A company earning more than a million has to give a quarter of what it earns to your government. — NOS4A2
To cover that cost while at the same time covering the overhead the best one can do is lower wages, raise prices, cut corners, lay people off, and so on, just to be able to pay such exorbitant prices. Even if we let the state get away with the act of theft, it’s hard to look past the effects all this has on the poorer among us who have to deal with the rise in the cost of living, a large amount of which is used to cover any offsetting. A tax on the rich is also a hidden tax on the poor, in this sense. — NOS4A2
if governments can play around with taxes to win votes, it means taxes have no logic to them — Agent Smith
Syād — Agent Smith
if people are grumbling about taxes it means the government hasn't quite explained the rationale behind taxes. — Agent Smith
It would have to be a pretty lousy simulation if the people in it were constantly pointing out they were in a simulation. Really, at that point it ceases to be a simulation and just is the context. So, any answer is that we simply live in our version of the real world — Cheshire
Bolsonaro doesn’t give a damn about the environment. — Xtrix
what happens if he does win? — Xtrix
‘where do your personal earnings go?’. There is no ONE answer to this question. — I like sushi
Nostalgia is one reason why we would want to simulate an older version of The Matrix. — Agent Smith
we could be simulating an older version of our world — Agent Smith
I think of the categories provided, the church is the most powerful. Everyone — in whatever class, in whatever position of power, and whether a politician or king or CEO, has a religion. — Xtrix
If the universe is a simulation, everything in it should be computable, like in a game world. — Agent Smith
Black holes are where God divided by zero. — Steven Wright
:sparkle:There is no God. There is probably no heaven, and no afterlife either — Stephen Hawking
The ai (Silicates) contemplated philosophy amongst many things but they could not come up with anything new themselves. — Seeker
I'd like to see -- if forced to choose -- what forum members think about power. — Xtrix
A Christian site reports:
Russian Church Leader's Sacrilegious Claim: Says Soldiers Can Cleanse Their Sins by Dying in Ukraine (Sep 27, 2022) — jorndoe
For my filthy lucre, "capitalism", in sum, is a global, commodifying, market system institutionalized for maximizing shareholder returns (i.e. private profits) on stakeholder investments-taxes (i.e. public costs). — 180 Proof
Possible that capitalism is not an economic system at all, but a type of (partial) government system. — Srap Tasmaner
Well, we vote for a person, not a party. — Michael
We don't have a President. — Michael
The referendums in eastern Ukraine went swimmingly for Russia. Annexation is next. — NOS4A2
I think it would make more sense to let public decide who leads the party … — I like sushi
And this is common with other religions too. The link even far more obvious in Islam. — ssu
Christianity will not be content to be an evolution within the total category of human nature; an engagement such as that is too little to offer to a god. Neither does it even want to be the paradox for the believer, and then surreptitiously, little by little, provide him with understanding, because the martyrdom of faith (to crucify one's understanding) is not a martyrdom of the moment, but the martyrdom of continuance." — Kierkegaard. Concluding Unscientific Postscript to Philosophical Fragments
The deification of the established order is the secularization of everything. With regard to secular matters, the established order may be entirely right: one should join the established order, be satisfied with that relativity, etc. But ultimately the relationship with God is also secularized; we want it to coincide with a certain relativity, do not want it to be something essentially different from our positions in life – rather than that it shall be the absolute for every individual human being and this, the individual person’s God-relationship, shall be precisely what keeps every established order in suspense, and that God, at any moment he chooses, if he merely presses upon an individual in his relationship with God, promptly has a witness, an informer, a spy, or whatever you want to call it, one who in unconditional obedience and with unconditional obedience, by being persecuted, by suffering, by dying, keeps the established order in suspense. — Kierkegaard. Practice in Christianity
From that point of view, I don't read Kierkegaard as an anti-modernist. He belongs more in the 'same as it ever was' camp. — Paine
I think this is Sartre — Tom Storm
"'But what will become of men then?' I asked him, 'without God and immortal life? All things are permitted then, they can do what they like?'" — Tom Storm
There is no crime or misdeed going that theism hasn't sanctioned or advocated in the name of doing a god's will. — Tom Storm
The Kingdom of God is freedom and the absence of such power... the Kingdom of God is anarchy." — Dermot Griffin
Without God Everything is Permitted — Dostoyevsky
Christian existentialism seems to heavily criticize the rise of modernity and its budding secularism. — Dermot Griffin
I think the emphasis on freedom and responsibility, something we find in all these thinkers, is crucial in understanding the way our world is going. — Dermot Griffin
So, talking about translations...
And I was looking at the repeated patterns, noting Ivanhoe referred to Ch 51, Part 2 of the TTC.
Came across this:
'Tao Talks' by Derek Lin
Useful slides.
Here's the Tao Te Ching 32
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=69PbMr3BVu0 — Amity
The Tao Te Ching has to be read in Chinese to understand it? — Agent Smith
math is a universal language — Agent Smith
However, given the popularity of Daoism in the West, I'd have to say there's a two-way exchange of philosophies. — Agent Smith
That would make it even more realistic. — Cuthbert
It cannot. It basically cherry picks from human thoughts. It does not ‘create’ any new ideas and anything that looks ‘new’ is simply due to the reader’s interpretation. — I like sushi
Should Artificial Intelligence provide (previously unseen) insights into matters of philosophy? — Bret Bernhoft
