Jump to content

TheVat

Senior Members
  • Posts

    3639
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    97

Everything posted by TheVat

  1. Yep, especially given the information that he knew the father living there to be abusive. Humans have a lot of retrospective bias in remembering past feelings. We fit them into a current narrative.
  2. You are clearly off your rocker!
  3. How would your proposed system deal with eutrophication? Seems like red tides, hypoxic zones, cyanobacteria blooms with their toxins, etc could be a problem. Also, what's the phosphorous content of these mid-ocean sediments that are being stirred up?
  4. Some paranormal phenomena are inherently so haphazard, so much fluke events tied to strong emotions and crisis, that they don't seem open to laboratory study. More like something rare seen in field research out in nature, where all you get over a long period are sporadic observations. Determining a sigma value would be really challenging. We can't, say, put people in a lab then kidnap their family members and see if the subjects report unusual and specific impressions. The research on anomalous and improbable events where unlikely details are somehow transfered is often plagued with potential leaks of information that the interviewer fails to consider or rule out. And, as @Genady makes clear, some people are going to be statistical outliers, who just happened to, say, have terrible acid reflux and chest pain at the same time a distant friend had a fatal heart attack. When the person later recalls their pain, they may tinker with the memory and imagine that the acid reflux was accompanied by a sense of something ominous. Self-report data is so often tainted by confabulation.
  5. Galaxies are mostly empty space. https://lovethenightsky.com/are-galaxies-mostly-empty-space/#:~:text=However%2C what we didn't,well over 99.99% empty space.
  6. Trump-Carlson ticket. "Bronze above, bronze below"
  7. Well said. I thought of that episode earlier as I followed this thread. The "casualties" had to go into a suicide booth didn't they? Viewing themselves as already dead. Yep. As @zapatos mentioned, it would be a kind of Catch-22: if foes trust each other enough to know their five warheads won't be attacked, then they wouldn't need the warheads in the first place. Powerful arms tend to lead to arms races and insane buildup of stockpiles.
  8. It could be something so rudimentary in humans that only the most dire and tragic events give a discernible signal. Your sad experience also seems to challenge conventional ideas of time and our perception of it.
  9. What do you think of Carl Jung's idea that paranormal experiences may be us tapping into a collective unconscious? A sort of mental internet. I've tended towards skepticism but have to acknowledge that cases of phenomena like crisis telepathy seem to be pretty well documented.
  10. Seems to be spreading. Don Lemon, of the infamous Nikki Haley (51) is past her prime remark, has just been booted by CNN. Wonder where Tucker will tan his testicles now. https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/tucker-carlson-end-of-men-testicle-tanning-1338944/
  11. https://knowablemagazine.org/article/food-environment/2023/climate-change-effect-on-plant-nutrients Atmospheric carbon dioxide is at its highest in human history. That’s probably fine for plants like the grasses the hoppers munch. They can turn that atmospheric carbon into carbohydrates and build more plant — in fact, plant biologists once thought all that extra carbon dioxide would simply mean better crop yields. But experiments in crops exposed to high carbon dioxide levels indicate that many food plants contain less of other nutrients than under carbon dioxide concentrations of the past. Several studies find that plants’ levels of nitrogen, for example, have fallen, indicating lower plant protein content. And some studies suggest that plants may also be deficient in phosphorus and other trace elements. The idea that plants grown in today’s carbon dioxide-rich era will contain less of certain other elements — a concept Kaspari categorizes as nutrient dilution — has been well-studied in crop plants. Nutrient dilution in natural ecosystems is less-studied, but scientists have observed it happening in several places, from the woods of Europe to the kelp forests off Southern California. Now researchers like Kaspari are starting to examine the knock-on effects — to see whether herbivores that eat those plants, such as grasshoppers and grazing mammals, are affected....
  12. May need a British --> American translator. I gather the peace sign, when held up backwards in UK, is a rude gesture. Not sure about the image source. Anyway, agree the new payment requirement is crap.
  13. That's good to hear. Perhaps coding skills are retained by doing other tasks employing logic, math, recursion, looping, etc. And so much depends on attention span and level of fascination when first learning a skill. I loved astronomy as a teen, joined a club, and it surprises me how much is retained.
  14. Cognitive skills vary a lot in how much maintenance they need. When young, I read books - and still do so. But if take a break from books, say a month or two, I resume reading easily. If I take such a long break from piano, my playing suffers terribly. Same with chess. Some mental activity involve a lot of intricate tasks and to be any good at the activity you have to stay at the very top of your abilities. (physics and higher math I would guess is like piano, you must keep at it almost daily) Others seem to rest on skills with more shelf life. And almost all skills benefit from attention span, so obsessive personality types generally have an easier path to developing notable cognitive skills. If they are hunter-gatherers, they become good animal trackers or mushroom finders; if they are modern people, they become scientists, musicians, coders, etc.
  15. Let's say full nuclear deterrence is reached by five warheads (of big city erasing megatonnage). Five can take out a major power's capital and four most economically vital cities. That would effectively collapse that nation. How could we at least reach that stage of MAD? It would keep maintaining that condition where WW3 is unthinkable, while reducing the potential to erase the planetary biosphere. E.g. wipe out Washington DC, New York, LA, Chicago, and Houston. USA collapses, but most of our territory would remain habitable and cropland outside of fallout plumes would be sufficient to feed many survivors. Industrial centers would remain, as would NG and petroleum fields, interstate highways and rails, wind turbines on the Great Plains, and refineries in Oklahoma, Kansas, couple other states. As this attack happened, we in turn would fire our five at Russia, taking out Moscow, etc. Both nations would vanish from the world stage, in terms of power and economy, and would spend decades if not centuries simply surviving and catching up, possibly as an aggregate of balkanized regions. The enemies would be, as Moon mentions, reemerging oligarchs using fascist tactics, offering their power to restore order. Balkan states might grow around cities like Atlanta, Denver, Seattle. Anyway, to keep this post from turning into a dystopian novel, back to main question: could just five big bombs apiece be a workable deterrence system?
  16. Pale leaves usually from watering issues. Either under or over watering.
  17. Perhaps a robust firewall between any AGI and the building's circuit breakers would ease some anxiety. (a metaphor, saying AI can only physically control what we allow) The greater danger from an AGI would actually be the danger of human confederates, i.e. those persuaded to enable it and assist some harmful plan. Just as there are fascist turds who follow Trump or Orban, there could be fascist turds who follow Lore (for non-Trekkies, that's the evil cyber-twin of Data, an android Starfleet officer).
  18. Go to Alpha Centauri, 4.25 light years away, at 99.9 percent the speed of light, the journey as observed by an observer on Earth would take a bit more than 4.25 years. On the ship, however, the travel time would be a little more than 60 days. The equivalence between time dilation and Lorentz contraction (linear, in the direction you are traveling) seems to throw people off. On the ship, one could easily imagine one had got to Centauri much faster than light, based on the subjective shipboard time and one's belief that the star is over 4 LY away. But really one has just contracted the intervening space wrt the ship.
  19. Yup. Immune response, analgesia, inflammation, BP, resting heart rate, all respond to increased interaction with people recognized as sympathetic. You could be Paul Kurtz, James Randi, Richard Dawkins, and if a shaman walked into your hospital room and began shaking a gourd full of seeds over your body and chanting, some of your biomarkers would improve. For sure, they would improve more if you had a deep cultural belief in the shaman's methods and healing powers.
  20. ChatGPT, is that you? Howdy!
  21. If Ukraine hadn't signed the Budapest Memorandum they would have nukes and Putin would have been likely deterred from attacking. So, in terms of realpolitik, the baboon approach is valid. In terms of a moral analysis, we get Mack's tightrope problem. Disarming Ukraine in 1994 meant there was no risk it could bare its nuclear fangs and have Russia call its bluff. If they had kept nukes, there would be some risk. It's the risk-loving poker players who sometimes gain power in a country, or a rogue military officer who breaks loose from central command, that make the risk Mack addresses a real one.
  22. I guess they are distinguishing between objective measures of safety and more subjective (clinging to nuclear teddy bears) political forms. Politics has a lot of threat gesturing. Like baboon troupes.
  23. Gould and others offer arguments for phenotypic traits that are neutral. Spandrels are an example. (Gould coined the term, going from the spandrels of San Marco) The human chin. Genady's earlobes. (mine are unusually purposeful) Gould and Richard Lewontin teamed up to make a critique of adaptationism that's pretty persuasive imo.
  24. I liked this. Baby steps away from the cliff. And this was sort of where START was headed. How that treaty can be restored I have no idea. I agree the US didn't really explore the philosophic questions early on the arms race, when asking them could have got us off on a different foot. But there was too much Red Menace hysteria, thanks to Sen. Joe McCarthy and others of his ilk.
  25. However (and your point about the wee fellas I did see) if the Big 5 disarmed (which was the thought experiment I was running) and the UN banned nukes, then we and our allies would be part of the coalition having the ugly task of enforcing the ban. If, say, Pakistan and NK failed to start dismantling their nukes as the rest of the nuclear countries were doing, they would quickly find themselves very unsafe. If the Security Council ever came together on this, the little holdouts would become the turds in the punchbowl. You may say I'm a dreamer.... Someplace like here? https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/10/europe/russia-putin-empire-restoration-endgame-intl-cmd/index.html Or from one of hundreds of other news outlets that have covered Putin's public remarks directly referencing his plans to rebuild the Empire. x-post with @iNow
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.