You’ve got to see this youtube animation to see how crazy this is – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-uuk4Pr2i8 . And these motor proteins are just one example of the range of molecular machines which organise the fundamental workings of a cell. — apokrisis
Yes, I understand but then the next question is, obviously, why the stress or emphasis on being rational? It doesn't lead anywhere at all. — TheMadFool
Yes, exactly.The more one consciously chooses an antisocial action, the more blameworthy they are, and therefore the more harsh the punishment should be. — kepler
I don't see what's wrong with technology and consumerism if they are in a balanced environment. I don't think such a thing has existed for quite some time though, because of the nature of politics and tradition.this global, technological, capitalist world order we find ourselves in is utterly corrupt and dehumanizing. — Erik
If someone - or some group of people (collaboration of artists, politicians, philosophers, etc.) - could tap into those intuitions and frame a vision of a more meaningful and humane world - one beyond the political Left and Right as they currently stand - then they may be able to awaken those latent possibilities and galvanize a sort of historically transitional and supra-political grassroots movement. Wishful thinking perhaps, but there's work to be done and this is the area I feel we should focus on. — Erik
Doesn't that show that our world is contradictory; afterall, the only way to disagree, given logic isn't at fault, is if we start with contradictory premises. — TheMadFool
But there was also the feather. Why didn't people choose it over the gun? — TheMadFool
Certainly at least, the audience/accomplices felt they had a certain amount of license to be sensational given the presence of a loaded gun, razor blades etc.So, you're saying the artist was suggesting the audience to be ''sensational''. — TheMadFool
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I think that Milgram's experiment is very different from Abramovic's performance.
Milgram's experiment purpose was to see how far people would go in their trust of authority. — Cavacava
Then they are surely the same thing! Or at least they/it has a name?Practical wisdom and virtue go hand in hand; — Pierre-Normand
We can certainly do better than locking people up forever to appease victims' families. — Bitter Crank
So, I don't have a solution that get's us out of unfairness. — Bitter Crank
when psychopaths commit crimes they are likely to get zero sympathy because we hold them responsible for their acts, — Bitter Crank
In the beginning there was a big bang…. And already science is in trouble. I call it the container problem, but I’m sure it has other names. What is it expanding into? Nothing? Bullshit. — MikeL
my original question lies in the nature of whether someone with a mental illness who ends up committing a crime is to be blamed. I don't think the will to resist committing crime is strong enough in some cases--due to the fact that the forces in such a person's brain move them to commit the crime. — kepler
well human nature and all that....it's not unreasonable to expect posters have done that. — Baden
I propose, regarding rationality per seNo that's [Occam's Razor] got nothing to do with it. — Wayfarer
In formal logic directly self referential statements like the one you showed do not exist and can not be defined. — Meta
You can create a perfectly rational argument for something which there is no prospect of falsifying through evidence or observation. — Wayfarer
Rationality is insufficient, though. Pure mathematics attempts to be 'as rational as possible', but maths is not a science, per se. You can create a perfectly rational argument for something which there is no prospect of falsifying through evidence or observation. So 'tangibility' or 'testability' is an essential ingredient - the proposition has to concern something for which particular kinds of evidence applies, otherwise it ain't scientific. — Wayfarer
It is has been observed that as many as 25% of the general prison population demonstrate psychopathic behavior. In a study by researchers at the Dept of Psychiatry at the U of Iowa, 320 newly incarcerated inmates were tested for Antisocial personality disorder. ASPD was present in 113 subjects, or about 35%. — kepler
but one goal we should definitely work toward is the stabilization of society. People need a stable, reliable, economy and stable families in which to grow up. They benefit greatly from quality education experiences. That would, in the long run, end a lot of antisocial disruptive behavior resulting from growing up in chaotic, dysfunctional families. — Bitter Crank
Does anyone seriously, I mean seriously, doubt they have a mind or do they think it is a matter of Cosmic Thermodynamic Destiny to enjoy hot dogs with mustard and sauerkraut? — Rich
ESPECIALLY not in principle. — szardosszemagad
Once you decided the universe is causal, then it follows that it is deterministic. — szardosszemagad