5/26/2010 12:45:22 PM
5/26/2010 2:29:00 PM
5/26/2010 2:39:50 PM
I mean Greek is a lot more east than NC am I right and for what its worth, Lexington BBQ sucks ass! Fuck that western shit
5/26/2010 2:43:43 PM
5/26/2010 2:56:26 PM
In fact, funny enough, in the East there's a tradition of formal logic that developed directly from religion. People wanted to know that the inferences they made in theology were "truth-preserving". Sorry noobs.
5/26/2010 3:00:46 PM
Re: "Skepticism", it really depends. There are skeptical positions that say investigation is completely fruitless; this may not be identical to solipsism but it's functionally equivalent with respect to crafting scientific theories.
5/26/2010 3:02:20 PM
I hate to derail this thread's topic, but the board voted in favor of the mosque:
5/26/2010 3:07:14 PM
The only reason I would object to the mosque in that location is that I would object to the building of new mosques in any location. There's nothing particular about that location, or that mosque that any reasonable (don't kill me for using that word, McDanger) person can argue. It's functionally the correct ruling.
5/26/2010 3:11:12 PM
Gotta love seeing bigotry go down in flames.
5/26/2010 3:11:58 PM
5/26/2010 3:12:06 PM
^ Can I get a witness.
5/26/2010 3:12:55 PM
for the majority of the protesters, it is not about bigotry. it is way too complex to be summed up in terms of simple racism (its also lame). its not an ingrained racial hatred of brown people that made people upset. its the emotions tied to that unique space and the unique circumstances surrounding it. any person who is being honest can understand that. while I believe they should be able to build the mosque wherever they want, I am not going to blame or judge the people protesting for being upset about it.
5/26/2010 3:18:59 PM
5/26/2010 3:19:59 PM
5/26/2010 3:21:02 PM
yet the same people demanding americans to be tolerant of a mosque next to WTC are the same type of americans who would be embarrassed to see McDonalds in the Louvre and apologize for how our culture is homogenizing the rest of the world.
5/26/2010 3:22:14 PM
5/26/2010 3:24:17 PM
I GOTTA MAC ATTACK RIGHT NEXT TO THE DAVID STATUE, OK[Edited on May 26, 2010 at 3:26 PM. Reason : *]
5/26/2010 3:26:49 PM
nah bro, not in my head and u know it.
5/26/2010 3:29:08 PM
5/26/2010 3:32:02 PM
5/26/2010 3:32:15 PM
Islam does not represent murder, but the murderers on 9/11 loudly and dynamically proclaimed said murder in the name of Islam. fair or not, they are linked and you know that.
5/26/2010 3:39:29 PM
5/26/2010 3:44:42 PM
emotional fervor is behind 95% of legislation so atleast it would be consistant.
5/26/2010 3:56:09 PM
5/26/2010 4:06:04 PM
5/26/2010 4:07:46 PM
Oh, that was a joke.
5/26/2010 4:09:15 PM
NO JOKING. THIS IS SERIOUS BUSINESS.
5/26/2010 4:09:42 PM
What is an acceptable distance at which a mosque could be built?
5/26/2010 5:11:44 PM
32,000 miles.
5/26/2010 5:19:17 PM
72 inches for every life senselessly destroyed in the name of religion
5/26/2010 5:20:51 PM
5/26/2010 10:04:44 PM
Bahahahaha you can't win an argument with an idiot. Have fun being ignorant as shit, I guess. Tally, ho!
5/26/2010 11:26:26 PM
touche
5/27/2010 12:33:26 AM
Wow, OK, it's been a busy day with this thread.
5/27/2010 12:55:37 AM
5/27/2010 7:55:08 AM
You're not going to change anyones mind about their oil dependency by telling them they're idiots for using a single drop. You're only making the worst ones more obstinate and more combative.
5/27/2010 8:46:35 AM
right. Removing oil dependency should be sold as an economic and security issue rather than an environmental one.
5/27/2010 9:50:43 AM
GrumpyGOP:
5/27/2010 10:08:56 AM
5/27/2010 10:36:36 AM
You've heard of democratic and populist revolutions, right?
5/27/2010 10:40:34 AM
In the context of "the story of civilization", I think non-religious populist revolutions are statistical outliers.
5/27/2010 10:48:47 AM
populist uprisings are always lead by someone with their own agenda. anyone not behind that leaders ideals will be crushed by their followers.
5/27/2010 10:52:34 AM
5/27/2010 11:02:20 AM
5/27/2010 11:03:17 AM
not to mention automation and vastly increased leisure time (i.e. that's the real reason)
5/27/2010 2:16:06 PM
5/27/2010 2:42:56 PM
5/27/2010 2:50:24 PM
In what possible way do we actually choose things? I don't follow your line of thinking here: "Man, this is really hard to understand, so let's just say we're in control of our decisions."
5/27/2010 3:08:16 PM
We are essentially finite state machines, but the number of conditions is sufficiently large to create the illusion of free will.The combinations of each of your internal desires, external stimulae, as well as the granularity of your states (how often you make "decisions") are so great that they are practically infinite.So from our perspective, we have free will. From an observer external to our Universe that could possibly see all of the above, they could predict exactly what we would choose at any given time.As I said, it's practical to describe this process as choice because from our perspective it is choice.
5/27/2010 3:23:56 PM