Theme: Truth

  • Not that the Brodies are a … an honorable kin group, but we DO have someone in

    Not that the Brodies are a … an honorable kin group, but we DO have someone in the white house who speaks the truth. I’ll debate you any time. -cheers.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-01-13 20:31:50 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/952277028585246720

    Reply addressees: @DrCherylBrodie @realDonaldTrump

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/951607233317568519


    IN REPLY TO:

    @DrCherylBrodie

    @realDonaldTrump you’re a shithole. Your family are shitholes. Your mere existence is a shithole. Your fake presidency is a shithole. #ShutUpTrump #shitholegate

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/951607233317568519

  • Retweeted M (@Mjonesplumber): The further a society drifts from truth, the more

    Retweeted M (@Mjonesplumber): The further a society drifts from truth, the more it will hate those who dare to speak it. #Shitholegate #shithole
  • Retweeted M (@Mjonesplumber): The further a society drifts from truth, the more

    Retweeted M (@Mjonesplumber):

    The further a society drifts from truth, the more it will hate those who dare to speak it. #Shitholegate #shithole


    Source date (UTC): 2018-01-13 15:36:00 UTC

  • Retweeted M (@Mjonesplumber): The further a society drifts from truth, the more

    Retweeted M (@Mjonesplumber): The further a society drifts from truth, the more it will hate those who dare to speak it. #Shitholegate #shithole
  • I’m trying to figure out if that’s a profoundly ignorant, profoundly stupid, or

    I’m trying to figure out if that’s a profoundly ignorant, profoundly stupid, or profoundly dishonest question … Let’s see. Reported vs Demonstrated. Possible vs Impossible. Voluntary vs involuntary. I mean… so many logical problems in there and so few characters to work with.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-01-12 15:48:11 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/951843255506923520

    Reply addressees: @Mr_Cain_Thaler

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/951838492253966336


    IN REPLY TO:

    Original post on X

    Original tweet unavailable — we could not load the text of the post this reply is addressing on X. That usually means the tweet was deleted, the account is protected, or X does not expose it to the account used for archiving. The Original post link below may still open if you view it in X while signed in.

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/951838492253966336

  • I thought it was just an empirically obvious statement. It’s true

    I thought it was just an empirically obvious statement. It’s true.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-01-12 07:05:15 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/951711657788616704

    Reply addressees: @BerniceKing

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/951677580243079168


    IN REPLY TO:

    @BerniceKing

    Only in a country still haunted by white supremacy and hounded by racism would a sitting president feel comfortable degrading Africa and Haiti, while praising Norway. There’s an ugly history that preceded Trump’s comments today. Don’t pretend as though America hasn’t been racist.

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/951677580243079168

  • Deflationary truth starts here?

    Deflationary truth starts here?

    https://www.facebook.com/msnbc/videos/2277862688900415/


    Source date (UTC): 2018-01-11 23:53:00 UTC

  • The Various Rights And Wrongs And Their Frames

    Um. Saying pain hurts is a tautology (meaningless). But this is an excellent opportunity to discuss an interesting defect in language and concept. And perhaps, it might help to remind us that english grammar (the verb) contains the time dimension of “always happened -> happened -> is happening -> will happen -> always shall happen.” Pain alerts us to damage so that we remember not to repeat the actions that caused that damage again, or avoid further opportunities for damage. Now it’s true that we humans often conflate: 1 – ‘correct and incorrect’ (testing or calculation of a known), 2 – ‘beneficial and harmful’ (human change in state – immediate) 3 – ‘right and wrong’ (operations to produce an intended outcome OR ‘ethical vs unethical’, OR ‘moral and immoral’ – intertemporal), 4 – ‘good and bad’ (moral actions that produce gain or loss upon others – moral being indirect, and ethical being direct – intertemporal.), 5 – ‘positive and negative’ (economic, financial, entrepreneurial change). 5 – ‘true and false’ (testimonial that is consistent, correspondent, operational, and coherent – intertempral), and 6 – ‘true and false’ (analytic – technically ‘testimony of correctness’ – intertemporal – this is the source of the ‘problem’ since ‘true’ in math and logic is equivalent to ‘true’ in carpentry, not true as in testimony. Mathematical and logical statements are either correct or incorrect or unknown, the are not true or false. Because all we are doing is testing deduction and inference between two states.) And it is very common for people to use the MEANS OF CALCULATION most common to them: 1 – those people of a religious frame to rely upon ‘good and bad, 2 – those of a moral frame rely upon right and wrong, 3 – those of a rationalist (philosophical) frame ethical and unethical, moral and immoral 4 – those of a legal frame legal and illegal. 5 – those of a scientific frame rely upon beneficial and harmful’, 6 – those of an entrepreneurial, financial, and economic frame rely upon ‘positive and negative’. And most of us conflate them depending upon the virtue signal we are trying to send. And sometimes we do so deceptively so that we attribute more authority to our assertions than exists: the most common being the pedestrian conflation of moral and legal. When speaking on this subject we are confronted by in a noun-verb challenge. In that we are discussing both cause and effect and must choose a compromise term because of a deficiency in our language. We have no equivalent of ethical and moral with others for the INDIVIDUAL with himself. We have ethical: directly to others, and we have moral: indirectly to others. But no equivalent for the self. And therefore are trying to answer a question is this ‘ethical (not harmful) ‘ between the person you are now, and the person you will be in the future. (Although that may be an unfamiliar means of analysis, it provides commensurability that’s a extremely beneficial addition to our linguistic and conceptual inventories. ) 1 – Doing something wrong. (harmful). 2 – Done something wrong. (harmful). 3 – Cumulatively done something wrong (harmful). 4 – Something is going wrong despite our efforts (harmful failure). 5 – We are indecline and noting we can do but conserve energy. (chronic harm). So, from the relationship between our physical body and our acting minds, I choose to use the word “wrong’ to satisfy that relationship between body and mind, where we should, if we can, do something differently from how we are currently doing it. Because that is the evolutionary origin of pain: to provide information that immediately overloads all other information competing for attention in that network we call the nervous system. To inform you to do something other than what you are doing. In the most severe case, that is, to find an answer to the harm that has befallen you by accident, intent, negligence, or fate. Cheers.
  • THE VARIOUS RIGHTS AND WRONGS AND THEIR FRAMES Um. Saying pain hurts is a tautol

    THE VARIOUS RIGHTS AND WRONGS AND THEIR FRAMES

    Um. Saying pain hurts is a tautology (meaningless).

    But this is an excellent opportunity to discuss an interesting defect in language and concept. And perhaps, it might help to remind us that english grammar (the verb) contains the time dimension of “always happened -> happened -> is happening -> will happen -> always shall happen.”

    Pain alerts us to damage so that we remember not to repeat the actions that caused that damage again, or avoid further opportunities for damage.

    Now it’s true that we humans often conflate:

    1 – ‘correct and incorrect’ (testing or calculation of a known),

    2 – ‘beneficial and harmful’ (human change in state – immediate)

    3 – ‘right and wrong’ (operations to produce an intended outcome OR ‘ethical vs unethical’, OR ‘moral and immoral’ – intertemporal),

    4 – ‘good and bad’ (moral actions that produce gain or loss upon others – moral being indirect, and ethical being direct – intertemporal.),

    5 – ‘positive and negative’ (economic, financial, entrepreneurial change).

    5 – ‘true and false’ (testimonial that is consistent, correspondent, operational, and coherent – intertempral), and

    6 – ‘true and false’ (analytic – technically ‘testimony of correctness’ – intertemporal – this is the source of the ‘problem’ since ‘true’ in math and logic is equivalent to ‘true’ in carpentry, not true as in testimony. Mathematical and logical statements are either correct or incorrect or unknown, the are not true or false. Because all we are doing is testing deduction and inference between two states.)

    And it is very common for people to use the MEANS OF CALCULATION most common to them:

    1 – those people of a religious frame to rely upon ‘good and bad,

    2 – those of a moral frame rely upon right and wrong,

    3 – those of a rationalist (philosophical) frame ethical and unethical, moral and immoral

    4 – those of a legal frame legal and illegal.

    5 – those of a scientific frame rely upon beneficial and harmful’,

    6 – those of an entrepreneurial, financial, and economic frame rely upon ‘positive and negative’.

    And most of us conflate them depending upon the virtue signal we are trying to send. And sometimes we do so deceptively so that we attribute more authority to our assertions than exists: the most common being the pedestrian conflation of moral and legal.

    When speaking on this subject we are confronted by in a noun-verb challenge. In that we are discussing both cause and effect and must choose a compromise term because of a deficiency in our language. We have no equivalent of ethical and moral with others for the INDIVIDUAL with himself. We have ethical: directly to others, and we have moral: indirectly to others. But no equivalent for the self.

    And therefore are trying to answer a question is this ‘ethical (not harmful) ‘ between the person you are now, and the person you will be in the future. (Although that may be an unfamiliar means of analysis, it provides commensurability that’s a extremely beneficial addition to our linguistic and conceptual inventories. )

    1 – Doing something wrong. (harmful).

    2 – Done something wrong. (harmful).

    3 – Cumulatively done something wrong (harmful).

    4 – Something is going wrong despite our efforts (harmful failure).

    5 – We are indecline and noting we can do but conserve energy. (chronic harm).

    So, from the relationship between our physical body and our acting minds, I choose to use the word “wrong’ to satisfy that relationship between body and mind, where we should, if we can, do something differently from how we are currently doing it.

    Because that is the evolutionary origin of pain: to provide information that immediately overloads all other information competing for attention in that network we call the nervous system.

    To inform you to do something other than what you are doing.

    In the most severe case, that is, to find an answer to the harm that has befallen you by accident, intent, negligence, or fate.

    Cheers.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-01-07 11:59:00 UTC

  • The Various Rights And Wrongs And Their Frames

    Um. Saying pain hurts is a tautology (meaningless). But this is an excellent opportunity to discuss an interesting defect in language and concept. And perhaps, it might help to remind us that english grammar (the verb) contains the time dimension of “always happened -> happened -> is happening -> will happen -> always shall happen.” Pain alerts us to damage so that we remember not to repeat the actions that caused that damage again, or avoid further opportunities for damage. Now it’s true that we humans often conflate: 1 – ‘correct and incorrect’ (testing or calculation of a known), 2 – ‘beneficial and harmful’ (human change in state – immediate) 3 – ‘right and wrong’ (operations to produce an intended outcome OR ‘ethical vs unethical’, OR ‘moral and immoral’ – intertemporal), 4 – ‘good and bad’ (moral actions that produce gain or loss upon others – moral being indirect, and ethical being direct – intertemporal.), 5 – ‘positive and negative’ (economic, financial, entrepreneurial change). 5 – ‘true and false’ (testimonial that is consistent, correspondent, operational, and coherent – intertempral), and 6 – ‘true and false’ (analytic – technically ‘testimony of correctness’ – intertemporal – this is the source of the ‘problem’ since ‘true’ in math and logic is equivalent to ‘true’ in carpentry, not true as in testimony. Mathematical and logical statements are either correct or incorrect or unknown, the are not true or false. Because all we are doing is testing deduction and inference between two states.) And it is very common for people to use the MEANS OF CALCULATION most common to them: 1 – those people of a religious frame to rely upon ‘good and bad, 2 – those of a moral frame rely upon right and wrong, 3 – those of a rationalist (philosophical) frame ethical and unethical, moral and immoral 4 – those of a legal frame legal and illegal. 5 – those of a scientific frame rely upon beneficial and harmful’, 6 – those of an entrepreneurial, financial, and economic frame rely upon ‘positive and negative’. And most of us conflate them depending upon the virtue signal we are trying to send. And sometimes we do so deceptively so that we attribute more authority to our assertions than exists: the most common being the pedestrian conflation of moral and legal. When speaking on this subject we are confronted by in a noun-verb challenge. In that we are discussing both cause and effect and must choose a compromise term because of a deficiency in our language. We have no equivalent of ethical and moral with others for the INDIVIDUAL with himself. We have ethical: directly to others, and we have moral: indirectly to others. But no equivalent for the self. And therefore are trying to answer a question is this ‘ethical (not harmful) ‘ between the person you are now, and the person you will be in the future. (Although that may be an unfamiliar means of analysis, it provides commensurability that’s a extremely beneficial addition to our linguistic and conceptual inventories. ) 1 – Doing something wrong. (harmful). 2 – Done something wrong. (harmful). 3 – Cumulatively done something wrong (harmful). 4 – Something is going wrong despite our efforts (harmful failure). 5 – We are indecline and noting we can do but conserve energy. (chronic harm). So, from the relationship between our physical body and our acting minds, I choose to use the word “wrong’ to satisfy that relationship between body and mind, where we should, if we can, do something differently from how we are currently doing it. Because that is the evolutionary origin of pain: to provide information that immediately overloads all other information competing for attention in that network we call the nervous system. To inform you to do something other than what you are doing. In the most severe case, that is, to find an answer to the harm that has befallen you by accident, intent, negligence, or fate. Cheers.