Jump to content

Ragitsu

HERO Member
  • Posts

    22,095
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    21

Status Updates posted by Ragitsu

  1. Quote

    My question has always been this: There’s this whole thing about abortion. But no one is willing to step up with daycare. Or the cost of healthcare. Or defund the military by a few million — against its trillions — to rebuild our public school system. You can’t save the children then forget about them. It’s not about being Christian; it’s code for racism and suppression of women.

     

    THANK YOU for saying that. I always ask this of Anti-Choice people, but they never give me a satisfactory answer.

    1. Show previous comments  1 more
    2. Thia Halmades

      Thia Halmades

      The other thing that warrants mentioning is this: Anti-Choice is fine. Just as women didn’t want the right to vote, and fought against suffragists. I, myself, am PRO LIFE. I have a baby. I cannot imagine terminating a pregnancy. But I will FOREVER vote PRO-CHOICE. Why? Because it’s not my f’n place. It’s not my call. It’s frankly none of my GD business, and as a conservative (no true Scotsman fallacy, don’t even start me on the whole RINO blah blah blah) I am a HUGE supporter of individual liberty and an equally loud supporter of my right to make my own choices. So that’s the thing. 

       

      You don’t LOSE ANYTHING but giving someone ELSE a choice they very clearly need. I could go on like this for, frankly, hours. But you get the gist.

    3. Ragitsu

      Ragitsu

      I use the term "Anti-Choice" for two reasons.

       
      1. "Pro-Life" brings an asymmetry to a pair of definitions that should be accurate and focused on one single topic -> "Pro Choice" and "Anti Choice" as it relates to the option to have an abortion. The reasons as to "why" someone holds a P.O.V. can be brought forth in good time, but everyone should be on equal footing.
       
      2. Many "Pro-Life" people are for the death penalty, for imperialist/colonialist policies (i.e., offensive wars in general), for the "War on Drugs", for lethal means of self-defense, against universal healthcare, against universal maternity/paternity leave, against S.N.A.P., against subsidizing healthy food over junk food, resistant to green energy plans, et cetera. If someone truly is "Pro-Life" across the board, great: I applaud them for their consistency. However, because the discussion is not about the topic of life (and quality of life) in a wider sense, a broad term being used in this narrow context is inappropriate.
    4. Thia Halmades

      Thia Halmades

      I am very tired and should be in bed, but I’m watching the aftermath of the VP debate. I’m reasonably certain I agree completely with everything you said, but let me respond in more detail after I get some sleep.

  2.  

    (All in good fun.)

    1. L. Marcus

      L. Marcus

      ... This is true.

  3.  

    1. Starlord

      Starlord

      Yeah, I've seen that before on one of the many SW documentaries I've watched.  They came up with a lot of ingenious sound and FX innovations in the making of the first movie.

  4.  

    Apparently, if you do the "right thing", you'll get your doggy treat.

    1. Old Man

      Old Man

      Great video, thanks!  Although I wonder how "undecided" voters can even exist nowadays.

  5.  

    1. Cancer

      Cancer

      A point I make in my classes about this: we do not yet know the resolution to the Fermi Paradox.

       

      In that I like to draw attention to another astronomical paradox, one framed multiple times since at least the Greeks, but most recently early in the 19th Century, Olbers' Paradox.  If you assume that the Universe obeys standard Euclidean geometry, and that it is infinite in spatial extent, and it is eternal (it has existed for infinite time, and presumably will continue to do so for infinite time, though that last is not required in the paradox), and uniform in content when averaged over an adequately large volume ... then one has to conclude that all sightlines in the Universe must eventually intersect the surface of a star, which means, the whole sky should be about as bright at the Sun's disk.  Obviously that is not observed.

       

      In the context of comparing this to the Fermi Paradox, I point out that all but one of the assumptions that went into Olbers' Paradox are incorrect (and perhaps a second is correct, but we can't evaluate that one).  The Universe is not eternal: it has a finite age.  It does not obey Euclidean geometry, though the degree to which it fails to do so does not seem to be important in the resolution of this paradox.  It may or may not be infinite in spatial extent, but we can't evaluate that because of the finite speed of light and the finite age of the Universe.  The one that that we do observe to be true is the one about uniformity in content, once one makes allowance for the finite age of the Universe and the evolution of the matter in it over time.  And, capping all that off, at the time of the framing of the paradox, absolutely none of those failures in assumption was known at the time (you could imagine all of those failures as possible resolutions to the paradox, but utterly no evidence was available to support belief in one as the resolution), and would not be known for more than half a century.

       

      So ... what is the resolution to the Fermi Paradox?  It is way too common to pick one assumption as being the obvious incorrect one, and wave away the problem.  As an instructor, I give that sort of thinking a grade of B-minus.  What if all the assumptions made in the Fermi Paradox are incorrect?  Or more than one, and not all?  Each failure and combination of failures has other implications for our views about life in the Universe, and it is worth considering those implications for each individual possible failure and combinations of them, because all of them lead to profound conclusions in their own right.

       

      So ... When I am asked about life elsewhere in the Universe, I avoid the "whole Universe" question.  I have no opinion informed enough to pass along.

       

      But when I started teaching, which was in a course on the Solar System, I did adopt an answer to the question about life on Mars (and this is any life, not intelligent, technological life, which the Fermi Paradox is concerned with).  And my answer is: I think that once we have the requisite ability on site to find it, then we will find that there is life on Mars, somewhere. 

       

      However, I am not willing to bet more than a beer on the issue.

    2. Ragitsu

      Ragitsu

      Quote

      “Two possibilities exist: either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying.”

      - Arthur C. Clarke.

       

      My inner cynic hopes that we aren't alone; I have to believe there's at least one lifeform out in the cosmos that hasn't screwed up as badly as homo sapiens. Then again, there is the possibility that we're the best of a bad lot. Golly...that is a depressing thought.

       

      Still, even *if* we happen to be the only fully sentient/sapient species in this cosmic neighborhood, there could be an alternative universe - part of the proposed "multiverse" - that is truly teeming with life; my romantic side wants this to be the case, even though the implications are nothing short of an existential crisis for many people.

       

      --- --- ---

       

      Anyhow, thank you, Cancer. I appreciate the banquet you've given me to savor, but I regret I have little to offer in return.

  6. .

    1. Hermit

      Hermit

      More for the character he played in A Knight's Tale if you mean the current Avatar

    2. Ragitsu
  7. "If you are lonely when you are alone, you are in bad company."

    - Sartre.

    1. Lord Liaden

      Lord Liaden

      Who's been telling you about my "social life?"

    2. Ragitsu

      Ragitsu

      Better than my social zombie, that is for certain.

  8. "All of humanity's problems stem from man's inability to sit quietly in a room alone."

     

    - Blaise Pascal.

  9. yyhhvsjv

     

    Is he a relation of yours?

    1. Lord Liaden

      Lord Liaden

      Hey, I LIKE turtles!

  10. It is a joyful thing indeed to hold intimate converse with a man after one’s own heart, chatting without reserve about things of interest or the fleeting topics of the world; but such, alas, are few and far between.

    – Yoshida Kenko (1283-1350), Tsurezure-Gusa (1340)

  11. Live long and prosper!

  12. Obsessiveness and perfectionism in the realm of art.

     

    When you toil away in obscurity, you're a nut.

     

    When you receive accolades (and a fat check), you're a genius.

    1. Certified

      Certified

      Read this, see this...

      6677oh.jpg

       

      If you're okay with it, I may share this conversation elsewhere. 

  13. 1582795541593.jpg

     

    A relation of yours?

  14. spacer.png

     

    A relative of yours, I take it?

    1. Amorkca

      Amorkca

      Likely a necromancer...

       

      and yes - my aunt...

  15. spacer.png

     

    spacer.png

     

    spacer.png

    1. Bazza

      Bazza

      You know I’m only doing this to annoy my British friend, right? 

    2. Ragitsu

      Ragitsu

      Nope. Who is in your avatar space?

    3. Bazza

      Bazza

      Nightcrawler is my current avatar. 

  16. spacer.png

     

    Turns out your long-lost brother became a hardcore LARPer.

  17. spacer.png

     

    This happens to be my astrological sign. Apparently, it is yours as well?

    1. Cancer

      Cancer

      It is, under classical Western astrology.  My username was a triple pun at the time I selected it.  The horoscope; my thesis project was on M67, a famous star cluster in Cancer; and at the time, I was employed as  a scientific programmer at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, developing a population microsimulation code for evaluating cancer screening strategies.

  18. spacer.png

    1. Ragitsu

      Ragitsu

       

       

      Apparently, the masters for this music were lost. That is a damn shame.

×
×
  • Create New...