View Full Version : What Extremist Views Do You Admit To Having?
Cleopatra
3rd October 2005, 09:06 AM
However, the idea that we should outlaw public discussion of supposedly uncivil topics is absurd. Define religion.
Actually from all the "extreme" or extreme ideas I posted this was the most serious one. I plan to start a thread on the issue, so we will have the opportunity to discuss it there.
The marketplace of ideas should not be restricted according to the desires of various upset people. Indeed but you must keep in mind that ideas will always upset people, the point is not to avoid to upset others but not to let upset people violate human rights on the pretense of the exchange of ideas. In my opinion of course(-----> I use imo because I know that you hate it :p )
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
3rd October 2005, 09:09 AM
Yes, start a thread. That should be interesting.
~~ Paul
Diamond
3rd October 2005, 09:14 AM
Yes, we do.
~~ Paul
No you don't. Really. My views on some things are so extreme I could be arrested for expressing them.
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
3rd October 2005, 09:23 AM
Try us on one moderately extreme one.
~~ Paul
Ed help me, I'm posting in Politics.
Jas
3rd October 2005, 10:35 AM
7.Vegetarians should be asked politely but in an official fashion to think before they talk.
That made my day. Thank you for that Cleo, I wholeheartedly agree.
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
3rd October 2005, 10:57 AM
I don't get it. How does the vegetarian diatribe differ in kind from the meat-eater diatribe? Perhaps it's just that the meat-eater diatribe is the default?
~~ Paul
Mercutio
3rd October 2005, 11:03 AM
I don't get it. How does the vegetarian diatribe differ in kind from the meat-eater diatribe? Perhaps it's just that the meat-eater diatribe is the default?
Why do you think it differs? Both are food bigotry. I don't like either type of prejudice.
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
3rd October 2005, 11:21 AM
Why do you think it differs?
I don't know, which is why I asked. Perhaps there is no meat-eater diatribe, and so the veggie diatribe is annoying in its one-sidedness.
Both are food bigotry. I don't like either type of prejudice.
Food bigotry? If someone claims that eating meat is cruel and inefficient, that's bigotry? That rather rules out discussing just about everything, doesn't it?
~~ Paul
IllegalArgument
3rd October 2005, 11:31 AM
I don't know, which is why I asked. Perhaps there is no meat-eater diatribe, and so the veggie diatribe is annoying in its one-sidedness.
Food bigotry? If someone claims that eating meat is cruel and inefficient, that's bigotry? That rather rules out discussing just about everything, doesn't it?
~~ Paul
I agree with Paul, how is bigotry? I'm not even a veggie and I don't see how you could frame it as bigotry.
mumblethrax
3rd October 2005, 11:32 AM
I blame cognitive psychologists. Corey has a quote somewhere about cognition being to psychology what creationism is to biology...
That's interesting. To me, behaviorism works much better as an analogy for creationism, due to its minority position among mainstream scientists, and its inferior explanatory power.
Mercutio
3rd October 2005, 11:44 AM
I don't know, which is why I asked. Perhaps there is no meat-eater diatribe, and so the veggie diatribe is annoying in its one-sidedness.
Having worked at a vegetarian daycare, and having dear friends who are vegans, I know the anti-carnivore diatribe. Having worked in restaurants, I know the anti-veggie diatribe.
Food bigotry? If someone claims that eating meat is cruel and inefficient, that's bigotry? We have had threads about this. Claiming it in the absence of evidence, or at times against available evidence, is certainly prejudiced (in the literal sense of the word).
That rather rules out discussing just about everything, doesn't it?
Only if one rules out discussion for that sort of reason. It seems to me that both sides, in this thread, asked the other to think before they speak. My view was that both sides deserve pity.
Hey, I am a glutton. I love vegetarian food, so think the carnivores should be pitied. I love meat, so the vegetarians deserve pity as well. To hold such extreme views about other people based on their eating habits just seems silly to me. Don't we have other more important things to base our extreme views on, like race or religion? (that was irony. I am pointing out that prejudice based on food is still prejudice, the same thing we tend to decry in other situations.)
IA--Bigot, on dictionary.com:"One who is strongly partial to one's own group, religion, race, or politics and is intolerant of those who differ." Perhaps I read too much into the two views--vegetarians or meat-eaters being asked to think before they speak--but to me they seemed to fit the definition.
Mercutio
3rd October 2005, 11:45 AM
That's interesting. To me, behaviorism works much better as an analogy for creationism, due to its minority position among mainstream scientists, and its inferior explanatory power.
Well, it only counts as explaining something if you actually do explain it. "Goddiddit" has remarkable explanatory power, from the creationist view.
IllegalArgument
3rd October 2005, 11:47 AM
That's interesting. To me, behaviorism works much better as an analogy for creationism, due to its minority position among mainstream scientists, and its inferior explanatory power.
/eagerly awaits Merc's response.
// Sits down with popcorn in hand.
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
3rd October 2005, 11:59 AM
Hey, I am a glutton. I love vegetarian food, so think the carnivores should be pitied. I love meat, so the vegetarians deserve pity as well. To hold such extreme views about other people based on their eating habits just seems silly to me. Don't we have other more important things to base our extreme views on, like race or religion? (that was irony. I am pointing out that prejudice based on food is still prejudice, the same thing we tend to decry in other situations.)
Your problem is that you just can't make up your mind. Decide what you want to eat! :D
Oh wait, I can't decide either. I don't eat red meat, but I do eat fish and poultry. What a fence-sitter I am!
~~ Paul
Jas
3rd October 2005, 12:02 PM
I don't get it. How does the vegetarian diatribe differ in kind from the meat-eater diatribe? Perhaps it's just that the meat-eater diatribe is the default?
Well, I don't remember ever sitting down to a salad or a falafel and having someone walk up to me and telling me I'm [insult random insult here]. Or be gardening and have people approach out of nowhere to tell me that I'm [insert some other pointless drivel here]. I enjoy vegetarian food, don't get me wrong, but being as I don't lecture strangers or coworkers on their food preferences, I do expect the same courtesy. I realize that not all vegetarians do this, but quite a few do.
Mercutio
3rd October 2005, 12:04 PM
Your problem is that you just can't make up your mind. Decide what you want to eat! :D
I have decided. My ideal would be to go to a wonderful restaurant with another person who appreciates food, and not leave until we had had everything on the menu. It might take a while...
Oh wait, I can't decide either. I don't eat red meat, but I do eat fish and poultry. What a fence-sitter I am!Hypocrite!!!
:D
Mercutio
3rd October 2005, 12:07 PM
Well, I don't remember ever sitting down to a salad or a falafel and having someone walk up to me and telling me I'm [insult random insult here]. Or be gardening and have people approach out of nowhere to tell me that I'm [insert some other pointless drivel here]. I enjoy vegetarian food, don't get me wrong, but being as I don't lecture strangers or coworkers on their food preferences, I do expect the same courtesy. I realize that not all vegetarians do this, but quite a few do.
If it makes you feel better, Tony Bourdain (in "Kitchen Confidential") has some choice things to say about vegetarians...and I have witnessed on more than one occasion meat-eaters teasing the veggie-burger-munching friend...
mumblethrax
3rd October 2005, 12:18 PM
Well, it only counts as explaining something if you actually do explain it. "Goddiddit" has remarkable explanatory power, from the creationist view.
Given that cognitivism doesn't reject the study of behavior, its explanatory power is at least as great as that of behaviorism. Given that there are phenomena which are not adequately explained by behaviorist doctrine, it seems valid to posit other explanations. It differs from creationism (which both explicitly rejects evolution and fails to present anything more than a naive critcism of evolutionary theory) in these important ways. Comparing it to creationism is the intellectual equivalent of character assassination.
But I don't want to derail this thread, so I'll state my extreme view: behaviorist doctrine was demolished forty years ago, but you'd never be able to infer that from the behavior of behaviorists.
epepke
3rd October 2005, 12:24 PM
If it makes you feel better, Tony Bourdain (in "Kitchen Confidential") has some choice things to say about vegetarians...and I have witnessed on more than one occasion meat-eaters teasing the veggie-burger-munching friend...
Since we're on extreme beliefs, that's because veggie-burgers are ridiculous. There are many fine vegan foods, including the aforementioned salads and falafel. Why fixate on "veggie burgers" or "vegetarian sausage" or that other crap? I don't cut meat and paint it green so that it looks like brussel sprouts.
Mercutio
3rd October 2005, 02:05 PM
Given that cognitivism doesn't reject the study of behavior, its explanatory power is at least as great as that of behaviorism. So, where it agrees with behaviorism, it is right? :D You might find amusing the reciprocal comment, that all of cognitive psychology is subsumed under the "antecedent control" area of behaviorism.
Given that there are phenomena which are not adequately explained by behaviorist doctrine, it seems valid to posit other explanations. Note how these other explanations owe a great deal to behaviorism. Very rarely are inner causes posited any more, for instance. And of course, while it seems valid to posit other explanations, it does not help to use explanatory fictions and circularly defined "causes".
It differs from creationism (which both explicitly rejects evolution and fails to present anything more than a naive critcism of evolutionary theory) in these important ways. Comparing it to creationism is the intellectual equivalent of character assassination.
I believe that was the intent of the quote. This is the extreme view thread, after all. Cognitive psychology has made a strawman out of Watson's Behaviorism, applied the label to all behaviorists, and argued against a fossil that has long been extinct. Behaviorists have moved on; there are more behaviorists at work now than ever, in more varied work than cognitive psychologists would dream possible from their stimulus-response charicature.
But I don't want to derail this thread, so I'll state my extreme view: behaviorist doctrine was demolished forty years ago, but you'd never be able to infer that from the behavior of behaviorists. A funny kind of demolition then, wouldn't you say? Especially since many of the methods and theoretical assumptions of behaviorism are now part of cognition, social psych, personality, developmental...At the Mind, Brain, and Consciousness seminar in LA this past May, I was surprised to see the cognitive neuroscientists coming to conclusions that behaviorists had suggested 20 years ago...but then, of course, as a behaviorist I would see that, and not realize that I have been dead for 40 years...
Mercutio
3rd October 2005, 02:07 PM
Since we're on extreme beliefs, that's because veggie-burgers are ridiculous. There are many fine vegan foods, including the aforementioned salads and falafel. Why fixate on "veggie burgers" or "vegetarian sausage" or that other crap? I don't cut meat and paint it green so that it looks like brussel sprouts.I agree--and I just don't get veggie bacon! There are wonderful veggie foods--why pretend something is something it is not?
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
3rd October 2005, 02:18 PM
Vegetarians want something to cook on the grill other than plain veggies. So they slopped some ground-up veggies together with a coagulating agent and formed it into a burger. I suspect there are also hot dog-shaped coagulated veggie blobs.
You can take the meat out of the eater, but you can't take out the desire for BBQ.
~~ Paul
(This wasn't insulting to veg-heads, was it?)
Roboramma
3rd October 2005, 07:12 PM
Well, I don't remember ever sitting down to a salad or a falafel and having someone walk up to me and telling me I'm [insult random insult here]. Or be gardening and have people approach out of nowhere to tell me that I'm [insert some other pointless drivel here]. I enjoy vegetarian food, don't get me wrong, but being as I don't lecture strangers or coworkers on their food preferences, I do expect the same courtesy. I realize that not all vegetarians do this, but quite a few do.
Actually, it isn't as rare as you think, at least not in my experience, and I'm not a veggie.
For instance: when I was growing up my younger sister decided to turn vegetarian. Family meals which centered around meat did not change at all, she was just given more potatoes. Most nights one of my brothers or both would harass her for not eating meat. I'm very impressed that she kept it up for all those years.
Or how about this: I live in Shanghai, when I first moved here a few months ago my boss took me out to dinner. Most meals here are eaten comunally, ie. many shared dishes are ordered. Almost all had meat, which i was fine with. The conversation quickly turned to an indian coworker who doesn't eat meat. All sorts of jokes and insults were thrown about (he wasn't there). I was quiet at this point until someone said something to me dirrectly, at which point I said, "Actually, I respect him for it, it's not easy being vegetarian." silence.
Those two anecdotes aside, it can be difficult for vegetarians eating out with friends or family. Many restaurants don't have very good vegetarian options (though that has changed in recent years) and many meat-eaters don't want to go to pure veg restaurants.
mumblethrax
4th October 2005, 04:15 AM
Note how these other explanations owe a great deal to behaviorism. Very rarely are inner causes posited any more, for instance. And of course, while it seems valid to posit other explanations, it does not help to use explanatory fictions and circularly defined "causes".
I don't disagree that behaviorism has influenced the development of cognitivism. I think terming something so obvious and universal to human experience as the mind an explanatory fiction betrays behaviorism's highly counter-intuitive ideological bias. The circular argument really only works if you're a behaviorist; if you admit functional analysis, it's not circular.
I believe that was the intent of the quote. This is the extreme view thread, after all.
A fair point, and yours is nothing like the most aberrant.
But many of the extreme views expressed here are actually thinly veiled attacks on the perceived extreme views of others.
A funny kind of demolition then, wouldn't you say? Especially since many of the methods and theoretical assumptions of behaviorism are now part of cognition, social psych, personality, developmental...
I was careful to distinguish between behaviorist doctrine and behaviorist methodology, so I don't think the latter can be admitted in defense of the former.
Mercutio
4th October 2005, 06:06 AM
I don't disagree that behaviorism has influenced the development of cognitivism. I think terming something so obvious and universal to human experience as the mind an explanatory fiction betrays behaviorism's highly counter-intuitive ideological bias. The circular argument really only works if you're a behaviorist; if you admit functional analysis, it's not circular.
Functional analysis is the heart of behaviorism. Actually manipulating antecedents and seeing effects on behavior is crucial. Merely inferring causation after the fact is what is circular. Tell me how one has ever either manipulated or measured the mind without manipulating environment and measuring behavior, and you will have made your point. And please, don't think behaviorism is stuck at Watson's year--modern behaviorists recognise private behavior such as thinking and remembering; they just think of them as behaviors, not as "mind". Thinking is obvious; remembering is obvious. It is obvious that we can do these, and that our doing these things is influenced by our environmental contingencies. What is not obvious is that it requires a "mind" to do so; that is circularly inferred. (Progress is being made, of course; we speak now of a descriptive label of "type A behavior pattern" rather than an inferred inner cause "type a personality".)
I was careful to distinguish between behaviorist doctrine and behaviorist methodology, so I don't think the latter can be admitted in defense of the former.Both are quite obviously still there, and quite influential. Eschewing inner causes in favor of environmental causes, for instance, is at the heart of virtually any application of social or cognitive psychology; if we wish to see a change in performance, we change some element of the situation. It is so basic that one forgets that it is a contribution of "behaviorist doctrine".
Not that you are, but for the casual observer I wish to make a note--it is important that the reactions to behaviorism are not reactions to the stereotype of behaviorism as Watson defined it. The behaviorism of 40-50 years ago was a methodological behaviorism, and radical behaviorists reject it. Other sciences progress; so does behaviorism. We would not argue against biology because we disagree with the "4 humours" theory.
Jas
4th October 2005, 09:18 AM
If it makes you feel better, Tony Bourdain (in "Kitchen Confidential") has some choice things to say about vegetarians...and I have witnessed on more than one occasion meat-eaters teasing the veggie-burger-munching friend...
And I tease my friends all the time as well. They tease me for ordering blue steak one day and tofu the next (granted, there's a lot more steak than tofu). With people you know, that's just the individual boundaries you set.
I'm talking about complete strangers going off about what's wrong with meat (be it ethical objections, health opinions, whatever), and more importantly, what's wrong with YOU for eating meat. I realize that this is the minority, but it's pretty annoying.
Jas
4th October 2005, 09:28 AM
Actually, it isn't as rare as you think, at least not in my experience, and I'm not a veggie.
...
Like I said in above post, that's a personal boundary thing among friends/family. And 'Haha, hope you like your sprouts!', is a bit different than comparing someone to a Nazi (a la Peta billboard).
(and yes, I realize that this isn't all vegetarians)
Many restaurants don't have very good vegetarian options (though that has changed in recent years) and many meat-eaters don't want to go to pure veg restaurants.
And I fully agree with you on that. But how does that excuse people calling me a murderer because I eat meat?
Melendwyr
4th October 2005, 10:13 AM
Time to fess up. What do you admit to being a little too emotional/irrational about? Being "extreme" has nothing to do with being excessively emotional. Nor with being irrational. An "extreme" view is one that is in one of the far ends of a distribution. That doesn't make it irrational, emotionally-based, or untrue.
Luke T.
4th October 2005, 10:55 AM
Being "extreme" has nothing to do with being excessively emotional. Nor with being irrational. An "extreme" view is one that is in one of the far ends of a distribution. That doesn't make it irrational, emotionally-based, or untrue.
But there is a good chance it is one or more of those things. :D
When we think of the term "extremist", I think most of us associate a certain amount of over the top emotionalism in our personal definition. A fanatic.
And I think you weren't reading between the lines very well. This part of the JREF forum has a high emotional content. Maybe if we all took a look at the things we know send us off the rational path a little bit, we could examine how each of us could calm the waters around here. If I allow myself to get too strident on a topic, I should take a look at what point I should refrain from further participation so I don't spoil it for everyone else. It is possible I can get so mad at someone in a topic that it taints every interaction I have with them from then on, leaking all over the forum.
If I am mad and showing it, it no longer matters if I am right.
Nuke North Korea! If only we could get away with it and still look ourselves in the eye! I love it!
There are some folks around here who will never back down. Who must be right instead of happy or useful to this forum. Who constantly "nuke north korea". But if enough of us know when to just walk away, those people will no longer control the tone around here the way they do.
epepke
4th October 2005, 12:19 PM
I agree--and I just don't get veggie bacon! There are wonderful veggie foods--why pretend something is something it is not?
Yes, that has always puzzled me.
People take soy protein and fat, processed, texturized, homogenized, hydrogenated, spooged, munged, and kerfabulated. Then they color some of it, doubtless with the finest organic annato, picked by union Nicaraguan freedom-fighters, and transported on the backs of goats. They arrange the two artistically so that it looks as much as practicable like something an ancient Nordic might have cut out of the side of a pig with a stone hand-axe.
Someone call Freud. Quick!
epepke
4th October 2005, 12:22 PM
Vegetarians want something to cook on the grill other than plain veggies. So they slopped some ground-up veggies together with a coagulating agent and formed it into a burger. I suspect there are also hot dog-shaped coagulated veggie blobs.
Yes, I held some in my hand just the other day. They look just like ground fat with some coagulated blood, which is approximately what hot dogs are.
Melendwyr
4th October 2005, 12:23 PM
And I think you weren't reading between the lines very well. I read between the lines just fine. I don't think you're titling your threads very well.
If I am mad and showing it, it no longer matters if I am right. Incorrect. Being angry is not an inherently undesirable state. Anger has its functions and uses, just as all the emotions do.
mumblethrax
5th October 2005, 08:34 AM
Functional analysis is the heart of behaviorism.
Cognitive scientists have a different understand of what functional analysis is.
Merely inferring causation after the fact is what is circular. Tell me how one has ever either manipulated or measured the mind without manipulating environment and measuring behavior, and you will have made your point.
This is where I think radical behaviorism is at its most absurd. To erect so impermeable a barrier against inference renders the greatest theoretical advances in the history of science invalid. Dalton was wrong to propose his atomic theory without observation of the atom, Darwin could not actually describe traits as passed from parent to offspring without understanding of genetics, and it was a mistake for Einstein to propose relativity without direct evidence. As Chomsky quipped, behaviorism would render physics the science of reading meters. It is impossible to directly measure the mind, because mind is an emergent property of brain. It is nevertheless useful to speak of cognition, and of cognitive function as information processing. It is quite possible, given this, to generate and test falsifiable hypotheses which support the foundational assumptions of cognition. Miller's experiments about the effects of representation on short-term memory leap to mind. Observation of the panicked behavior of captive chimpanzees exposed to snakes for the first time also implies innate cognitive structures. Both of these can be seen as reactions to environment, but only in the most trivial sense; something else is clearly going on.
And please, don't think behaviorism is stuck at Watson's year--modern behaviorists recognise private behavior such as thinking and remembering; they just think of them as behaviors, not as "mind".
I don't, I think it's stuck on Skinner. His consignment of thought, feeling, belief, memory and so on to behavior, external to his black box of physiology, is an arbitrary and specious assumption driven an invalid induction, not science. Nothing about this assumption is obvious or intuitive, and there is no way to show that thought is strictly behavioral, and never itself directly causative.
Both are quite obviously still there, and quite influential. Eschewing inner causes in favor of environmental causes, for instance, is at the heart of virtually any application of social or cognitive psychology.
Herein lies the difference between theory and application. I'm not hostile to application; it's vital to create a body of evidence from which theory can be inferred. But radical behaviorists do seem quite hostile to theory, for reasons unknown.
Honestly, I had thought behaviorism had reconciled itself with cognition to some degree, which is why I see your comments as something of a throwback.
Luke T.
5th October 2005, 08:45 AM
Another extremist view of mine: Any patient who comes into a doctor's office or hospital, for whatever reason, should be tested for STD's. I believe (heard) this was actually common practice several decades ago, and helped to knock back syphilis. Nowadays, civil liberty advocates oppose it.
And there is still a dark part of me that is in favor of people with sexually transmittable fatal diseases (AIDS) should be tattooed on a discreet location of their body.
Belz...
5th October 2005, 10:23 AM
...An extremist view ?
I'm allergic to stupidity. Everytime I'm subjected to a person or idea I find idiotic, I feel obligated to point it out to that person. It's gotten me into all kinds of trouble in the past.
Belz...
Dorian Gray
5th October 2005, 10:39 PM
My extreme view is.... I don't think large breasts are always attractive. There, I said it.
Babe from Missouri
5th October 2005, 11:43 PM
My extreme view is.... I don't think large breasts are always attractive. There, I said it.
And that's something that a woman built like a 14-yr-old girl can't hear enough. :D
I'm for extreme welfare reform. I may start a thread later and go into that, I'm interested in everyone's view.
Beerina
6th October 2005, 10:56 AM
7. I too felt exhillaration when watching 9/11 on TV, and exasperation at the reporters wondering where this "explosion" (the first one) had come from when you clearly saw a plane fly into the building. I get excited at most natural disasters, especially when you can't actually see the human suffering. Doesn't mean I feel good about it, though.
This is a natural product of evolution. Animals that didn't get all excited when something dangerous was happening tended to not survive to the next generation too well.
Also keep in mind that laughing and smiling are a biological response to nervousness.
Nothing to see here, move along, move along...
Beerina
6th October 2005, 11:05 AM
Originally Posted by Mercutio
3) There is no free will.
4) "Mind" as a causal entity is an illusion
Strangely, I don't consider those extremist, but I guess most people would.
Ditto on no free will and consciousness is an illusion.
Actually, I have yet to even see a definition of free will that doesn't ultimately boil down to determinism, or determinism with some random quantum influences.
Of course, I have no problem defining free will as "the freedom to do what you want", which neatly sidesteps the issue when you think about it. Now how "what you want" comes about, that's another story.
A mind is something that evaluates inputs and produces outputs. This is deterministic. I don't see where the age-old philosophical conflict is. I press for a definition of "free will", but never get it. Some spiritual entity that...what? Just what does it do, if not process inputs and create outputs deterministically (or, worse, deterministically with random influences.) What else could it possibly be? It's a law of excluded middle thing.
Beerina
6th October 2005, 11:25 AM
Those two anecdotes aside, it can be difficult for vegetarians eating out with friends or family. Many restaurants don't have very good vegetarian options (though that has changed in recent years) and many meat-eaters don't want to go to pure veg restaurants.
My 16 year old daughter is an ovo-lacto-processed meat vegetarian. She'll eat vegetables and meat, but only if it's ground up like hot dogs, sausage, hamburgers, Mc Nuggets, etc. She will eat chicken tenders, which are real, macroscopically unified slabs of meat, but are thickly breaded and flavored, and very occasionally, about 20% of a chicken breast from the barbeque or a thoroughly grey steak.
So she's not a pure ovo-lacto-processed meat vegetarian, but pretty close!
Adrian
6th October 2005, 12:12 PM
I have many many extreme views. There are way too many to pick just one, so here are my top three:
1.) I refuse to include most southern states as part of the US. I group those states together as a unit that I refer to as "Christopia".
2.) I think private prayer should be allowed in school, but it should be taxed and monitored by the FCC for decency standards. It must only happen in special designated areas to protect others from the dangers of second-hand faith.
3.) I believe that a government should only be able to enact the option of war if every senior official's own children are immediately drafted to the front lines with no flak jacket.
pgwenthold
6th October 2005, 01:08 PM
I haven't read over all the pages of this thread, but I am going to suggest this hasn't been brought up:
I believe that Major League Baseball ticket prices are significantly too low. In fact, I think that most tickets to popular events are seriously underpriced. I can't stand events where the tickets are sold out in 8 minutes.
pgwenthold
6th October 2005, 01:10 PM
Oh, and my other one: Sometimes, $hit happens for no reason at all.
Dorian Gray
6th October 2005, 10:22 PM
And that's something that a woman built like a 14-yr-old girl can't hear enough. :D
Small-breasted women don't have to wear bras - that's all I'm saying. It's sexy.
shecky
8th October 2005, 12:28 PM
I believe nearly everyone on this thread should be executed for revealing themselves to be closeted (and not so closeted) fascists.
Tez
9th October 2005, 03:52 PM
Extreme views I hold:
1. The laws of physics are ultimately arbitrary and not "deeply beautiful".
(Not sure I really hold this one all the way to my blackened soul, but I have some quantitative arguments showing the Hamiltonian of the universe could be pretty much anything but would still admit a "beautiful uniform and highly symmetric" description over a large range of energy scales. Part of this program is to understand why we have evolved in a way that we do see amazing beauty in nature and in our mathematical understanding of it.)
2. Randomness (and hence the need for probabilistic descriptions) is only ever a human construct and thus a function of limited human knowledge/information
(So I dont really believe in "free will" - I believe all the disconcerting feelings people have about abandoning such a notion can be dispensed with by realising that issues of computational complexity can rescue us from the notion that some uber-powerful being is able to predict our actions.)
3. The math we have now is not really that profound and is primarily a function of how a society of (male dominated) primates needed to quantify their outlook on the world.
(If a race of beings not formed from localised globs of electromagnetic fields do exist, then I'm quite sure their whole system of mathematics would be orthogonal(!) to ours.. Heck, if female mathematicians such as my PhD supervisor or my sister were controlling the directions of mathematical research I think modern math would be significantly different. And not just becoz it'd involve more questions about chocolate, though of course that too...)
4. Patriotism is only exhibited by puerile thinkers.
5. Respect for the musings of historical persons purely because they lived a long time ago is only exhibited by puerile thinkers.
6. People who believe in the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics are puerile thinkers.
7. All holders of extreme views are puerile thinkers.
New Ager
15th December 2005, 01:33 PM
(Leon)
10. What part of "shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion" is difficult to understand? Keep religion out of government.
(Todd)
No argument with the sentiment, but if you insist on a strict reading of the amendment, it says "Congress shall make no law repsecting the establishment of religion." If you want to be a literalist, it says nothing about the president, other executive departments, or state governments.
(New Ager)
Todd, you are so right.
And it doesn't say the President shouldn't have a religion and use it in his decision making. It also doesn't say that everything gov't funds is gov't. A school isn't the gov't and should not stop school prayer.
(Adrian)
I think private prayer should be allowed in school, but it should be taxed and monitored by the FCC for decency standards. It must only happen in special designated areas to protect others from the dangers of second-hand faith.
(New Ager)
I think private liberalism should be allowed in school, but it should be taxed and monitored by the FCC for decency standards. It must only happen in special designated areas to protect others from the dangers of second-hand looniness. :)
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