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Let's make fun of Trump, bash him, etc. while we can!
(08-25-2016, 10:31 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote:
(08-25-2016, 06:07 PM)Classic-Xer Wrote: Neither of you are particularly normal people.

I can agree with this with considerable enthusiasm.  Eric and I agree with quite a few blue positions, but Eric's mystical slant an my own odd way of looking at things aren't typical.  If I were asked to nominate someone to go on a talk show representing a typical representative of blue values, I'd nominate neither Eric nor myself.

(08-25-2016, 06:07 PM)Classic-Xer Wrote: How many people do you know can identify with scientific or mystic values?

Quite a few, actually.  I worked at a high tech firm on the Route 128 corridor.  I knew a lot of engineers with strong scientific learn-from-the-world ways of looking at things.  That's part of why I was puzzled when you needed to be explained what a scientific world view is.  Around here, I'm not used to having to explain that.  

For a time in my 20s I was actively pursuing the mystical path.  In my experience there are far more scientific and technical people out there than mystical people, but if you look for mystical people one can find them... at least in heavily populated well educated areas like Greater Boston.  I suspect urban California would be similar.  The middle of the country?  I haven't spent significant time there, and when I was there I wasn't in my mystical phase, but I suspect mystics would be rare indeed.

(08-25-2016, 06:07 PM)Classic-Xer Wrote: Americans generally come from more or less the same place. A place we call America. You are correct. America has millions who are still tied to American values and the American beliefs that are directly associated with it. Are you familiar with American values? You should be since you been running into them and being pounded by them by a dedicated American that you claim to view as being extreme. I can be an extremely partisan American. Ask yourself a question, is it wise to be be politically associated with people who carry Mexican flags while they're burning an American flag? Is it wise to be associated with racists of other colors? Do Democrats deserve what's eventually coming them? You bet. Do I like Trump or the way he acts? Nope. Do I like Trump vs Hillary? You bet. I can think of no better candidate to unleash against Hillary Clinton.

You are definitely confusing rural red America with America.  You are more or less representative of a whole bunch of folk who share red values.  Ignore the science.  Believe the politician's promises.  Assume one has an ability to read God's mind.  There are similar numbers of people who share blue values.  Depending on where you look, you will find more of one or more of the other.  Depending on when you look, you will find more of one or the other.  The blue New Deal values were born in crisis and dominated through high and awakening.  The red have dominated the unravelling.  I don't see this as accident.  The blue New Deal values of coming together to work for the common good in desperate times reflect what needs to be done in a crisis.  The red take from the poor to give to the rich selfish indulgence is an unraveling thing.

But both the red and the blue are American.  FDR is at least as American as Reagan.  While you seem optimistic that your part of America can continue to dominate, looking at the polls for the upcoming election and looking at demographic data showing younger voters are coming in more secular and Democratic, I can't agree with you.
You are making a mistake by associating me with rural red America. I'm a city slicker who was born and raised in a suburban/urban area with a lot of different kinds of people. So, we actually share many of the same values as far as public services that are associated with them. If you want to stick with applying your red stereotype to whoever you want that's fine. All that does is allow me continue to apply my blue stereotype to whoever I want. Sounds silly and unproductive to me. But then again, I'm not supposed be as intelligent as someone like you.
.
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The great softening! "He hasn't changed his position on immigration; he's just changing the words he's saying"
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
Flip, meet Flop.

Vote for Donald Trump for President, and you have no idea of what you are getting.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


Reply
(08-26-2016, 01:50 AM)Classic-Xer Wrote: You are making a mistake by associating me with rural red America. I'm a city slicker who was born and raised in a suburban/urban area with a lot of different kinds of people. So, we actually share many of the same values as far as public services that are associated with them. If you want to stick with applying your red stereotype to whoever you want that's fine. All that does is allow me continue to apply my blue stereotype to whoever I want. Sounds silly and unproductive to me. But then again, I'm not supposed be as intelligent as someone like you.

You've been pushing the Reagan / Rand red unravelling approach all along, and I don't expect you to change. That would require your learning how to listen. I'm not going to accept responsibility for your applying stereotypes rather than paying attention to what others are saying. That's just your way. Nothing I say or do seems apt to stop it. I don't know that you are unintelligent, you just have well defended values and world view. Facts which conflict with your beliefs and values roll off you like water off a duck. This is hardly unique to you nor to those with red values. From my perspective, there is an epidemic of partisan thinking which is showing no sign of abating.
That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.
Reply
Everyone with a double-digit mental age has known all along that rounding up and deporting 11 million or 15 million or 20 million illegal aliens was never going to actually happen.

But the point I have been making all along is that even if we deported 3 or 4 million of them, the effect on the economy would be truly massive. It would re-create 1926 and its sub-2-per-cent jobless rate in pure peacetime all over again.

And Trump's victory has ended the Reagan/Rand red unraveling approach's political viability once and for all. It is now down to a choice between Trump's Malthusianism and Hillary's Marxism Lite (the "real thing" having been defeated along with Bernie Sanders).
"These, and many other matters which might be noticed, add a volume of unofficial declarations to the mass of organic utterances that this is a Christian nation" - Justice David Brewer, Church of the Holy Trinity v. United States, 1892
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(08-25-2016, 03:03 PM)Classic-Xer Wrote:
(08-25-2016, 01:06 PM)playwrite Wrote: This is the funniest thing on the Internet today!

[img][Image: anne%20coulter%20trump%20book_zpshxjkm4jn.jpg][/img]


Ann Coulter's Fabulous Twitter Meltdown: My Book! My Book!


Who's left to vote for this guy?  Cynic Hero and Classic Xer???

Beavisbutthead

41-42% of the electorate. Are you ready to embrace the Republicans and their followers who you blamed for the 2008 crash? Good luck with the banana republic during the crisis. Which revolution scares you more as far as finding your yourself directly caught up in, the French Revolution or the American Revolution? The common belief that Bob and I share is harsh lessons must learned in order to bring change. BTW, Anne Coulter ain't my type.

I know, I know, the zombie apocalypse is just around the next corner.... again.

Can you set a date that you'll give up this hope or is it something you're going to again warn the kids about as they gather around your deathbed (hey, by then, you can be the zombie!)?

At some point, as your tribe fades into memory as a national political force, we'll take you by the hand and try to comfort you.  But for now, we're kind of busy dismantling you - sorry, but that's got to come first.

Given that you all believe you look like this -

[Image: arnie%20s_zpsblzouwsg.jpg]

but actually more like this -

[Image: speedo-gun-guy_zpspgjysjvw.png]

- it's going to take awhile to get you to climb down.
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So which Donald Trump are we getting?

[Image: 336px-Schrodingers_cat.svg.png]


Schrödinger's cat (from Wiki)



Schrödinger's cat: a cat, a flask of poison, and a radioactive source are placed in a sealed box. If an internal monitor detects radioactivity (i.e., a single atom decaying), the flask is shattered, releasing the poison that kills the cat. The Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics implies that after a while, the cat is simultaneously alive and dead. Yet, when one looks in the box, one sees the cat either alive or dead, not both alive and dead. This poses the question of when exactly quantum superposition ends and reality collapses into one possibility or the other.

Whether Donald Trump keeps which of his contradictory promises is not up to the random decay of an atom; it will be up to President Trump himself.  It's easy for me to say spare the cat... we simply need to spare ourselves the danger of an analogous, i f less horrible plight.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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(08-26-2016, 01:18 PM)pbrower2a Wrote: So which Donald Trump are we getting?

[Image: 336px-Schrodingers_cat.svg.png]


Schrödinger's cat (from Wiki)



Schrödinger's cat: a cat, a flask of poison, and a radioactive source are placed in a sealed box. If an internal monitor detects radioactivity (i.e., a single atom decaying), the flask is shattered, releasing the poison that kills the cat. The Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics implies that after a while, the cat is simultaneously alive and dead. Yet, when one looks in the box, one sees the cat either alive or dead, not both alive and dead. This poses the question of when exactly quantum superposition ends and reality collapses into one possibility or the other.

Whether Donald Trump keeps which of his contradictory promises is not up to the random decay of an atom; it will be up to President Trump himself.  It's easy for me to say spare the cat... we simply need to spare ourselves the danger of an analogous, i f less horrible plight.

Yes, the quantum principle that the act of observation changes what you observe, or brings it into reality instead of mere potential. So, I suppose, the real Donald Trump will come into being if we elect him, and whatever he does that we can observe would be real. We just have no idea what that will be now, and we never will from one moment to the next even after he's elected.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
(08-26-2016, 09:03 AM)playwrite Wrote:
(08-25-2016, 03:03 PM)Classic-Xer Wrote:
(08-25-2016, 01:06 PM)playwrite Wrote: This is the funniest thing on the Internet today!

[img][Image: anne%20coulter%20trump%20book_zpshxjkm4jn.jpg][/img]


Ann Coulter's Fabulous Twitter Meltdown: My Book! My Book!


Who's left to vote for this guy?  Cynic Hero and Classic Xer???

Beavisbutthead

41-42% of the electorate. Are you ready to embrace the Republicans and their followers who you blamed for the 2008 crash? Good luck with the banana republic during the crisis. Which revolution scares you more as far as finding your yourself directly caught up in, the French Revolution or the American Revolution? The common belief that Bob and I share is harsh lessons must learned in order to bring change. BTW, Anne Coulter ain't my type.

I know, I know, the zombie apocalypse is just around the next corner.... again.

Can you set a date that you'll give up this hope or is it something you're going to again warn the kids about as they gather around your deathbed (hey, by then, you can be the zombie!)?

At some point, as your tribe fades into memory as a national political force, we'll take you by the hand and try to comfort you.  But for now, we're kind of busy dismantling you - sorry, but that's got to come first.

Given that you all believe you look like this -

[Image: arnie%20s_zpsblzouwsg.jpg]

but actually more like this -

[Image: speedo-gun-guy_zpspgjysjvw.png]

- it's going to take awhile to get you to climb down.

I wonder which one Classic Xer looks the most like. I know I am somewhere in between now.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
Bob Butler Wrote:Exercising my personal value of respecting both sides of a dispute, I would say both paradigms have value

Of course they do, that’s my point. 
Quote:Such folk will look at the numbers and history to determine the weight of merit of the two paradigms.

And people have done that.  That’s how these two concepts emerged.
Quote:Throwing in another example, could Darwin's principle of evolution be considered a paradigm?

Of course it is.  It’s one of the fundamental paradigms for biology.  When evolutionary theory matured and developed a fruitful mathematical theory of evolution, biology matured.  And look at the progress since then!  Mature sciences have valid paradigms.  Science in which opposing plausible paradigms are still battling it out, like economics, are still immature.  This isn’t necessarily  because of clashing values. Science is  difficult.
Quote:According to his understanding that holy works are unquestionably, absolutely and literally true, it follows that evolution is incorrect.
No it follows that a fundamentalist cannot become a competent biologist because his values conflict with the operating manual of biology.  He can still do chemistry, however.  I know some conservative Christian chemists who could be fundamentalists for all I know. I don’t look to them for religious guidance, just chemistry guidance.
 

Quote:...the world views and values of red and blue folk in the United States does effect their perception of the worth of your two economic paradigms.

I suspect self-interest has a stronger influence than values—we are a commercial republic as Vigil used to say.
Quote:I would happily agree with you that the above economic examples ought to be resolved using something similar to the scientific method.

The fact is they are.  The best way to resolve this is by experimentation.  We had the opportunity to try to experiment with this in 1920-21, 1929-33, 1970, 1980-82, 1987, 2000 and more recently in 2008-9.  The supply side paradigm yielded a good outcome in 1920-21, and with the Friedman modifications in 1980 and 1987.  It utterly failed in 1929-33.  Demand-side policy was employed successfully after 1933 and unsuccessfully in 1970.  In 2008 we sort of did both policies half-heartedly.  I will leave the interpretation of the results as successful or not to you.
Quote:It's just that political partisans often include these economic paradigms within the realm of their world views, and thus are apt to be no more objective and rational.

Since the answer is unclear, this is a fair approach.
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Bob Butler Wrote:You are all too correct in that many values issues are resolved by force, either political or physical.  You failed to mention courtesy and tolerance.

These are not a resolution.  The issue remains, it simply is avoided.
Quote:These too are part of a culture's world view and values system.  If one encounters something one doesn't like, is it really necessary to call a lawyer or to throw a rock?  Can smiling, wishing the other guy well and walking away be a possibility that should at least be considered?

Sure.  But lots of people won’t do that.  They will bring suit as advocates of gay marriage did and as  some who did not like a vendor being unwilling to provide services at a gay wedding did.  And as black folks at a lunch counter in 1960 did. In all these cases they could have walked away, but they did not and so things like this are no longer necessary.  Would you change that for the sake of comity?
Quote:There might be one effective logical, rational and scientific question to ask.  What would Jesus do?

Which is an unknowable thing as there are no reliable records of what Jesus would do in various situations. Amongst our extant manuscripts there exist more differences than there are words in the New Testament.
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Quote:The supply side paradigm yielded a good outcome in 1920-21


It did if you didn't die of starvation or exposure in the Forgotten Depression if 1921-22. But a visit to any large cemetery will show that many, many did in fact die.
"These, and many other matters which might be noticed, add a volume of unofficial declarations to the mass of organic utterances that this is a Christian nation" - Justice David Brewer, Church of the Holy Trinity v. United States, 1892
Reply
(08-26-2016, 02:52 PM)Mikebert Wrote: [quote Bob]
Throwing in another example, could Darwin's principle of evolution be considered a paradigm?
Quote:Of course it is.  It’s one of the fundamental paradigms for biology.  When evolutionary theory matured and developed a fruitful mathematical theory of evolution, biology matured.  And look at the progress since then!  Mature sciences have valid paradigms.  Science in which opposing plausible paradigms are still battling it out, like economics, are still immature.  This isn’t necessarily  because of clashing values. Science is  difficult.
Adopting a paradigm brings progress for a while; then's there's stagnation and anomalies and a new paradigm comes along. The battle resumes.

Just as the new quantum physics and relativity did not totally invalidate Newton's laws within certain parameters, the new biology of belief, of epigenetics, the gaia theory and so on will not totally invalidate neo-Darwinism; it will remain valid in certain respects and applications.

Quote:No it follows that a fundamentalist cannot become a competent biologist because his values conflict with the operating manual of biology.  He can still do chemistry, however.  I know some conservative Christian chemists who could be fundamentalists for all I know. I don’t look to them for religious guidance, just chemistry guidance.
I know of biologists who are successful whose spiritual views conflict with Darwin. Maybe they aren't fundamentalists, though.

Quote:The best way to resolve this is by experimentation.  We had the opportunity to try to experiment with this in 1920-21, 1929-33, 1970, 1980-82, 1987, 2000 and more recently in 2008-9.  The supply side paradigm yielded a good outcome in 1920-21, and with the Friedman modifications in 1980 and 1987.  It utterly failed in 1929-33.  Demand-side policy was employed successfully after 1933 and unsuccessfully in 1970.  In 2008 we sort of did both policies half-heartedly.  I will leave the interpretation of the results as successful or not to you.

I'm not aware of demand-side economic policies being employed in 1970. Maybe you mean 1965?
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
(08-26-2016, 03:17 PM)Mikebert Wrote:
Bob Butler Wrote:You are all too correct in that many values issues are resolved by force, either political or physical.  You failed to mention courtesy and tolerance.

These are not a resolution.  The issue remains, it simply is avoided.
Quote:These too are part of a culture's world view and values system.  If one encounters something one doesn't like, is it really necessary to call a lawyer or to throw a rock?  Can smiling, wishing the other guy well and walking away be a possibility that should at least be considered?

Sure.  But lots of people won’t do that.  They will bring suit as advocates of gay marriage did and as  some who did not like a vendor being unwilling to provide services at a gay wedding did.  And as black folks at a lunch counter in 1960 did. In all these cases they could have walked away, but they did not and so things like this are no longer necessary.  Would you change that for the sake of comity?

I'm not an expert on the Alt-Right.  From what I gather, they are not one movement, but a mix of associated movements.  One of these is a a defense of white male culture.  It is proposed that in recent times, if any minority, gender or similar group other than white male heterosexuals wants to get together and celebrate their identity, the liberal left will applaud, help them find a room on campus, lend them some balloons and streamers, and the minority subculture will be welcomed to celebrate.  (This might even involve guys dancing in white dresses.)  On the other hand, if it is noted that a founding father who did much good for the country owned slaves, or that a president of the United States was racist in a way that was normal for his time but is no longer acceptable, the liberals will try to tear down monuments, remove names from college buildings, and otherwise diminish and demean all that white males have done for America.

Further, if a group gathers together and attempts to preserve a bit of traditional America, perhaps opposing the building of a mosque on a street that otherwise features traditional victorian architecture, you get another set of tensions.  "Welcome diversity!" says the liberals.  "Preserve tradition and heritage!" says some of the Alt Right.

We are becoming a hyper sensitive conflict seeking intolerant country.  I don't have a lot of sympathy for white males heterosexuals feeling picked on.  I'm a white male heterosexual myself.  I've had some traditional prerogatives and am willing to show a little extra courtesy and respect to other groups who haven't habitually been on the sunny side of easy street.  My instinct isn't to sympathize with haves who want more.  At the same time, some liberal culture warriors are being more a pain in the ass than they really have to be.  If I'm making reasonable attempts to show respect and some hypersensitive champion of political correctness decides to imagine a slight and make a fuss, I'll suggest that sometime it's the militant aggressively pushing political correctness that is at fault.

This isn't worth violence.  Nobody ought to be drawing guns and shooting each other over the question of whether a college building must be renamed, or a statue be removed.  It's barely worth getting lawyers involved, though if you must you must.

As a whole I've seen too much of this sort of thing, and don't want to see it blow up into another excuse for people to not get along.  From your comment on guys dancing in white dresses, perhaps you disagree.  Perhaps you think any excuse to become an obnoxious (expletive deleted) is a good excuse.  I think we could do more courtesy and mellow.

(08-26-2016, 03:17 PM)Mikebert Wrote:
Quote:There might be one effective logical, rational and scientific question to ask.  What would Jesus do?

Which is an unknowable thing as there are no reliable records of what Jesus would do in various situations. Amongst our extant manuscripts there exist more differences than there are words in the New Testament.

First, you deleted the smiley on the above quote.  The smiley was part of the message.

Second, yes, it is impossible to know precisely what His message was.  The apostles had different agendas and slants.  We've had a couple of millennia of churchmen with agendas spinning The Message in nigh on every way imaginable.  Your typical guy on the street asking himself what Jesus would do likely wouldn't be able to justify his answer before a tenured academic tribunal of Jesus experts.

Third...  Can you come up with a better question?  While everyone and his sister will have a different spin on Jesus, what other question would pull out the best side of a typical American's sense of morality, peace and justice?  Hey, I haven't got Religion at the top of my values chain.  It's at the bottom.  I'm not proposing to invoke religious law and bring back the Inquisition.  Still, not every question can be answered using scientific methods.

Given our culture, if one wants someone to consider if he is doing the proper moral thing, it's not a dumb question.

Or do you want morality, peace and justice?  Are you one of those angry white male heterosexuals who wants to bully and make sure his culture and manners remain dominant?  To show courtesy respect is to diminish the amount of respect other groups have to show you?

If I were Jesus, first I would expect you to kneel and subjugate yourself before me...   NOT!
That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.
Reply
(08-25-2016, 11:33 AM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote:
(08-25-2016, 11:24 AM)pbrower2a Wrote:
(08-25-2016, 07:23 AM)Classic-Xer Wrote: Question. If you fall in a hole and can't get out are you going to wait for science or pray for science or call out science to either help or assist you with getting out of the hole. I place God's opinion of me above all.

If you believe in either science, God, or both, then you will not let either be your sole means of attempting to escape a dangerous circumstance. You will call for help. You will try to extricate yourself from the dangerous situation. Need I say more/ If God cannot be relied upon for miracles, then science does not lend itself to offering miracles.

Personally, if I were concerned about falling into holes, and if I were given a choice between a cell phone and a crucifix as a precaution against the threat, I'd go with the cell phone.
I'd choose the cell phone too because I'm not a Christian. The crucifix probably wouldn't do me much good as far as saving me.
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(08-26-2016, 02:52 PM)Mikebert Wrote: Since the answer is unclear, this is a fair approach.

The base point is that when working with someone who is really strong into religion or politics, or perhaps other non-scientific ways of knowing the world, science or any form of observation based analysis can be irrelevant to the other guy in deciding a question or analyzing a situation.  I sense I'm stating this in a way you're not satisfied with, but the base point is that you can't expect others to always defer to your own world view and values.  You may think you are using the one and only obvious and correct way to understand something, but not everyone will agree.  You might as well be bringing a table tennis paddle to a football field.  The rules, the ways of scoring points, the size of the ball, are all different.  People aren't playing the same games.  The gears just don't engage.  If the quarterback throws you a football 50 yards in the air, forget the table tennis paddle, you'd best catch the ball.

Recently on this thread I've been engaging Classic as the red champion, Eric as the blue, with you championing science.  If all three of you aren't happy with me, perhaps I'm doing something right?  Wink  I was hoping, though, that science's champion could be a little more open to new paradigms.  According to my notes, it's supposed to be that way.  When we move towards the subject of guys dancing in white dresses though, your usual scientific objectivity and analysis fades as you operate in the realms of culture and politics.  

This illustrates what I mean when I say most individuals don't operate in one realm of knowledge.  Most everyone has to shift between various ways of looking at things.  Stock market cycles and guys dancing in white dresses belong in different mental realms.  Most everyone will have to shift between such realms in the course of living their lives, and not be aware that they are doing it.  Different folks will spend different amounts of time in different realms, be most at home in different places, and shift under different circumstances.  There has to be a paradigm in that somewhere.  If one wants to make sense of the convoluted conversations we have around here, it is interesting to keep track of who is working in what realm and maybe even try to follow.
That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.
Reply
(08-27-2016, 12:19 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote:
(08-26-2016, 02:52 PM)Mikebert Wrote: Since the answer is unclear, this is a fair approach.

The base point is that when working with someone who is really strong into religion or politics, or perhaps other non-scientific ways of knowing the world, science or any form of observation based analysis can be irrelevant to the other guy in deciding a question or analyzing a situation.  I sense I'm stating this in a way you're not satisfied with, but the base point is that you can't expect others to always defer to your own world view and values.  You may think you are using the one and only obvious and correct way to understand something, but not everyone will agree.  You might as well be bringing a table tennis paddle to a football field.  The rules, the ways of scoring points, the size of the ball, are all different.  People aren't playing the same games.  The gears just don't engage.  If the quarterback throws you a football 50 yards in the air, forget the table tennis paddle, you'd best catch the ball.
What you need is the best way of understanding the kind of subject matter you want to know. There are four basic ways of knowing: art, mystical religion, philosophy and science, and possibly gradations in between. Politics is not a mode of knowing, because it's a mode of action, acting on your knowledge, or a kind of subject matter; not a method of knowing it. Knowing politics would be political science, or political philosophy. And it's an art too, of course. Trump is a political artist, or more exactly, an entertainer. To say politics or law is a way of knowing, is like saying the atomic structure is a way of knowing. How you know it, the way you study and observe it, affects the subject matter and your view of it, but knowledge and subject matter is not identical.

Quote:Recently on this thread I've been engaging Classic as the red champion, Eric as the blue, with you championing science.  If all three of you aren't happy with me, perhaps I'm doing something right?  Wink  I was hoping, though, that science's champion could be a little more open to new paradigms.  According to my notes, it's supposed to be that way.  When we move towards the subject of guys dancing in white dresses though, your usual scientific objectivity and analysis fades as you operate in the realms of culture and politics.  
That's true. But are you doing something right? You always think so, as fully as those you "engage" might. And you can't see that fact very well. So operating within that realm of self-delusion, you have your limits.
Quote:This illustrates what I mean when I say most individuals don't operate in one realm of knowledge.  Most everyone has to shift between various ways of looking at things.  Stock market cycles and guys dancing in white dresses belong in different mental realms.  Most everyone will have to shift between such realms in the course of living their lives, and not be aware that they are doing it.  Different folks will spend different amounts of time in different realms, be most at home in different places, and shift under different circumstances.  There has to be a paradigm in that somewhere.  If one wants to make sense of the convoluted conversations we have around here, it is interesting to keep track of who is working in what realm and maybe even try to follow.

I agree. Maybe "try to follow;" do you? Not often where I lead, at least.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
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(08-27-2016, 01:00 AM)Classic-Xer Wrote: I'd choose the cell phone too because I'm not a Christian. The crucifix probably wouldn't do me much good as far as saving me.

You are not Christian, and you are not a Republican, but you believe their ideas? What does it mean, then, to say you are "not" those things?
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
(08-26-2016, 07:16 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote: From your comment on guys dancing in white dresses, perhaps you disagree. 

I didn't make a comment about guys dancing in white dresses. Here is what I said:

For example, much of Trump’s appeal is because a lot of folks are sick and tired of progressives stuffing PC down their throats. Now we are supposed to celebrate men wearing dresses?  What the fuck is wrong with America?

The statement about men and dresses is part of the example, as is the last statement.  It is not a statement of personal views.  The transgender thing (what the men in dresses refers to) isn't of concern to me.  Neither is the PC stuff on campus or terrorism.  In all these cases they are things I have encountered on the internet or in the media, but not in real life.
Reply
(08-26-2016, 03:40 PM)Anthony Wrote:
Quote:The supply side paradigm yielded a good outcome in 1920-21


It did if you didn't die of starvation or exposure in the Forgotten Depression if 1921-22.  But a visit to any large cemetery will show that many, many did in fact die.

The 80-year rule suggests that the busts of 1920 and 2000 were similar in timing and effect: Americans got out of the recession, learned the wrong lessons, and set up an even bigger Crash because they applied the wrong ansers.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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