the_grungydan
the_grungydan t1_j1zjb5t wrote
Reply to comment by AConcernedCoder in An Argument in Favour of Unpredictable, Hard Determinism by CryptoTrader1024
Unrelated, but here's my favorite ML joke.
Scientist: If all of your friends jumped off a bridge would you do it too?
Machine Learning algorithm: Yes.
the_grungydan t1_j1xghol wrote
Reply to comment by CryptoTrader1024 in An Argument in Favour of Unpredictable, Hard Determinism by CryptoTrader1024
Compatiblism always just smacks me of "but that (determinism) makes me uncomfortable so I'm going to contort my mind into a pretzel so I feel better again.
the_grungydan t1_j0s6bdg wrote
Reply to comment by assault_shakr in The Army will finally stand up a laser-equipped Stryker platoon next month by J11ghtman
We didn't need them with you shooting shots like that.
the_grungydan t1_izclpla wrote
Reply to comment by Azad1984 in Amia Srinivasan, philosopher: ‘We must create a sexual culture that destabilizes the notion of hierarchy’ by Logibenq
I'm glad I'm not the only one that feels that way. I straight up just posted under the (current as of writing) top post that it sounded like a Jordan Petersen level bad take by an incel with a dictionary. These comments reek of offended "men" desperate to be right.
the_grungydan t1_izcla3r wrote
Reply to comment by VersaceEauFraiche in Amia Srinivasan, philosopher: ‘We must create a sexual culture that destabilizes the notion of hierarchy’ by Logibenq
This reads like Jordan Petersen meets basement dwelling incel with a fine veneer of having read a dictionary.
the_grungydan t1_iyerkx8 wrote
Reply to comment by Thatguyxlii in US judge orders Amazon to ‘cease and desist’ anti-union retaliation by nacorom
They (Dems) are less overtly hostile and insane, yes. Guess we take what we can get.
the_grungydan t1_iye6pg1 wrote
Reply to comment by Thatguyxlii in US judge orders Amazon to ‘cease and desist’ anti-union retaliation by nacorom
Not that the Dems are fighting that hard for us, either.
And this isn't whataboutism, before some dingus that saw that word somewhere once comes along, nor am I trying to be the enlightened centrist here. It's just a fact.
Neither party gives the slightest shit about anything other than power and making money.
the_grungydan t1_iye6ego wrote
Reply to comment by hindusoul in US judge orders Amazon to ‘cease and desist’ anti-union retaliation by nacorom
Oh that money? No, it didn't just fapl out of my pocket.You must have dropped that.
walks away whistling
the_grungydan t1_iye627l wrote
"We're sorry."
the_grungydan t1_ixmdyzs wrote
Reply to comment by official_jgf in Hundreds riot at Foxconn iPhone plant over terrible conditions by Doener23
We have in essence the exact same problem that existed in the USSR, just with a much more effective propaganda machine.
Some "Murca!" dipshit is going to come along and deliberately misunderstand my point in 3.... 2.....
the_grungydan t1_iwj7af1 wrote
Reply to The Coming Robot Rights Catastrophe by beforesunset1010
What a long winded way to say that you've read some scifi/speculative fiction over the last few decades.
Can this author possibly think these are new questions and issues?
the_grungydan t1_iv6cps0 wrote
Reply to comment by TheManInTheShack in "A socialist society has no room for parties or trade unions. [...] The struggle is for the simultaneous abolition of both market and production relations, [...]for the abolition of the differences in the working class brought about by the capitalist division of labor." by Maxwellsdemon17
Hint: getting a new flagship smartphone that requires some actually fairly scarce material isn't a human need.
Yes, I'm discussing something that would have to be done hand in hand with reworking what we consider valuable or necessary to some degree.
But runaway crony capitalism and the TV/radio/internet screaming that you "need" the latest and greatest Thing are poisons that will continue to keep humanity from moving beyond primitive "competition" and into a more sustainable cooperative.
It's about a realignment of values, and the value we assign to things. But the idea that "competition" in the modern world is some natural state that isn't the direct result of propaganda and manipulation is ridiculous.
the_grungydan t1_iv5wmnq wrote
Reply to comment by TheManInTheShack in "A socialist society has no room for parties or trade unions. [...] The struggle is for the simultaneous abolition of both market and production relations, [...]for the abolition of the differences in the working class brought about by the capitalist division of labor." by Maxwellsdemon17
The obvious counter to that argument is that we compete because we perceive resources as scarce, and therefore something over which to compete. As we grow closer to (and in some ways have already far surpassed) the vagaries of actual scarcity, we must be willing to make conscious change to accept that reality.
Put another way, we only have to compete today because of massive inequality and the enforcement of a scarcity mentality by power structures that benefit from the status quo.
Anyone telling you otherwise is profiting from how things are.
the_grungydan t1_iu6ay9r wrote
Which one of Cletus's cousins' "totally real companies" will be pocketing the money and doing nothing this time?
the_grungydan t1_iu1js91 wrote
Reply to comment by iiioiia in Absurdist Freedom Versus Ontological Freedom by Sasakii
Fair, but as you note, if that's the case, the original writing doesn't contain enough to indicate or support it.
the_grungydan t1_itobr4w wrote
Reply to comment by Wuizel in Absurdist Freedom Versus Ontological Freedom by Sasakii
Excellently stated.
the_grungydan t1_itoblwm wrote
Reply to Absurdist Freedom Versus Ontological Freedom by Sasakii
My most immediate issue is with
> ... Jean-Paul Sartre sees freedom as something humans are born into, and is the effect of one’s ability to choose. With this description of freedom, we are entirely responsible for our situation and the meaning that we give it. >
Satre proposes, according to this writing, that we are born into a vacuum lacking any external influences. Part of where Camus is so prescient on this issue IMO is that he accounts for externalities very directly, speaking on the very real situations that humans have created for ourselves with regard to drudgery and pointlessness, whereas (at least from this article) Sartre pretends that they don't exist. On the other hand, Camus directly speaks to the absurdity of the modern life.
> We are born into a world of choices such that we have sole control over what we choose.
In a word: poppycock.
the_grungydan t1_itg9bod wrote
Reply to comment by Akul_Tesla in Science, technology and innovation is not addressing world’s most urgent problems by jlpcsl
Salient points. It's not the tech or even really resources holding us back. It's power (the desire to attain and retain), greed, and tribalism.
the_grungydan t1_itg8yb0 wrote
Reply to comment by 857477457 in Science, technology and innovation is not addressing world’s most urgent problems by jlpcsl
I love the smell of whataboutism in the morning.
the_grungydan t1_iru4tqi wrote
Reply to comment by ClearlyCylindrical in NASA’s InSight Waits Out Dust Storm. InSight’s team is taking steps to help the solar-powered lander continue operating for as long as possible. by EricFromOuterSpace
Solid points, for sure. Like I said, I'm sure way more educated-on-the-matter people than me clearly work on this. Just seems like a problem begging for a better solution than "guess it'll just get covered indust and die." And I'm certain they're working on it
Don't mistake idle conversation on an interesting subject for a formal debate. You'll enjoy life more. :)
the_grungydan t1_irrj2m1 wrote
Reply to comment by Applederry in NASA’s InSight Waits Out Dust Storm. InSight’s team is taking steps to help the solar-powered lander continue operating for as long as possible. by EricFromOuterSpace
I came here to ask the same thing. I'm clearly not any kind of expert on the topic, but it sure seems like you could equip a small blower and run a tube out to the end of it's arm. I know that space and weight are everything with regards to launch and so forth, but it almost seems like they're engineered to fail.
Edit: heck, reduce the complexity required by adding a blower and just give the good good spacey boi a feather duster.
the_grungydan t1_j9ah2ce wrote
Reply to Compatibilism is supported by deep intuitions about responsibility and control. It can also feel "obviously" wrong and absurd. Slavoj Žižek's commentary can help us navigate the intuitive standoff. by matthewharlow
Compatiblism: for when determinism gives you a big sad and you don't like it.