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BigBallinStalin wrote:If you can finagle your way into founding your own police department, you could get some serious military equipment for free!
http://articles.businessinsider.com/201 ... ice-forces
jay_a2j wrote:hey if any1 would like me to make them a signature or like an avator just let me no, my sig below i did, and i also did "panther 88" so i can do something like that for u if ud like...
I'm sure it did happen. The tenor of your original post seems to suggest that pre-20th century societies' problems had to do with religion, especially with respect to scientific advancement. I'm trying to think of examples (other than your example below) of religion repressing science such that quality of life did not improve.AAFitz wrote:Yes, and all Germans supported Hitler during World War. Sorry, just because any dissent was met with banishment or death, hardly means it was not truly there, and that suppression didnt happen.
Galileo was a practicing Catholic, so there's that. And it wasn't like Galileo was repressed.AAFitz wrote:Galileo feared for his life because he simply tried to describe how the planets orbited the sun. Id say that was an environment win which science was definitely suppressed.
yeah, I know... anyone who disagrees with you is just farting. Try education, not excuses.BigBallinStalin wrote:Yes, that's nice.PLAYER57832 wrote:Nice try at sidswiping the issue by, again pretending that you sit in some lofty hallowed position of understanding that the rest of us cannot possibly understand.BigBallinStalin wrote:There's a difference between the government creating an incentive which shapes human behavior (my position) and the incentives which shape government/political behavior (your position).PLAYER57832 wrote:NOPE!BigBallinStalin wrote: The government creates the strong incentive for very poor people to continuously procreate. Essentially, welfare services (like medicare and medicaid, and subsidies within the tax code) reward people who earn very little for producing more kids. People tend to be geared toward thinking in the short-term, so they'll discount the long-term costs of raising kids in exchange for the immediate tax credits and services received by the government.
The government has no such incentive. Despots, monarchs, dictators, etc all have incentive to keep people heavily dependent so they won't complain about much of anything and will more fully serve the whims of the elite.
Seeing that you failed to see this distinction by conflating the two different positions, and that you simply discarded my entire argument without really addressing it (via your patented Tangent to the Unknown), then I'd be glad to discuss your criticism if someone else takes up the torch and pitchfork. Or if you wanted to focus on one specific thing in the argument, then I'll talk with you about it.
The government has no independent incentives. Leaders have incentives to keep their power. People have incentives to demand security and safety. In the past, the two worked in tandem (oppositional tandem, but it worked). However, just as monarchs in the past gained too much power and became abusive, the heavy capitalists of today are also deciding that its OK for them to have everything and give nothing to those below .. or only very little.
That we are not yet at the point of having droves starving, massive plagues, etc is a benefit of technology, but the disparity is still there, and still marked.
Excuse me:
We are facing one right now, in the utter disregard for Global warming and natural resource use.thegreekdog wrote:I'm sure it did happen. The tenor of your original post seems to suggest that pre-20th century societies' problems had to do with religion, especially with respect to scientific advancement. I'm trying to think of examples (other than your example below) of religion repressing science such that quality of life did not improve.AAFitz wrote:Yes, and all Germans supported Hitler during World War. Sorry, just because any dissent was met with banishment or death, hardly means it was not truly there, and that suppression didnt happen.
Galileo was a practicing Catholic, so there's that. And it wasn't like Galileo was repressed.[/quote]AAFitz wrote:Galileo feared for his life because he simply tried to describe how the planets orbited the sun. Id say that was an environment win which science was definitely suppressed.
lol, I love how you argue. It's typically the following format:PLAYER57832 wrote:
yeah, I know... anyone who disagrees with you is just farting. Try education, not excuses.
The trouble is the whole scenario you described above (which is, yes, accurate) of collapse is BECAUSE our economic system has been so disassociated from the real basis of wealth.. creation and production of goods and services for sale. And that came about, in large part BECAUSE of what I said, along with a hefty dose of " I don't care about no *%$ resources.. just give me my fancy SUV and 10 course dinner, thank you... if you can't get hose, its because you are just plain lazy and anyone claiming there are real limits is just trying to take what is righfully mine from me!".
The trouble is the whole scenario you described above (which is, yes, accurate) of collapse is BECAUSE our economic system has been so disassociated from the real basis of wealth.. creation and production of goods and services for sale. And that came about, in large part BECAUSE of what I said, along with a hefty dose of " I don't care about no *%$ resources.. just give me my fancy SUV and 10 course dinner, thank you... if you can't get hose, its because you are just plain lazy and anyone claiming there are real limits is just trying to take what is righfully mine from me!".
No I do not. Public assistance is basically never cut off - and that is wrong. People who recieve transfer payments recieve money. The government does not send them food/clothing. It sends them money - and they quite often waste it as my aunt did. Some people deserve to live with the results of their own stupidity.PLAYER57832 wrote:Except "public assistance" IS just about giving the kids clothing, food... and yes, shelter. So, basically, you are saying that you don't want public assistance... but you want people to still have the things public assistance provides.rockfist wrote:I'd personally rather have people fend for themselves than see any of our money taken by force to be given to people like the woman in this story.Lootifer wrote:Personally I think the woman is largely irrelevant to the wider issues. Sure she should be condemned, but she is not a valid rationale for scrapping welfare systems world wide.
I had an aunt (through marriage) that was on public assistance after she bankrupted my uncle...and I was appalled with the way she spent her money. I'd have cut them off from all monetary assistance. I'd have made sure my cousins had cloths/food, but paper money was of more use being burned to heat your home than being given to her.
I really don't think that's religious repression.PLAYER57832 wrote:We are facing one right now, in the utter disregard for Global warming and natural resource use.
WTF, but everyone loves kiwis. >=(Lootifer wrote:Oh dont invest in NZ BBS, our production is all agriculture. Way to dependent on the price of oil getting the shit out of the country. Aussie is a much better bet; mineral rich and a decent enough domestic demand to insulate against world matters (to an extent ofc).
NZ is at the mercy of the world economy.
You cant necessarily find an example, because it essentially never happened. What you can do, is realize that the sceintific breakthroughs happened, as religious governments simply lost their stranglehold on them, and it is perfectly reasonable to essentially understand that the achievements that improve our quality of life today, would certainly have progressed faster had the religious governments simply not...well... killed people that otherwise would have made that advancement.thegreekdog wrote:I'm sure it did happen. The tenor of your original post seems to suggest that pre-20th century societies' problems had to do with religion, especially with respect to scientific advancement. I'm trying to think of examples (other than your example below) of religion repressing science such that quality of life did not improve.AAFitz wrote:Yes, and all Germans supported Hitler during World War. Sorry, just because any dissent was met with banishment or death, hardly means it was not truly there, and that suppression didnt happen.
Galileo was a practicing Catholic, so there's that. And it wasn't like Galileo was repressed.AAFitz wrote:Galileo feared for his life because he simply tried to describe how the planets orbited the sun. Id say that was an environment win which science was definitely suppressed.
And how are the dark ages different from today?AAFitz wrote:You cant necessarily find an example, because it essentially never happened. What you can do, is realize that the sceintific breakthroughs happened, as religious governments simply lost their stranglehold on them, and it is perfectly reasonable to essentially understand that the achievements that improve our quality of life today, would certainly have progressed faster had the religious governments simply not...well... killed people that otherwise would have made that advancement.thegreekdog wrote:I'm sure it did happen. The tenor of your original post seems to suggest that pre-20th century societies' problems had to do with religion, especially with respect to scientific advancement. I'm trying to think of examples (other than your example below) of religion repressing science such that quality of life did not improve.AAFitz wrote:Yes, and all Germans supported Hitler during World War. Sorry, just because any dissent was met with banishment or death, hardly means it was not truly there, and that suppression didnt happen.
Galileo was a practicing Catholic, so there's that. And it wasn't like Galileo was repressed.AAFitz wrote:Galileo feared for his life because he simply tried to describe how the planets orbited the sun. Id say that was an environment win which science was definitely suppressed.
It wasnt called the dark ages because the sun shone less brightly. It was the dark ages, because the light of truth, ie science, was darkened by simple men, who simply enjoyed their position of power.
jay_a2j wrote:hey if any1 would like me to make them a signature or like an avator just let me no, my sig below i did, and i also did "panther 88" so i can do something like that for u if ud like...
jay_a2j wrote:hey if any1 would like me to make them a signature or like an avator just let me no, my sig below i did, and i also did "panther 88" so i can do something like that for u if ud like...
How would the religious-science argument account for the role of coffee in civilization? How about the division of labor since the industrial revolution? Wouldn't the division of labor lead to different and new fields of knowledge that further expand the world's the total knowledge and capacity to solve problems?thegreekdog wrote:And how are the dark ages different from today?AAFitz wrote:You cant necessarily find an example, because it essentially never happened. What you can do, is realize that the sceintific breakthroughs happened, as religious governments simply lost their stranglehold on them, and it is perfectly reasonable to essentially understand that the achievements that improve our quality of life today, would certainly have progressed faster had the religious governments simply not...well... killed people that otherwise would have made that advancement.thegreekdog wrote:I'm sure it did happen. The tenor of your original post seems to suggest that pre-20th century societies' problems had to do with religion, especially with respect to scientific advancement. I'm trying to think of examples (other than your example below) of religion repressing science such that quality of life did not improve.AAFitz wrote:Yes, and all Germans supported Hitler during World War. Sorry, just because any dissent was met with banishment or death, hardly means it was not truly there, and that suppression didnt happen.
Galileo was a practicing Catholic, so there's that. And it wasn't like Galileo was repressed.AAFitz wrote:Galileo feared for his life because he simply tried to describe how the planets orbited the sun. Id say that was an environment win which science was definitely suppressed.
It wasnt called the dark ages because the sun shone less brightly. It was the dark ages, because the light of truth, ie science, was darkened by simple men, who simply enjoyed their position of power.
My point, to put it specifically, is that I think it's misguided for people to blame nonadvancement of science on religion, no matter the generation or historical reference. I agree that in every generation there are people in power who repress things that don't help them retain power or obtain more of it. I don't believe this has anything to do with religion. Perhaps religion was used as a tool for those powerful men, but it certainly wasn't the root cause of the nonadvancement of science in any historical time period.
History simply disagrees. I agree that there are other factors as well, but none that are simultaneously so ridiculous and powerful at the same time.thegreekdog wrote:And how are the dark ages different from today?AAFitz wrote:You cant necessarily find an example, because it essentially never happened. What you can do, is realize that the sceintific breakthroughs happened, as religious governments simply lost their stranglehold on them, and it is perfectly reasonable to essentially understand that the achievements that improve our quality of life today, would certainly have progressed faster had the religious governments simply not...well... killed people that otherwise would have made that advancement.thegreekdog wrote:I'm sure it did happen. The tenor of your original post seems to suggest that pre-20th century societies' problems had to do with religion, especially with respect to scientific advancement. I'm trying to think of examples (other than your example below) of religion repressing science such that quality of life did not improve.AAFitz wrote:Yes, and all Germans supported Hitler during World War. Sorry, just because any dissent was met with banishment or death, hardly means it was not truly there, and that suppression didnt happen.
Galileo was a practicing Catholic, so there's that. And it wasn't like Galileo was repressed.AAFitz wrote:Galileo feared for his life because he simply tried to describe how the planets orbited the sun. Id say that was an environment win which science was definitely suppressed.
It wasnt called the dark ages because the sun shone less brightly. It was the dark ages, because the light of truth, ie science, was darkened by simple men, who simply enjoyed their position of power.
My point, to put it specifically, is that I think it's misguided for people to blame nonadvancement of science on religion, no matter the generation or historical reference. I agree that in every generation there are people in power who repress things that don't help them retain power or obtain more of it. I don't believe this has anything to do with religion. Perhaps religion was used as a tool for those powerful men, but it certainly wasn't the root cause of the nonadvancement of science in any historical time period.
And then we factor those saved lives into the rate of population growth and we'd have something like 15 billion people on this planet and we'd be in an even deeper mess. Polluting, devouring natural resources, etc..AAFitz wrote:Go back and discover a better way of treating infection, a few years before it was discovered, and thousands and possibly millions would be saved.
El Capitan X wrote:The people in flame wars just seem to get dimmer and dimmer. Seriously though, I love your style, always a good read.
Its true. Not all lives are worth saving or make the world a better place.TheProwler wrote:And then we factor those saved lives into the rate of population growth and we'd have something like 15 billion people on this planet and we'd be in an even deeper mess. Polluting, devouring natural resources, etc..AAFitz wrote:Go back and discover a better way of treating infection, a few years before it was discovered, and thousands and possibly millions would be saved.
I don't understand why people always assume that saving lives is a good thing. Look at the subject in the opening post in this thread. Be honest. If you could....Thumbs Up!....or Thumbs Down!!!!
too many details and realities. Please keep things simple where religion is evil and without religion the airplane would have been invented in 100 b.c.BigBallinStalin wrote:AAFitz, regarding science and religion "way back in the day," don't you admit that you're overestimating the capabilities of science? If you subtract religion, you're still left with other constraints? and you're overlooking the lack of additional benefits, which have yet to exist. *
*transaction costs, high price of books, monopolistic organizations (guilds), lack of patents, lack of cheap and quick communication, lack of government investment in R&D, lack of private investment in R&D, lack of a market economy which coordinates human action and allocates resources much more efficiently than 13th to 18th century economies, etc.

All good points. I actually would not deny that the state of religion likely inhibited scientific advances during the middle ages.BigBallinStalin wrote:AAFitz, regarding science and religion "way back in the day," don't you admit that you're overestimating the capabilities of science? If you subtract religion, you're still left with other constraints? and you're overlooking the lack of additional benefits, which have yet to exist. *
*transaction costs, high price of books, monopolistic organizations (guilds), lack of patents, lack of cheap and quick communication, lack of government investment in R&D, lack of private investment in R&D, lack of a market economy which coordinates human action and allocates resources much more efficiently than 13th to 18th century economies, etc.