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Only when taken out of context. NAOS literally said that me. "That all you got" was his exact quote. And my tone with CL pales in comparison to his tone with me. Hell, he just called me a douche. Like just a minute ago.

No, I didn't. Reading 101. Try it some time.
 
Yep, I'm loving all the creative innovation taking place in this thread. It sure is adding a lot of value to the discussion.


And I have faith that there is a wealth of new ideas that will be shared, sooner or later.

So this is what progress looks like!
:-)
 
It pushed the spread of computerization to a new level. Humans + computers > Humans - computers. Like I mentioned before, I have a very realist perspective on progress. It is increased capability. The romantics are the ones who talk about the "dark side", not me.

which capacities are increased? Are they increased at the expense of other capacities?

Siro, this interaction between us was really very simple. Do you honestly feel like you did your part to engage in a "two way conversation"? For my part, I'm very comfortable with the questions I asked in response to your post.
 
I concede that not every impact of humans is positive, but I think in the grand scale it is a net positive. Now if it was a dolphin keeping score they might feel differently about that, but I am a human and have already admitted that I'm a fan of human progress.

I already explained in a response to alt that my meaning with gaining value was gaining value to humans. So yes, clearly these objects were already there in their own right, and if you believe they had value to themselves that's fine, but my interest is in their value to humans.

Regarding the use of words that you find too romantic, I think the words I've used are apt for describing the things I've described. I think you should feel free to continue to use your pompous words, and I will continue to use my romantic ones.

I'm seriously surprised at the level with with "progress" is being launched around here without any parachute. We're just barreling toward a net good, so who needs one? And at the ways in which "humanity" is being used as a general category. Together: "human progress." Wow.

It's moral zealotry. And while it's just me typing right now, I can assure you that thousands of well-informed people would like you to know (via proxy) that you've provided extremely thin evidence. (But you did rehearse a nice synopsis of the neoclassical synthesis in the opening pages of this thread. #Goosebumps)
 
My thoughts are that both Joe and NAOS have valid arguments to the two sides of the debate.
Difference is Joe stated his opinions and NAOS did the same but in an unnecessarily condescending way.
I would greatly prefer being educated to the two ways of thinking through constructive debate with less hyperbole and personal barbs.

But it's a message board.

#modauditioning
Nah, Joe is a douche

Sent from my LG-E970 using Tapatalk
 
Oh hush now




Didn't Steve Jobs say that the key is to give people what they want before they know they want it
 
Everything can be and is created. Wealth is no different. Take a look at the value of an enormous corporation like Apple. Where did that value come from? It was literally created from nothing more than imagination. Forward thinking people dreamed of products like iPhones and Mac computers, etc., and then they brought them to life by building these amazing objects out of resources, all of which would have no value whatsoever if not for technology that bestowed value upon them. Where did this technology come from? Imagination.

Do you believe that resources have intrinsic value? Did you know that prior to the invention of the internal combustion engine that oil was thought of as nothing but a nuisance? It bubbled up from the ground here and there polluting otherwise pristine land and streams. Nobody wanted land with oil on it, and no one imagined that there was a whole bunch more of it under the ground or that anyone would ever want to access it even if there was. But technology transformed this useless dirty slimy goo into what many people now believe to be one of the most valuable resources on earth.

And then technology created better and better ways to extract it from the ground, to refine it, and to use it. Many people are stunned to learn that today, despite all the hand wringing over depleting oil reserves, the known resources of oil in terms of years of burnable fuel are currently greater than they have ever been in the history of the world. We literally have more years worth of available oil resources than we have ever had, despite the fact that we are simultaneously burning far more oil in far more places that we ever have in the history of mankind. And on top of that,despite what you've probably heard, it doesn't matter if we ever run out. This is because, if that were to happen, technologies would emerge to solve the problem by replacing it with other resources that are also likely currently worth nothing.

If you follow this pathway back to the origins of mankind you would discover that our first energy resource was wood, and there was a time when the English were in a panic because somebody figured out that it was going to be impossible for the supply of wood to keep up with the ever increasing demand. Not only wouldn't people be able to heat their homes, but they wouldn't even have anything to build those homes out of, nor would they be able to build the furniture that was needed inside of the homes. But did we ever actually run out of wood? Not even close... and we never will. This despite the fact that some people want you to believe that we need to conserve paper in order to save forests - the notion is patently ridiculous.

If you are willing to take a close look at the way economics really works you will probably discover that a lot of the things you have been led to believe for your entire life simply are not true.
Lol

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Everything can be and is created. Wealth is no different. Take a look at the value of an enormous corporation like Apple. Where did that value come from? It was literally created from nothing more than imagination. Forward thinking people dreamed of products like iPhones and Mac computers, etc., and then they brought them to life by building these amazing objects out of resources, all of which would have no value whatsoever if not for technology that bestowed value upon them. Where did this technology come from? Imagination.

Do you believe that resources have intrinsic value? Did you know that prior to the invention of the internal combustion engine that oil was thought of as nothing but a nuisance? It bubbled up from the ground here and there polluting otherwise pristine land and streams. Nobody wanted land with oil on it, and no one imagined that there was a whole bunch more of it under the ground or that anyone would ever want to access it even if there was. But technology transformed this useless dirty slimy goo into what many people now believe to be one of the most valuable resources on earth.

And then technology created better and better ways to extract it from the ground, to refine it, and to use it. Many people are stunned to learn that today, despite all the hand wringing over depleting oil reserves, the known resources of oil in terms of years of burnable fuel are currently greater than they have ever been in the history of the world. We literally have more years worth of available oil resources than we have ever had, despite the fact that we are simultaneously burning far more oil in far more places that we ever have in the history of mankind. And on top of that,despite what you've probably heard, it doesn't matter if we ever run out. This is because, if that were to happen, technologies would emerge to solve the problem by replacing it with other resources that are also likely currently worth nothing.

If you follow this pathway back to the origins of mankind you would discover that our first energy resource was wood, and there was a time when the English were in a panic because somebody figured out that it was going to be impossible for the supply of wood to keep up with the ever increasing demand. Not only wouldn't people be able to heat their homes, but they wouldn't even have anything to build those homes out of, nor would they be able to build the furniture that was needed inside of the homes. But did we ever actually run out of wood? Not even close... and we never will. This despite the fact that some people want you to believe that we need to conserve paper in order to save forests - the notion is patently ridiculous.

If you are willing to take a close look at the way economics really works you will probably discover that a lot of the things you have been led to believe for your entire life simply are not true.

Lol

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This is actually a good reply to Joe's post. I honestly think the best thing to do when you're in the company of someone who is repeating the mantra of others -- especially in such rich detail -- is to assume they're trying to joke or manipulate. Either way, laughter is good. If they get offended, then it's highly probable they were attempting a manipulation, or, alternatively, they are themselves a product of manipulation. An offended response is revealing: if they were manipulating, how much should you care if they are offended? if they are products of manipulation, then what exactly are you offending? Is it the conviction they bring to the moral purpose they find in the mantra?

What kind of person shares a moral story and gets offended when others have the strength to laugh instead of kneel?

If you laugh and offend somebody, and then that person starts making broad generalizing statements about who they are and what they sincerely believe and then go on to explain how the people who disagree with them secretly harbor a pessimistic outlook on life, then........... (wait, let me recap this situation quickly: you're laughing, and then being told that you're a pessimist)...... well then, either up the mockery or get the **** out of there. Personally, I think it feels good to mock moral convictions of the economic variety.


Apple managed to change the landscape of technology and push human capabilities further than ever before.

LMFAO

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oiF1NeDffOE

If you offend a preacher who then attempts to give you a brief history of the world, then you really need to get the **** outta there.

They are ideas made to maximize diffusion into the market. Ideas that would not exist if it wasn't for someone trying to maximize their profits.

The West is Europe and its daughter colonies. Shortly after time of the Roman Empire's collapse, Europe was at about the same level of technical development as China and the Middle East. Liberals will often point out that this invention or that originated outside of Europe in order to counter the Eurocentric view of human progress, but they miss the point entirely. Europeans are no more, or less, innovative than anyone else. And yet, within a few hundred years, they shot past competing powers at a confounding rate. By the 1700s, Europe was leagues ahead of the Middle and Far East (how ideas of racial supremacy began). The engine that drove this progress was the advent of capitalism toward the end of the low Middle Ages. Capitalism spread cutting edge technologies far and wide across Europe, whereas before such inventions would be relegated to the originating group to be stuck there or eventually forgotten. Infrastructures required for that continuing spread had to be developed, and universities to pass on the knowledge had to be built.

Capitalism has been, by far, the prime pusher of human progress. It is why we have a globalized society, and why we've managed to build a civilization that is unlikely to ever collapse. It is really quite obvious.
 
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--TECHNOLOGY! DEAR BENEFICENT GOD, CAN YOU HEAR ME?! THOU PROVIDETH ALL SOLUTIONS WHEN WE ARE IN NEED!! Never will we run out of wood or oil thanks to your inevitable march toward the Good, dear God! Those who understand and trust your unlimited power and resources have a lightness of being and a clear vision; those who don't bubble up through the world like the useless goo of tar pits, and, like them, they will eventually be washed clean!
 
Oh hush now




Didn't Steve Jobs say that the key is to give people what they want before they know they want it

I heard that before Steve Jobs cleared his first math class.

Henry E. Eyring told me that the secret to being a good husband was in knowing what your wife wants quick enough to make it your own idea.
 
Fun Stuff

This thread has surpassed my hopes as a generator of interesting and divergent comments.

If I ever quit laughing at myself or the world, I'll go sit in the Hogup cave and contemplate the rising and falling levels of the Great Salt Lake and the causes, and consequences, that might be somehow correlated. Oh yah, and take pics of the jet traffic too.

Energy is the fundamental basis of technology. If you have enough energy from other sources you can synthesize all the oil-based materials you need from carbon dioxide and water. The Navy had a problem of what to do with the carbon dioxide generated by humans or engines onboard subs, and found some scientists who developed the technology to reduce the carbon dioxide back to methane.

They're still working on cold fusion reactions, and other nuclear technologies, for having all the energy they could need onboard. Never need refueling technologies.

I have heard that we have vast clouds of protons separated from vast clouds of electrons in our upper atmosphere, moving a high speed. I'm willing to debate the origin of our magnetic field, but for some reasons our researchers have not measured the exact size or variance of these resources, or of the hydrogen being generated by collisions of these ions. In a universe that is 99.9999999999999% hydrogen, oxygen is limiting factor on a lot of stuff necessary to life. Pretty sure every planet has some kind of "solar wind" shield. . . . fragmented hydrogen atoms could be as much as .01% of the total hydrogen. . . . more material than all the stars combined. . . . have any astrophysicists ever measured the spectroscopic lines for protons and electrons in space?

We can make oil products from wood, as long as we have enough carbon dioxide to support photosynthesis in our atmosphere. If you look at all forms of life as a basis for "moral good", carbon dioxide has got to right up there with oxygen and water. I wouldn't quibble about a few hundred feet in ocean level or polar ice cap melting, I'd just build dikes or move the cities. Having global management representing the vested interests of coal and oil cartelists interested in reducing consumption of their products while maintaining the same levels of sales comes from the "morality" of a John D. Rockefeller, whose genius was directed at eliminating competitors and restricting supplies to keep prices high, compounded with a global model for ultimate monopoly comprehended in the words "Use Theirs First".

Apparently, morality is about the same thing as wealth, entirely existing in the minds of the humans. . . . . particularly in the more egocentric and megalomaniacal humans.

Put me down as solid with NAOS on this thread.

Siro, for some reason, subordinates his humanity to his belief system, which places inordinate value on "intelligence", and so he thinks computer-assisted intelligence equates with a superior humanity. That's called Transhumanism, and it qualifies as a religious cult.
 
Siro, this interaction between us was really very simple. Do you honestly feel like you did your part to engage in a "two way conversation"? For my part, I'm very comfortable with the questions I asked in response to your post.

The following errors occurred with your submission
NAOS has exceeded their stored private messages quota and cannot accept further messages until they clear some space. (Have tried twice.)
 
The following errors occurred with your submission
NAOS has exceeded their stored private messages quota and cannot accept further messages until they clear some space. (Have tried twice.)

should be plenty of space now.
 
Re siro's assertion that capitalism is the key factor in the west's dominance: I studied Chinese economic history for a while and this learned some really interesting things about progress and innovation. As far as innovation goes, the chinese, and Asians in general have the advantage in sheer time of dominance. This is not due to some innate ability because of genetics or anything like that, but due to the fact that they basically have had thousands of years living in a resource rich area with a huge land mass. They basically had unlimited room to expand and grow enough food for what amounted to a huge population boom well in advance of any population boom around the world.

The Chinese had a multitude of inventions that allowed for world travel well before any Europeans (excluding vikings) were making long sea voyages (read about zheng he the Chinese admiral for more on this). They had more than enough knowledge and resources to have an industrial revolution as early as 900 ad. But what stopped them? There are probably a lot if things that stopped them, but one thing that I came across a lot in my reading back then was the Chinese affinity for confucian values of self sufficiency and not stretching beyond ones own means. There was basically a conscious choice by leaders of the Chinese people on multiple occasions, over about 800 years, to avoid too advanced of a technological age. This was even perpetuated into Mao's rule with "the great leap forward" followed by re education and turning inward for answers to their problems of growth.

While I am not 100% sold on capitalism being the vehicle for industrial revolution (imo, it's a stronger chance that the printing press was the vehicle, or that ingenuity had reached a critical mass and could not be held back any longer), it does have some merit.

The world would certainly be vastly different had Asians been the ones who spread modern technology.

Side note on the Americans of 1000 years ago: those people were pretty advanced in their own right, and at least as prosperous as contemporary Europe. They lacked one insurmountable advantage, they didn't have the exposure to disease that Eurasians did, and obviously lacked immunity. If native Americans would have had exposure to a few more large animals, we could be living in a world dominated by aztec, incan and maya people.
 
Re siro's assertion that capitalism is the key factor in the west's dominance: I studied Chinese economic history for a while and this learned some really interesting things about progress and innovation. As far as innovation goes, the chinese, and Asians in general have the advantage in sheer time of dominance. This is not due to some innate ability because of genetics or anything like that, but due to the fact that they basically have had thousands of years living in a resource rich area with a huge land mass. They basically had unlimited room to expand and grow enough food for what amounted to a huge population boom well in advance of any population boom around the world.

The Chinese had a multitude of inventions that allowed for world travel well before any Europeans (excluding vikings) were making long sea voyages (read about zheng he the Chinese admiral for more on this). They had more than enough knowledge and resources to have an industrial revolution as early as 900 ad. But what stopped them? There are probably a lot if things that stopped them, but one thing that I came across a lot in my reading back then was the Chinese affinity for confucian values of self sufficiency and not stretching beyond ones own means. There was basically a conscious choice by leaders of the Chinese people on multiple occasions, over about 800 years, to avoid too advanced of a technological age. This was even perpetuated into Mao's rule with "the great leap forward" followed by re education and turning inward for answers to their problems of growth.

While I am not 100% sold on capitalism being the vehicle for industrial revolution (imo, it's a stronger chance that the printing press was the vehicle, or that ingenuity had reached a critical mass and could not be held back any longer), it does have some merit.

The world would certainly be vastly different had Asians been the ones who spread modern technology.

Side note on the Americans of 1000 years ago: those people were pretty advanced in their own right, and at least as prosperous as contemporary Europe. They lacked one insurmountable advantage, they didn't have the exposure to disease that Eurasians did, and obviously lacked immunity. If native Americans would have had exposure to a few more large animals, we could be living in a world dominated by aztec, incan and maya people.

Kim Stanley Robinson wrote an interesting book that basically retold world history with Europe never recovering from the plague and therefore Asians and Native Americans taking on a significantly different role. It's called "The Year's of Rice and Salt"

KSR also wrote an awesome series on Mars colonization.
 
Kim Stanley Robinson wrote an interesting book that basically retold world history with Europe never recovering from the plague and therefore Asians and Native Americans taking on a significantly different role. It's called "The Year's of Rice and Salt"

KSR also wrote an awesome series on Mars colonization.

That sounds interesting. Gonna have to read that.
 
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