Then maybe, instead of just downvoting, these persons should have asked him to clarify and repharse his post. This would have actually led to an interesting dicussion, while downvoting gave nobody nothing. Maybe it should be possible to downvote a post only if you also reply to that post.
Randolf
Personally I think that this call voting is indeed useless and belongs to places such as Youtube or other such sites where you can’t expect a meaningful discussion in the first place. Here, if a person disagrees with you, I believe she or he should post a counter argument instead of yelling “your are wrong!”, that is, giving a negative vote.
The first picture is a dark image of a planet with a sligthly threatening atmosphere. It looks like the upper half of a mushroom cloud, but it could be also seen as the earth violently torn apart. This is why I think , given the context, that it symbolises the threat of a nuclear war, and more universally, the threat of a dystopia.
The last picture shows a beatiful utopia. I thought it’s there to give a message of the type: “If everything goes well, we can still achieve a very good future.” That is, while the first picture symbolises the threat of a dystopia, the last one symbolises the hope and possibility of an utopia.
Of course, this is merely my interpretation. There are very many ways one can inerprent these pictures.
I’m afraid you are making a very strong statement with hardly any evidence to support it. You merely claim that people who pursue gratitude-free goals are often religious people (source?) and that such goals are a myth and absurd. (Why?) I for one, don’t understand why such a goal would be necessarily absurd..
Also, I can imagine that even if I was the only person in the world, I would still pursue some goals.
Strange enough. After all, while I am a transhumanist to some degree and also enjoy scifi, I am far from being a genious. Still the message of the pictures were immeditately obvious.This would suggest towards what you said: they maybe appealing to general people, while not necessarily as appealing to those already very familiar with scifi and transhumanism.
I could indeed simply lie and play the role of an obeying soldier to get the position I were looking for. However, it is of course true that if I had born and lived in a country where people are continiously fed with nationalist propaganda, I would be less likely to disobey the rules or to think it’s wrong to retalite.
If I had been one of those persons with the missile warning and red button, I wouldn’t have pressed it even if I knew the warning was real. What use would it be to launch a barrage of nuclear weapons against normal citizens simply because their foolish leaders did so to you? It would only make things worse, and certainly wouldn’t save anyone. Primitive needs to revenge can be extremely dangerous with todays technology.
as interesting as picking up rocks and observing insects crawling under them, IMHO
What, insects are fascinating!
Rationality can be useful when drawing. It allows you to avoid simple mistakes which you could otherwise make. I think this is especially true when you are for example inking your work, or doing some other other task which is mostly mechanical. However, sometimes following mere feelings can provide very interesting results. I am not a good drawer, nor do I actually know anything about drawing, but I draw a little bit every now and then. I find drawing most enjoyable when I draw quided by intuition, just letting the pen draw curve after curve the way it feels. I have found that when I do this, I achieve results more to my liking than when I actually think about what to draw and how. Maybe this is simply because I don’t have much actual knowledge about drawing, I don’t know.
Anyway, interesting post, thanks.
This is another sort of mistake. Because a hypothesis can’t be tested by me does not mean that it is meaningless. Vereficationists would agree with this because they think verification works everywhere, even on the other side of the universe. If some alien race over there could have seen the spaceship, or seen something which made the probability of there being a spaceship there high, or not have, then the claim is not meaningless.
I don’t think I understand.. If it isn’t possible to ever verify the existence of these aliens, what does it matter that they could have seen the spaceship? Essentially, how does it help that some being A could verify a phenomenon if I can’t ever verify that this is indeed the case?
I left that field plank because I don’t think the question is well defined. It has very little meaning to assign probabilities on the existence of something as vaque as a god. Maybe there is a god, maybe there isn’t. It’s entirely beyond my scope.
Yes, I think you managed to put my thoughts into words very well here. Probably a lot more clearly than I.
That’s a bit differend from what I’m trying to say. My word choosing of intuition was clearly bad, I should have talked about mental experiences. My point is that when I do the mathematics, when I, for example, use the axioms and theorems of natural numbers to proof that 1+1 is 2, I have to rely on my memories and feelings at some point. If I use a theorem proven before, I must rely on my memories that I have proven that theorem before and correctly, but remembering is just another type of vaque mental experience. I could also remember axioms of natural numbers wrong, even if it would seem clear to me that I remember them correctly. I have to rely on the feeling of remembering correctly. This is why I define truth as what you truly believe. Once you have carefully checked that you used all the axioms and theorems correctly, you will truly believe that you made no mistake. Then you can truly believe that 1 + 1 is 2, and it’s safe to say its the truth.
Whetever it is a weaker statement or not isn’t the point. I only brought it up because it made me change the way I think about mathematics and the world. While I don’t know what you mean by “any story is as good as any other”, I do not believe that it is possible to give truth a honest definition which would leave no open questions about the very nature of truth, while still being entirely objective.
Yes, I agree, it doesn’t work on this case. It was an interesting talk though, thank you for that. Now I must sleep over this..
Yes, that’s pretty much what I would say. Also, a simple answer to the question would also be:
At least the part where you use feelings to verify you didn’t make an error. After writing the proof, you remember that you checked every part carefully that you didn’t make an error. But this remembering is a mere feeling.
My world view used to be differend until I read the following pharse somewhere. That moment I realised I can only be as sure as my feelings let me.
Not even mathematical facts necessarily hold since there could always be a magical demon blurring your mind, making you make errors and making you blind at them.
I still have a great interest in mathematics and am hoping my studies and everything goes well so I can bear the title of mathematican one day. Maybe my beliefs change when I get less green.
No, I think you understood pretty well what I meant. However, even though I may not be a rationalist myself, I think I can still take part in rational debate by embracing the definition of rational truth during that debate. Same way a true Christian can take part in a scientific debate about evolution, even if he doesn’t actually believe that evolution is true. Rational talk, just like any talking, can also change my feelings and intuitions and hence persuade me to change my subjective beliefs.
However, I now realise this wasn’t exactly the right place to tell about my idea of subjective truth. Sorry about that.
Hmm, well, if you truly believe that truth is subjective, then there’s nothing I can do to dissuade you, by definition—since my subjective opinion is as good as yours. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got to go build some hula-hoops, and then maybe take to the skies by will alone
Oh, you probably could. I’m not so fond on this definition. It’s just something I have found most satisfying so far but it’s still subject to chance (How ironic!).
I think he will have a strong feeling that pi is about 3.141… . Like I said, in my definition truth is subjective and may chance since it’s tied to the person’s beliefs / feelings. This may not seem beatiful to everyone, but I can live with that.
I think the main reason for this is that these persons have simply spent more time thinking about cyronics compared to other people. By spending time on this forum they have had a good chance of running into a discussion which has inspired them to read about it and sign up. Or perhaps people who are interested in cyronics are also interested in other topics LW has to offer, and hence stay in this place. In either case, it follows that they are probably also more knowledgeable about cyronics and hence understand what cyrotechnology can realistically offer currently or in the near future. In addition, these long-time guys might be more open to things such as cyronics in the ethical way.