That's what the ladies have to wear when I'm in charge. — Terrapin Station
We categorically deny that you were ever a member of the Church of the Invisible Pink Unicorn. It's all lies! Lies and falsehoods! And innuendoes! Icky ones, with little thingies growing on them. — Srap Tasmaner

infidel — Srap Tasmaner
agree with the OP. Science is essentially an umbrella marketing term for fundraising and shielding against criticism. There are no standards, there are no methods. Just some claims that are rarely challenged since the industry has so thoroughly insulated itself both in academia and commercial industry. Once in a while though there are some articles that challenge the scientific method myth, that are accepted in some journal, which are quickly shot down by the industries' hired censors self-named skeptics. — Rich
There will be, for instance, snakes. — Bitter Crank
My point is that a woman's top time today would have won a big margin against top male runners back in the day, look at the time difference. — Cavacava
It would never make biological sense to make the females more risk taking, regardless of any gaps in competence. — Wosret
I don't think men or women are physically that much different, but the culture of physical training has changed them dramatically. — Cavacava
nd then wished to explain why men excel in some areas, and women in others. — Wosret
Did you just vaguely look up "marathon records" or something? Those numbers don't say much, and are not detailed research. — Wosret
It isn't in fact true. In marathon conditions, the gap closes. Women tend to weigh less, so that things that require less explosive force, and more continuous effort, the more body weight becomes more and more disadvantageous. — Wosret
but rather concepts is something the we shape and create, and they cannot be forced on us from 'outside' (whether by experience or innate nature), because otherwise they would cease to be concepts in the logical sense and will be nothing more then behavioral instincts. — Fafner
Is it conceivable that someone could be born (as a result of a mutation or whatever) with the WRONG sorts of concepts? Do we have a method to check this? — Fafner
Of course the concept of 'length' is something the we have created. It really doesn't make sense to 'perceive' a length in an object as an empirical discovery, and for a simple reason: you must already have the concept of length in order to perceive something as having a length, otherwise how could you know that what you are perceiving is 'length' and not some other property? — Fafner
For comparison, I think the war over the Whorf-Sapir hypothesis and color words is still raging. See this wikipedia article. The nutshell would be something like this: many languages do not have separate words for what we call "blue" and "green" (just as an example); can native speakers of those languages distinguish blue from green? Common sense says so, and I tend to agree, but the research goes on. — Srap Tasmaner
Of course it has a physical length, but this claim has to be distinguished from saying what exactly its length is in some unites of measurement. — Fafner
↪Marchesk You have to keep in mind we're taking about a time when 1 meter was defined as the length of this stick. — Srap Tasmaner
he can't say, it's 1 meter by definition, which he can't because he says it has no length. — Srap Tasmaner
My understanding is that Witt noticed that rule-following can't account for the entirety of communication because there has to be some source of normativity outside the system of rules. He looked to human interaction to find that source. You're saying we should look inward to find it. — Mongrel
We make the stick a standard by comparing stuff to it. See? He's talking about meaning and existence simultaneously. — Mongrel
Here, though, you're surely at a crux where Fafner is right: you are conjuring up an imaginary Wittgenstein in order to make a point of your own. 'Philosophical Investigations' is a complex book and nowhere in it do I remember these 'arguments' that you mention. One thing I'm confident he's saying is that it's difficult to have a clear overview of language, since we only have language to do it with. What you are calling 'meaning' will involve comparing one word with another, or with a group of other words, and asserting that some greater clarity results. — mcdoodle
The conveyance of thought is its primary use and its communicative use is secondary — Cavacava
Not once in our exchange have you even used the word behaviour, — StreetlightX
OK, and what does that have to do with meaning-as-use? — StreetlightX
