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#121 |
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On May 9, 4:41 pm, Jack Hollis <xslee...@aol.com> wrote:
> On Thu, 8 May 2008 22:50:13 -0700 (PDT), "Paul G." <carb...@egine.com> > wrote: > > > Every seaport in the world is going > >to be under water. Many trillions of dollars of infrastructure, > >refineries, etc would have to be rebuilt. > > One of the advantages of that is the new facilities are made from the > latest technology. > > >What is going to happen is > >mass starvation, millions of refugees, and wars over resources. No > >one is going to be planting wheat and corn on "virgin tundra" soon > >enough to feed the existing population. There will be a massive die- > >off. > > What nonsense. These changes take place gradually over decades at the > fastest. Humans will adjust if they have to. Evem if they don't > perhaps it's time to thin the herd and improve the gene pool. The 100' rise in sea level that you specified would be catastrophic even if it took 100 years. It would not be possible to simply rebuild, you'd probably have to rebuild 3 or 4 times as the sea level continued to rise. Where would the money come from? The most valuable real estate around the world would be wiped out and commerce severely disrupted. Bin Laden destroyed 2 buildings. You seem to think it's no biggie if every port city in the world was devastated. Bin Laden killed 3,000, you're saying "perhaps it's time to thin the herd and improve the gene pool". You right wing traitors make bin Laden look like an underachiever. And you say you have a son- so your attitude is "I've got mine, Jack, screw the grandkids." Ah, "family values", Republican-style. I'd simply like to leave my grandkids a country in as good a shape as it was when it was handed over to me. -Paul |
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#122 |
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On May 11, 12:09 am, Michael Press <rub...@pacbell.net> wrote:
> In article > <d7ddf1ee-1266-471e-83d2-9c1979cc1...@n1g2000prb.googlegroups.com>, > "Paul G." <carb...@egine.com> wrote: > > > > > On May 9, 1:59 pm, Michael Press <rub...@pacbell.net> wrote: > > > In article > > > <be89f6b0-43b5-4993-b3f4-5cc2484e2...@b5g2000pri.googlegroups.com>, > > > Robert Chung <rech...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On May 9, 11:31 am, Michael Press <rub...@pacbell.net> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > Individuals or groups calling themselves `reality based' > > > > > > > > > commit hubris. The laws of irony are against them. > > > > > > > > > Read the link. > > > > > > > > I read it, and stand by what I said. > > > > > > > I am not surprised. > > > > > > I _am_ surprised. > > > > > Where do you disagree with what I said? > > > > > Hmmm. You're saying you're surprised that I'm not surprised? That does > > > > surprise me. > > > > No. I am surprised that you seem to disapprove of what I say: > > > that self-labeling with the tag `reality based' is hubris. > > > But, then, you are not giving clues to what you think, > > > and I only infer that you disapprove of what I say. > > > What inanity. There is no hubris involved in acknowledging reality. > > Maybe you're suggesting that reality isn't reality. But, then, you are > > not giving clues to what you think, and I only infer that you > > disapprove of what we say. > > I said exactly what I think. > You said you read it. I'm sure you think you read it. Let me refresh your memory: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reality-based_community You then said "self-labeling with the tag `reality based' is hubris." I wouldn't agree with that even if it were true, but it's not true. According to the article the source of the term is an unnamed aide to George W. Bush: "The aide said that guys like me were "in what we call the reality- based community," which he defined as people who "believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality." So we were labeled, rather than being self-labeling. However, I embrace that label. I DO believe that "solutions emerge from the judicious study of discernible reality." It's not like we're claiming that we're "saved" or "perfected" or "god's chosen" or some similar nonsense. Now THAT'S hubris. -Paul |
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#123 |
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On Mon, 12 May 2008 12:25:46 -0700 (PDT), "Paul G."
<carbide@egine.com> wrote: >> What nonsense. These changes take place gradually over decades at the >> fastest. Humans will adjust if they have to. Evem if they don't >> perhaps it's time to thin the herd and improve the gene pool. > >The 100' rise in sea level that you specified would be catastrophic >even if it took 100 years. It would not be possible to simply rebuild, >you'd probably have to rebuild 3 or 4 times as the sea level continued >to rise. At current rates, even with an acceleration factor put into the equation, it's estimated that the seas will rise about 280 to 340 mm in 100 years. At that rate a 100 foot rise in sea levels will take almost 10,000 years. Even if you have to build new seaports every time the sea rises by 10 feet, you only have to rebuild every thousand years. No problem. http://www.pol.ac.uk/psmsl/author_a...2006_024826.pdf |
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#124 |
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On Mon, 12 May 2008 12:25:46 -0700 (PDT), "Paul G."
<carbide@egine.com> wrote: >Bin Laden destroyed 2 buildings. You seem to think it's no biggie if >every port city in the world was devastated. Bin Laden killed 3,000, >you're saying "perhaps it's time to thin the herd and improve the gene >pool". You right wing traitors make bin Laden look like an >underachiever. Actually, some theorists believe it was the population reduction during the last ice age that led to modern humans. It's estimated that only a few thousand humans survived. Homo Sapiens before the ice age were different from the ones that came after the ice age. So it's not clear that population bottlenecks are a bad thing. Unlike you, I have faith that the human race will adjust to whatever the situation presents. |
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#125 |
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On Mon, 12 May 2008 12:52:44 -0700 (PDT), "Paul G."
<carbide@egine.com> wrote: >However, I >embrace that label. I DO believe that "solutions emerge from the >judicious study of discernible reality." It's not like we're claiming >that we're "saved" or "perfected" or "god's chosen" or some similar >nonsense. However, it does claim that you know what reality is. |
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#126 |
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On May 12, 5:13 pm, Jack Hollis <xslee...@aol.com> wrote:
> On Mon, 12 May 2008 12:52:44 -0700 (PDT), "Paul G." > > <carb...@egine.com> wrote: > >However, I > >embrace that label. I DO believe that "solutions emerge from the > >judicious study of discernible reality." It's not like we're claiming > >that we're "saved" or "perfected" or "god's chosen" or some similar > >nonsense. > > However, it does claim that you know what reality is. I'm fortunate to live in a time when a lot of the basic stuff has been worked out- most of us know the earth is not flat, it revolves around the sun rather than vice versa, the stars in the "firmament" move, the universe and earth are respectively around 13 and 4 billion years old, etc etc. Then there is the really obvious stuff- Bush is the worst president in history, the Iraq war was an unnecessary fiasco, the war in Afghanistan is going badly. As an example of "discernible reality" here are US combat deaths in Afghanistan by year: Year US 2008 26 2007 117 2006 98 2005 99 2004 52 2003 48 2002 49 2001 12 Total 501 Note the trend. That's the opportunity cost of diverting scarce resources to the fiasco in Iraq, and proof that the best troops in the world cannot overcome incompetent civilian leadership. -Paul |
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#127 |
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"Paul G." <carbide@egine.com> wrote in message news:f7e2b0d9-562e-4947-9298-66e9616097e7@b9g2000prh.googlegroups.com... > On May 12, 5:13 pm, Jack Hollis <xslee...@aol.com> wrote: >> On Mon, 12 May 2008 12:52:44 -0700 (PDT), "Paul G." >> >> <carb...@egine.com> wrote: >> >However, I >> >embrace that label. I DO believe that "solutions emerge from the >> >judicious study of discernible reality." It's not like we're >> >claiming >> >that we're "saved" or "perfected" or "god's chosen" or some similar >> >nonsense. >> >> However, it does claim that you know what reality is. > > I'm fortunate to live in a time when a lot of the basic stuff has been > worked out- most of us know the earth is not flat, it revolves around > the sun rather than vice versa, the stars in the "firmament" move, the > universe and earth are respectively around 13 and 4 billion years > old, etc etc. > > Then there is the really obvious stuff- Bush is the worst president in > history, the Iraq war was an unnecessary fiasco, the war in > Afghanistan is going badly. As an example of "discernible reality" > here are US combat deaths in Afghanistan by year: > Year US > 2008 26 > 2007 117 > 2006 98 > 2005 99 > 2004 52 > 2003 48 > 2002 49 > 2001 12 > Total 501 > > Note the trend. That's the opportunity cost of diverting scarce > resources to the fiasco in Iraq, and proof that the best troops in the > world cannot overcome incompetent civilian leadership. > -Paul The most difficult task in the world is being minister to an idiot king. Phil H |
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#128 |
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On Tue, 13 May 2008 10:16:49 -0700 (PDT), "Paul G."
<carbide@egine.com> wrote: >I'm fortunate to live in a time when a lot of the basic stuff has been >worked out- most of us know the earth is not flat, it revolves around >the sun rather than vice versa, the stars in the "firmament" move, the >universe and earth are respectively around 13 and 4 billion years >old, etc etc. I'm afraid that even these most basic things are full of assumptions. You assume that the earth, flat or not, is real. How could you possibly know this in a way that is separate from your subjective experience? There is no such thing as objective reality. |
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#129 |
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On May 14, 1:42 pm, Jack Hollis <xslee...@aol.com> wrote:
> On Tue, 13 May 2008 10:16:49 -0700 (PDT), "Paul G." > > <carb...@egine.com> wrote: > >I'm fortunate to live in a time when a lot of the basic stuff has been > >worked out- most of us know the earth is not flat, it revolves around > >the sun rather than vice versa, the stars in the "firmament" move, the > >universe and earth are respectively around 13 and 4 billion years > >old, etc etc. > > I'm afraid that even these most basic things are full of assumptions. > You assume that the earth, flat or not, is real. How could you > possibly know this in a way that is separate from your subjective > experience? There is no such thing as objective reality. Nevertheless, if you ride through a large enough pothole, you will bend your rims, and it does no good to explain to the pothole that it is merely a construct through which you approximate the true nature of roadness; the Platonic ideal of a road, after all, is flat. Man, I miss the good days when conservatives would beat up softheaded liberals and strawman postmodernists, claiming they said everything was subjective, and were out to overthrow Western Science, etc. That was always a caricature, although there were a few people who actually fit it. Now that this particular culture war has turned a corner, all of a sudden it becomes convenient for wingers to reject empiricism, so they do. Ben P.S. It's a perfectly legitimate position to reject the idea that a person can have purely objective knowledge of the natural world. However, to take this a step beyond and reject empirical knowledge derived from the study of phenomena outside oneself, is, well ... It's an old chestnut. Boswell says that Samuel Johnson, on hearing that Bishop George Berkeley denied the existence of external realities, kicked a rock and said, "Thus do I refute Berkeley." http://www.samueljohnson.com/refutati.html |
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#130 |
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On May 14, 2:42*pm, Jack Hollis <xslee...@aol.com> wrote:
> On Tue, 13 May 2008 10:16:49 -0700 (PDT), "Paul G." > > <carb...@egine.com> wrote: > >I'm fortunate to live in a time when a lot of the basic stuff has been > >worked out- most of us know the earth is not flat, it revolves around > >the sun rather than vice versa, the stars in the "firmament" move, the > >universe and earth are respectively around 13 *and 4 billion years > >old, *etc etc. > > I'm afraid that even these most basic things are full of assumptions. > You assume that the earth, flat or not, is real. *How could you > possibly know this in a way that is separate from your subjective > experience? *There is no such thing as objective reality. You sound like the desperate defense lawyer in an extortion case where I was on the jury. The FBI had phone recordings of multiple explicit threats and tons of other evidence. The lawyer tried to build a defense out of minor inconsistencies elsewhere in the evidence and argued "How can you convict when we don't know what really happened"? I had the hubris to vote for conviction being the law and order liberal that I am. Bret |
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#131 |
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On May 14, 3:04 pm, "b...@mambo.ucolick.org" <b...@mambo.ucolick.org>
wrote: > Samuel Johnson [...] said, "Thus do I refute Berkeley." I know a guy who was told he had little chance of getting tenure here. He sought, received, and accepted an offer from that school down the peninsula. He said something very much like Johnson. |
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#132 |
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Bret wrote:
> You sound like the desperate defense lawyer in an extortion case where > I was on the jury. The FBI had phone recordings of multiple explicit > threats and tons of other evidence. The lawyer tried to build a > defense out of minor inconsistencies elsewhere in the evidence and > argued "How can you convict when we don't know what really happened"? > I had the hubris to vote for conviction being the law and order > liberal that I am. Oh christ, now you're going to start Greg up on this. -- Bill Asher |
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#133 |
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On May 14, 4:20*pm, William Asher <gcn...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> Bret wrote: > > You sound like the desperate defense lawyer in an extortion case where > > I was on the jury. The FBI had phone recordings of multiple explicit > > threats and tons of other evidence. The lawyer tried to build a > > defense out of minor inconsistencies elsewhere in the evidence and > > argued "How can you convict when we don't know what really happened"? > > I had the hubris to vote for conviction being the law and order > > liberal that I am. > > Oh christ, now you're going to start Greg up on this. There was plenty of evidence to convict you of dumbassy and so I did. I'm not the pettifogging dumbass who gave birth to Ben Franklin, but I was there when it happened. |
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#134 |
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On May 14, 1:42 pm, Jack Hollis <xslee...@aol.com> wrote:
> On Tue, 13 May 2008 10:16:49 -0700 (PDT), "Paul G." > > <carb...@egine.com> wrote: > >I'm fortunate to live in a time when a lot of the basic stuff has been > >worked out- most of us know the earth is not flat, it revolves around > >the sun rather than vice versa, the stars in the "firmament" move, the > >universe and earth are respectively around 13 and 4 billion years > >old, etc etc. > > I'm afraid that even these most basic things are full of assumptions. > You assume that the earth, flat or not, is real. How could you > possibly know this in a way that is separate from your subjective > experience? There is no such thing as objective reality. "If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit". -Paul |
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#135 |
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On May 8, 11:50*pm, Howard Kveck <YOURhow...@h-SHOESbomb.com> wrote:
> In article <bb78e344-0cc3-4681-9e64-134f7271e...@d77g2000hsb.googlegroups.com>, > > *Bret <bret.w...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On May 8, 9:41*pm, Howard Kveck <YOURhow...@h-SHOESbomb.com> wrote: > > > In article <482314ac$0$14355$e4fe5...@news.xs4all.nl>, > > > *Ted van de Weteringe <myfulln...@xs4all.nl.invalid> wrote: > > > > > Mark & Steven Bornfeld wrote: > > > > > "reality-based community"---I love it! *When do we move? > > > > >http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reality-based_community > > > > * *I'm betting on the aide in question being Karl Rove. > > > I think it was Douglas Feith. I do hope we find out some day. > > * *You know, Feith is also a good choice. But it sounds so Rovian to me - similar to > his comment to NPR host Robert Siegel about the then-impending '06 elections: "You > may end up with a different math, but you're entitled to your math. I'm entitled to > 'the' math." The more I think about it the more it sounds like someone on a manic high. I once had a housemate that was an undiagnosed manic depressive. Their behavior became increasingly erratic until they were confronted by the household. We were told that we just didn't understand what it was like to be perfect. Things went downhill from there. Police, hospital, lithium, bus ticket home to live with parents. Our landlord was manic depressive himself and totally understood. Bret |
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