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the srange things in the skies

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  • J jmaida

    I Understand. Bias has a human quality to it. Objective is much more neutral. Like math.

    "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

    T Online
    T Online
    trønderen
    wrote on last edited by
    #26

    In politics, most definitely in the international variant, what is 'objective' depends on subjective opinions. Most 'facts' are cultural arti_facts_. You may of course pull up some objective, undisputable facts. Then you apply these facts in your argumentation, in very subjective ways. Is the play 'Erasmus Montanus' by the Dane Ludvig Holberg well known in English speaking countries? Rasmus proves that his mother is stone: A stone cannot fly. Little Mother cannot fly. Then Little Mother is a stone. ... His mother is shocked to be a stone, so her son has to turn her back into a human again: A stone cannot talk, Little Mother can talk. So Little Mother is not a stone. This play (you can read it in an English translation at ERASMUS MONTANUS OR RASMUS BERG[^]) is always presented as a comedy, and most reader / audience fail to see the satire - how we in academic and political discussions juggle all sorts of 'facts' around to reach whatever conclusion we want. In discussions, I rarely see real 'facts' being presented at all, and if they are, most of the time they are applied as arguments in more or less dubious ways. Unless you agree with the conclusion, of course. Little Mother was very happy about her son's second fact, but not with his first.

    J 3 Replies Last reply
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    • T trønderen

      In politics, most definitely in the international variant, what is 'objective' depends on subjective opinions. Most 'facts' are cultural arti_facts_. You may of course pull up some objective, undisputable facts. Then you apply these facts in your argumentation, in very subjective ways. Is the play 'Erasmus Montanus' by the Dane Ludvig Holberg well known in English speaking countries? Rasmus proves that his mother is stone: A stone cannot fly. Little Mother cannot fly. Then Little Mother is a stone. ... His mother is shocked to be a stone, so her son has to turn her back into a human again: A stone cannot talk, Little Mother can talk. So Little Mother is not a stone. This play (you can read it in an English translation at ERASMUS MONTANUS OR RASMUS BERG[^]) is always presented as a comedy, and most reader / audience fail to see the satire - how we in academic and political discussions juggle all sorts of 'facts' around to reach whatever conclusion we want. In discussions, I rarely see real 'facts' being presented at all, and if they are, most of the time they are applied as arguments in more or less dubious ways. Unless you agree with the conclusion, of course. Little Mother was very happy about her son's second fact, but not with his first.

      J Offline
      J Offline
      jmaida
      wrote on last edited by
      #27

      Coming a from mathematics and engineering background, I view objective facts as founded in the laws of nature, math and logic, etc. Math, logic, etc. can all be made to have tricks. Erasmus play is an example. You may have heard of the Missing dollar riddle. An accounting trick. Missing dollar riddle - Wikipedia[^] True arguments from both sides can have objective information delivered to bolster their cases. However, I dispute that most facts are cultural artifacts. Some facts can have a culture tint, but not most. If they did we would never settle anything. One long endless argument unless one has objective facts to weigh the scale. True both sides can be right or wrong at the same time, so Flip a coin.

      "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

      J 1 Reply Last reply
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      • T trønderen

        In politics, most definitely in the international variant, what is 'objective' depends on subjective opinions. Most 'facts' are cultural arti_facts_. You may of course pull up some objective, undisputable facts. Then you apply these facts in your argumentation, in very subjective ways. Is the play 'Erasmus Montanus' by the Dane Ludvig Holberg well known in English speaking countries? Rasmus proves that his mother is stone: A stone cannot fly. Little Mother cannot fly. Then Little Mother is a stone. ... His mother is shocked to be a stone, so her son has to turn her back into a human again: A stone cannot talk, Little Mother can talk. So Little Mother is not a stone. This play (you can read it in an English translation at ERASMUS MONTANUS OR RASMUS BERG[^]) is always presented as a comedy, and most reader / audience fail to see the satire - how we in academic and political discussions juggle all sorts of 'facts' around to reach whatever conclusion we want. In discussions, I rarely see real 'facts' being presented at all, and if they are, most of the time they are applied as arguments in more or less dubious ways. Unless you agree with the conclusion, of course. Little Mother was very happy about her son's second fact, but not with his first.

        J Offline
        J Offline
        jmaida
        wrote on last edited by
        #28

        I downloaded Erasmus story. I heard a variation many moons ago. Seems to be about the same. I love logic twists. And yes, juggling is a there, but it's the meta position that's sees the juggling. Beware the meta juggler.

        "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

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        • T trønderen

          In politics, most definitely in the international variant, what is 'objective' depends on subjective opinions. Most 'facts' are cultural arti_facts_. You may of course pull up some objective, undisputable facts. Then you apply these facts in your argumentation, in very subjective ways. Is the play 'Erasmus Montanus' by the Dane Ludvig Holberg well known in English speaking countries? Rasmus proves that his mother is stone: A stone cannot fly. Little Mother cannot fly. Then Little Mother is a stone. ... His mother is shocked to be a stone, so her son has to turn her back into a human again: A stone cannot talk, Little Mother can talk. So Little Mother is not a stone. This play (you can read it in an English translation at ERASMUS MONTANUS OR RASMUS BERG[^]) is always presented as a comedy, and most reader / audience fail to see the satire - how we in academic and political discussions juggle all sorts of 'facts' around to reach whatever conclusion we want. In discussions, I rarely see real 'facts' being presented at all, and if they are, most of the time they are applied as arguments in more or less dubious ways. Unless you agree with the conclusion, of course. Little Mother was very happy about her son's second fact, but not with his first.

          J Offline
          J Offline
          jmaida
          wrote on last edited by
          #29

          "You may of course pull up some objective, undisputable facts. Then you apply these facts in your argumentation, in very subjective ways." How else can make one's case? Objective, indisputable facts is the fuel to settle an argument. Application is not subjective. It is required. True, settling an argument can also become "might makes right". But we all know that's the evil side.

          "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • J jmaida

            Coming a from mathematics and engineering background, I view objective facts as founded in the laws of nature, math and logic, etc. Math, logic, etc. can all be made to have tricks. Erasmus play is an example. You may have heard of the Missing dollar riddle. An accounting trick. Missing dollar riddle - Wikipedia[^] True arguments from both sides can have objective information delivered to bolster their cases. However, I dispute that most facts are cultural artifacts. Some facts can have a culture tint, but not most. If they did we would never settle anything. One long endless argument unless one has objective facts to weigh the scale. True both sides can be right or wrong at the same time, so Flip a coin.

            "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

            J Offline
            J Offline
            jschell
            wrote on last edited by
            #30

            jmaida wrote:

            Coming a from mathematics and engineering background, I view objective facts as founded in the laws of nature, math and logic, etc

            For math prove that parallel lines do not intersect in a Euclidean space. For logic prove that when a=b and b=c that a=c. Myself my subjective experience is that both of those are true. If you can prove them then I would really like to see that.

            jmaida wrote:

            I dispute that most facts are cultural artifacts.

            Which of course is a subjective statement.

            jmaida wrote:

            If they did we would never settle anything. One long endless argument unless one has objective facts to weigh the scale. True both sides can be right or wrong at the same time, so Flip a coin.

            Vast majority of agreements by humans are based on compromises. (And I am not suggesting I know of ones that are not but rather I just do not agree to absolutism.) People who believe that the world is flat still manage to get on airplanes that fly half way around the world to attend flat earth conferences.

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            • J Jeremy Falcon

              What's more plausible... aliens with advance tech that were somehow able to be suppressed by us low tech human n00bs or the government creating yet another story to fool the sheeple with into giving up more freedoms? And why is it... in the days of 8K video and satellite lenses that can see windshield wipers... every shot of these things are poor quality. I wonder why.

              Jeremy Falcon

              J Offline
              J Offline
              jschell
              wrote on last edited by
              #31

              Jeremy Falcon wrote:

              What's more plausible... aliens with advance tech that were somehow able to be suppressed by us low tech human n00bs or the government creating yet another story to fool the sheeple with into giving up more freedoms?

              Err...neither.

              J 1 Reply Last reply
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              • J jschell

                jmaida wrote:

                Coming a from mathematics and engineering background, I view objective facts as founded in the laws of nature, math and logic, etc

                For math prove that parallel lines do not intersect in a Euclidean space. For logic prove that when a=b and b=c that a=c. Myself my subjective experience is that both of those are true. If you can prove them then I would really like to see that.

                jmaida wrote:

                I dispute that most facts are cultural artifacts.

                Which of course is a subjective statement.

                jmaida wrote:

                If they did we would never settle anything. One long endless argument unless one has objective facts to weigh the scale. True both sides can be right or wrong at the same time, so Flip a coin.

                Vast majority of agreements by humans are based on compromises. (And I am not suggesting I know of ones that are not but rather I just do not agree to absolutism.) People who believe that the world is flat still manage to get on airplanes that fly half way around the world to attend flat earth conferences.

                J Offline
                J Offline
                jmaida
                wrote on last edited by
                #32

                axioms, not subjective about artifacts, compromises are just more sophisticated coin flips to settle

                "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

                J 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • J jschell

                  Jeremy Falcon wrote:

                  What's more plausible... aliens with advance tech that were somehow able to be suppressed by us low tech human n00bs or the government creating yet another story to fool the sheeple with into giving up more freedoms?

                  Err...neither.

                  J Offline
                  J Offline
                  Jeremy Falcon
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #33

                  Don't reply to me dude. Seriously.

                  Jeremy Falcon

                  J 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • J Jeremy Falcon

                    Don't reply to me dude. Seriously.

                    Jeremy Falcon

                    J Offline
                    J Offline
                    jschell
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #34

                    OK? Oh wait that is a reply right?

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                    • J jmaida

                      axioms, not subjective about artifacts, compromises are just more sophisticated coin flips to settle

                      "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

                      J Offline
                      J Offline
                      jschell
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #35

                      jmaida wrote:

                      axioms,

                      Which is just defining what I said.

                      jmaida wrote:

                      not subjective about artifacts,

                      Your stated opinion is subjective because that is what opinions are.

                      jmaida wrote:

                      compromises are just more sophisticated coin flips to settle

                      Not sure what that means. Complex negotiations involve trade offs and no one actually doing them would claim they were decided by a "coin flip".

                      J 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • J jschell

                        jmaida wrote:

                        axioms,

                        Which is just defining what I said.

                        jmaida wrote:

                        not subjective about artifacts,

                        Your stated opinion is subjective because that is what opinions are.

                        jmaida wrote:

                        compromises are just more sophisticated coin flips to settle

                        Not sure what that means. Complex negotiations involve trade offs and no one actually doing them would claim they were decided by a "coin flip".

                        J Offline
                        J Offline
                        jmaida
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #36

                        "Your stated opinion is subjective because that is what opinions are." Your opinion, I believe. On complex negotiations, buying and selling a power plant is a very complex process. The negotiators often encode all their variables, positions, etc. in a simulated purchase agreement. (have a relative who does this). One would be surprised how many of these revolve around just 1 or 2 impasses being settled. Even after a number of iterations. So sometimes they either flip a coin (not literally) and/or trade (compromise if you like) to close the deal.

                        "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

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                        • J jschell

                          jmaida wrote:

                          Coming a from mathematics and engineering background, I view objective facts as founded in the laws of nature, math and logic, etc

                          For math prove that parallel lines do not intersect in a Euclidean space. For logic prove that when a=b and b=c that a=c. Myself my subjective experience is that both of those are true. If you can prove them then I would really like to see that.

                          jmaida wrote:

                          I dispute that most facts are cultural artifacts.

                          Which of course is a subjective statement.

                          jmaida wrote:

                          If they did we would never settle anything. One long endless argument unless one has objective facts to weigh the scale. True both sides can be right or wrong at the same time, so Flip a coin.

                          Vast majority of agreements by humans are based on compromises. (And I am not suggesting I know of ones that are not but rather I just do not agree to absolutism.) People who believe that the world is flat still manage to get on airplanes that fly half way around the world to attend flat earth conferences.

                          J Offline
                          J Offline
                          jmaida
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #37

                          Axiom noun 1. a self-evident truth that requires no proof. 2. a universally accepted principle or rule. 3. Logic, Mathematics. a proposition that is assumed without proof for the sake of studying the consequences that follow from it.

                          "A little time, a little trouble, your better day" Badfinger

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