Operationalism: Testimony using a sequence of intuitionistically(incentives), logically(speech), and physically testable actions. Operational constraints: Realism( Material, Persistent), Naturalism(physical rules of the material universe), Operationalism(description as human actions), Empiricism(observations of results reduced to analogy of experience by physical or logical means), rational choice, reciprocity. Science: the production of testimony by under operationalism Philosophy: “it’s sorta like that but I can’t explain how”: Analogies. Excuse making. Making stuff up. Sigh.
Form: Definition
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Context
Operationalism: Testimony using a sequence of intuitionistically(incentives), logically(speech), and physically testable actions. Operational constraints: Realism( Material, Persistent), Naturalism(physical rules of the material universe), Operationalism(description as human actions), Empiricism(observations of results reduced to analogy of experience by physical or logical means), rational choice, reciprocity. Science: the production of testimony by under operationalism Philosophy: “it’s sorta like that but I can’t explain how”: Analogies. Excuse making. Making stuff up. Sigh.
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A God is a System of Measurement
[M]an is the measure of all things to man, because man is the only system of measurement available to man. God is a system of measurement in the group’s ideal of man to imitate (as in Jesus, or Achilles) a demigod to aspire to (Odin, Hercules), a god to negotiate with (zeus, thor, tyr), one to obey (jehova, allah), or one to simply understand (deism, the physical and natural laws). Any creature inventing a god would invent one in his image just as we have – and just as the hundreds of gods have been invented abandoned or lost before the present gods.
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A God is a System of Measurement
[M]an is the measure of all things to man, because man is the only system of measurement available to man. God is a system of measurement in the group’s ideal of man to imitate (as in Jesus, or Achilles) a demigod to aspire to (Odin, Hercules), a god to negotiate with (zeus, thor, tyr), one to obey (jehova, allah), or one to simply understand (deism, the physical and natural laws). Any creature inventing a god would invent one in his image just as we have – and just as the hundreds of gods have been invented abandoned or lost before the present gods.
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Definition of Morality, Moral
(core)
Morality = Reciprocity
Reciprocity = limiting our display word and deed to productive, fully informed, voluntary transfer of demonstrated interests, free of imposition of costs upon the demonstrated interests of others by externality to the action, and warrantied within the limits of the actors’ capacity for restitution, between those who demonstrate, promise, imply, or expect exchange of reciprocity. As far as I know, that is the logical, empirical, biologically necessary, genetically necessary and complete definition of morality, for conscious beings, and there are no cases under which the definition fails. Some people will try to conflate the moral and the good, where good consists of an additional investment in addition to not violating reciprocity – but this demands involuntary transfer from others, and violates reciprocity. Some people will try to demand involuntary exchange of a promise of reciprocity from those who do not offer it – but an enemy is nothing more than an enemy who will not engage in reciprocity. Some people will argue this is a binary condition rather than an agreement, under which we match their level of reciprocity and irreciprocity. But while we seek perfect reciprocity, we rarely obtain it. In international trade and in politics we all but never obtain reciprocity, instead we exchange selective reciprocities and irreciprocities within our tolerance for continued cooperation, boycott, or war. Some people will try to demand reciprocity in war between groups, between whom the exchange of reciprocity has been withdrawn, but this demand violates reciprocity. Humans demonstrate the minimum morality that they can get away with without provoking altruistic punishment from others. Humans possess extraordinary abilities of accounting for debts and credits with others, our relative status, status differences, and the tendency of people to engage in moral or immoral behavior.
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Definition of Morality, Moral
(core)
Morality = Reciprocity
Reciprocity = limiting our display word and deed to productive, fully informed, voluntary transfer of demonstrated interests, free of imposition of costs upon the demonstrated interests of others by externality to the action, and warrantied within the limits of the actors’ capacity for restitution, between those who demonstrate, promise, imply, or expect exchange of reciprocity. As far as I know, that is the logical, empirical, biologically necessary, genetically necessary and complete definition of morality, for conscious beings, and there are no cases under which the definition fails. Some people will try to conflate the moral and the good, where good consists of an additional investment in addition to not violating reciprocity – but this demands involuntary transfer from others, and violates reciprocity. Some people will try to demand involuntary exchange of a promise of reciprocity from those who do not offer it – but an enemy is nothing more than an enemy who will not engage in reciprocity. Some people will argue this is a binary condition rather than an agreement, under which we match their level of reciprocity and irreciprocity. But while we seek perfect reciprocity, we rarely obtain it. In international trade and in politics we all but never obtain reciprocity, instead we exchange selective reciprocities and irreciprocities within our tolerance for continued cooperation, boycott, or war. Some people will try to demand reciprocity in war between groups, between whom the exchange of reciprocity has been withdrawn, but this demand violates reciprocity. Humans demonstrate the minimum morality that they can get away with without provoking altruistic punishment from others. Humans possess extraordinary abilities of accounting for debts and credits with others, our relative status, status differences, and the tendency of people to engage in moral or immoral behavior.
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“Shrilling” (vs Shrill, Shrew, Scold)
|Shrilling| Counter-Signaling -> Outraging -> Shrilling -> ShriekingShrilling : hbd science-denialism, feminism, postmodernism, marxism, inappropriate theism. shrill (n.) 1a: having or emitting a sharp high-pitched tone or sound 1b: accompanied by sharp high-pitched sounds or cries 2: having a sharp or vivid effect on the senses 3: PIERCING, STRIDENT, INTEMPERATE shrew, shrewish (adj.) “peevish, malignant, clamorous, spiteful, vexatious, turbulent woman” [Johnson] is late 14c., from earlier sense of “spiteful person” (male or female), mid-13c.,late 14c., “wicked, malignant,” from shrew + -ish. Of women, “malignant and scolding,” from 1560s. Related: Shrewishly; shrewishness. scold (n.) mid-12c., “person of ribald speech,” later “person fond of abusive language” (c. 1300), especially a shrewish woman [Johnson defines it as “A clamourous, rude, mean, low, foul-mouthed woman”], from Old Norse skald “poet” (see skald). The sense evolution might reflect the fact that Germanic poets (like their Celtic counterparts) were famously feared for their ability to lampoon and mock (as in skaldskapr “poetry,” also, in Icelandic law books, “libel in verse”).
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“Shrilling” (vs Shrill, Shrew, Scold)
|Shrilling| Counter-Signaling -> Outraging -> Shrilling -> ShriekingShrilling : hbd science-denialism, feminism, postmodernism, marxism, inappropriate theism. shrill (n.) 1a: having or emitting a sharp high-pitched tone or sound 1b: accompanied by sharp high-pitched sounds or cries 2: having a sharp or vivid effect on the senses 3: PIERCING, STRIDENT, INTEMPERATE shrew, shrewish (adj.) “peevish, malignant, clamorous, spiteful, vexatious, turbulent woman” [Johnson] is late 14c., from earlier sense of “spiteful person” (male or female), mid-13c.,late 14c., “wicked, malignant,” from shrew + -ish. Of women, “malignant and scolding,” from 1560s. Related: Shrewishly; shrewishness. scold (n.) mid-12c., “person of ribald speech,” later “person fond of abusive language” (c. 1300), especially a shrewish woman [Johnson defines it as “A clamourous, rude, mean, low, foul-mouthed woman”], from Old Norse skald “poet” (see skald). The sense evolution might reflect the fact that Germanic poets (like their Celtic counterparts) were famously feared for their ability to lampoon and mock (as in skaldskapr “poetry,” also, in Icelandic law books, “libel in verse”).
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Ownership of the Name Aryan… sigh
In the scholarly literature aryanism refers to the culture of the indo european expansion from russia-ukraine, using militaristic, expansionist, hierarchical, paternal, sky worshipping, horse riding peoples consisting of the european and iranic branches, resulting in the european, armenian, iranic, indo-iranic peoples. europeans and indians want to appropriate this name exclusively, but as far as I know all of use evolved from the two or three different subraces that adopted this culture.
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Ownership of the Name Aryan… sigh
In the scholarly literature aryanism refers to the culture of the indo european expansion from russia-ukraine, using militaristic, expansionist, hierarchical, paternal, sky worshipping, horse riding peoples consisting of the european and iranic branches, resulting in the european, armenian, iranic, indo-iranic peoples. europeans and indians want to appropriate this name exclusively, but as far as I know all of use evolved from the two or three different subraces that adopted this culture.