social situations seem embarrassing?
TheVat replied to Scientific_potato's topic in General Philosophy
When in France, I greatly amused some locals by referring to the cruise liner company as Conard, instead of Cunard. This was how I learned that connard is French for asshole. I wasn't too embarassed, thanks to the friendly company and my already earned status as something of a clown. -
Why do certain social situations seem embarrassing?
TheVat replied to Scientific_potato's topic in General Philosophy
I will confess that I sometimes wear pants that say, f you, I just want to be comfortable. I have tried to advance the position that my running pants are more stylish than mere sweat pants but it's been suggested they are really just fancy sweat pants with pockets. My position is that running pants with pockets are: A. Pants. Suitable for most public venues and occasions. B. Warm. This is important in a cold windy climate. C. Have a flexibility and ability to stay up (elastic waist plus drawstring*) that makes them ideal for most physical tasks. So this approach to public pants display combines logic and empiricism in a beautiful synergy, while also serving as a superficial snobby twit detector. That said, embarassment is a useful thing for social creatures when it causes us to regret transgressions like dishonesty or foolish boasting. * belts are digital, drawstrings are analog, and analog + waists = freedom! Sounds quite stylish. My son often wears such attire, and looks splendid in it. Some people really rock black, and not just classical musicians. Though July in the American Midwest, where he lives, tends to concentrate the mind on somewhat cooler clothing choices. -
Anyone even remotely involved in it. A bitter bloody destructive war that shattered the nation, destroyed cities and vast areas of land and the South's economy, leaving dire poverty and hunger and around 2 million wounded on top of 600,000 dead. Your question is like someone suggesting the Hutus in Rwanda took machetes to their Tutsi neighbors and hacked them to death because it livened up block parties.
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I sort of regret my earlier post, which was meant as a bit whimsical, suggesting that sugar was the most dangerous chemical. I did understand that danger, in the OP context, was meant in the sense of extremely toxic in tiny amounts and not "might give you pancreatitis or diabetes in a few decades of nonstop bingeing." I was offering it in the same way that someone will say mosquito when asked what's the world most dangerous animal. True answer, but often not what the asker had in mind. Danger must be defined, it having multiple meanings. Ask an electrician and they would probably say "squirrel." 🙂
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No they weren't. FFS, read some Civil War history.
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Could be either Rachel Carson or E. O. Wilson (though he was a bug guy, not a marine biologist). There is also Stephen Hart, though he is probably not "very influential." Oh crap, wait, it has to Loren Eiseley. Damn, we grew up in the same town and I once lived a couple of blocks from his childhood home in Nebraska. Yeah, he was a big cephalopod fan.
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C12H22O11. Around 1.5 million deaths per year. (before sucrose was widely available, diabetes was relatively rare) Definitely competitive with ethanol, nicotine, and plasmodium DNA. But I think nicotine is the champion, with 8 million/yr.
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I've wondered about octopus intelligence because of their intelligent behavior (they test smarter than human toddlers, in some respects) and also things like having the highest encephalization quotient of any invertebrate, a degree of synaptic plasticity more associated with learning and memory centers of vertebrates, sophisticated control of 5 different types of chromatophores, and the whole "embodied" brain thing which is so unlike vertebrates. My guess is that they do have a unique form of intelligence that we are only starting to be able to measure. I have wondered if someday we discover that they are able to use chromatophores as a sophisticated language system, and not just for camouflage or basic emotions. Half a billion neurons is a lot, when you are invertebrate and weigh 6-20 lb. Another factor is that they are both predators and prey. This dual role usually makes more higher overall intelligence in the animal kingdom.
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The simplest cause of the accelerating expansion of the universe
TheVat replied to Max70's topic in Speculations
This isn't an argument. It's just contradiction. -
The simplest cause of the accelerating expansion of the universe
TheVat replied to Max70's topic in Speculations
Even emojis can be argued with. -
Some processes are more feasible when done on a larger communal scale. Sewage treatment might be one of those. Some cities started using sewage to make fertilizer, though some of those programs were discontinued due to PFAS and other toxins turning up in the product that farmers were putting on their fields. https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2013/04/10/176822392/cities-turn-sewage-into-black-gold-for-local-farms And home composter devices generally cannot handle human poop. (unless it's a large and expensive composting toilet, which cannot be used with a van) Nor are the chemicals that would neutralize the odor anything you would want to be adding to a landfill or sewage system. Emptying your van receptacle into a public toilet is likely the best destination. Or networking with someone in the area who has a composting toilet and is willing to take shit from you, so to speak.
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A rather sudden exit, over 4 months ago, of a longterm and active member, without any valedictory post - are you okay, Studiot? I hope you are exploring realms of gold, wherever you are.
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I've just reviewed my old PM exchanges with him and he did tell me his family name, although we were on a first-name basis when messaging. People sometimes disappear for a while. I hope he's ok.
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We have this in common ,it seemsin that we are both not dead.
I hope you have been well over the intervening period,Studiot
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In our federal system there is always a potential for interstate conflicts. States will resent federal control over matters where they prefer some autonomy. Especially where profit is concerned. In the Civil War, the economics of slavery (and other states rights) was such that landowners in the South felt it was advantageous to expand the slavery system into the western territories, while the North, especially the new Republican Party which had gained majorities in almost every N. state, were determined to open those territories to free labor alone. The GOP was founded by Abolitionists, some more radical than others but they all agreed that chattel slavery could not be allowed to expand beyond the South. Democracy is inherently messy. Especially given the natural tendency towards what DeToqueville called "the tyranny of the majority." (which our Constitution keeps evolving to prevent) If the minority that is experiencing that tyranny is concentrated in a state or cluster of states, then attempts at secession are always a possibility. If you want tidiness and purity, you need a totalitarian dictator.
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Could posters please post their discursive points in text and not by saying "here, click this." It's against forum rules, and it's a nuisance when you are somewhere that you can't watch videos. Usually, a clear text explanation of one's position is also much faster to read, especially when it comes to presenting facts. (I've seen videos that take half an hour to get to the point that one paragraph of text could have adequately made) Also, @Otto Kretschmer should retract his inaccurate comments about SSRI treatment and respond to my post addressing that. There is nothing wrong with critiquing pharmaceuticals used in treatment, but it needs to be done from an informed and fact-based perspective.
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This is inaccurate. Your "proof" is like saying milk isn't helping calcium deficient bones because blood calcium levels rise within hours of drinking but it takes weeks for bone density to increase. After carrying a message, serotonin is usually reabsorbed by the nerve cells. SSRIs work by blocking reuptake, meaning more serotonin is available to pass further messages between nearby nerve cells. This isn't a rapid mood booster in depressives, but rather provides an unusual surplus of neurotransmitter which assists in a healing process that can take quite a while before a more favorable (to emotional response) pattern of signaling pathways is established. Further quite a bit of therapeutic knowledge exists as to how to reap the most benefit from an SSRI course, so we do know a bit about the mix of chemical, behavioral, environmental, and social contributions to depression. Not having seen the video, I don't know how far I'd go in agreeing with NDGT, but your "how come SSRIs don't work in a few hours" criticism is not based on an understanding of how SSRI works.
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Do AI Programs Initiate Discussions to Collect Information?
TheVat replied to exchemist's topic in Computer Science
Possibly we are seeing high school students using LLMs in countries where it is common to assign the task of "publishing" a paper online. Since legitimate academic/pro journals are generally not going to accept such papers, they just put them up on online forums and the teachers accept that. -
A handsome and muscular man walks into a bar, opens up his backpack, and sets out on the counter a tiny man and a miniature piano of compatible size. The tiny man begins to play, with great skill. That's amazing, says the bartender. Where did you find him? A genie in an old bottle gave him to me, says the man. I had three wishes. The first two were good looks and immortality, and those were provided - today is my 157th birthday. The man sips his beer and looks sadly over at his tiny companion. Unfortunately, says the man, the genie didn't hear me clearly on the third wish so instead of my actual request he gave me a 12 inch pianist.
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Well first, Franklin's RoT is 50/500, just to get our decimals in the right place, and it is highly dependent on species reproductive rate, habitat needs, average number of harmful recessive alleles (it's around 5 in humans, IIRC) and probability of disruptions to the ecosystem. Also, an artificial one, i.e. a zoo or wildlife preserve in an O'Neill colony or what have you, would have different requirements than a natural ecosystem where the goal is to save from extinction. Franklin et al were trying to make a RoT for wildlife conservation in natural settings, especially ones under siege from human depredations. So the space habitats you envision might work with a lower number. The 50 is a minimum in a locality to reduce deleterious inbreeding between close relatives, the 500 is the total number of that species in the entire habitat needed to reduce negative effects (low diversity) of genetic drift and maintain a healthy adaptive population. Again Franklin's model is very dependent on species and habitat and what controls are in place (a space habitat, I would imagine, would have a lot). I'd have to think a bit on how well the 500 popsicles scenario, with AI injections (each generation, most likely) would work out. I guess it could play out like, e.g. small bands of humans (50 per) in a forest which occasionally meet up for wooing and intermarrying between the bands.
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The pedestrians actions still don't answer the eternal question - why did the chicken cross the road?