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Comments by decius


201. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256607 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 9:20 am

Attention, please.

Fanusi,

that isn't a 'rant site', it's a supremacist site and you know it well.


Everybody else,

I have now read many of Fanusi's posts, there.
In all fairness, so far, he isn't saying anything different from what he says here. Rather, he seems to act as a moderating force, rejecting idea of fascist governments and indiscriminate use of force, criticising religious ideas etc.

Here are all his posts, I think we should read them carefully, before passing judgement.


My personal impression is that Fanusi is incredibly naive - to the point of stupidity, frankly - if he thinks that he can moderate the imbeciles that post there, while promoting his views of Islam, or looking for common ground.

202. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256555 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 8:27 am

. Comment #256546 by Steve Zara

I am just inviting cautiousness. One could go to those meetings to express dissent. It seems fair to me to actually read first what he wrote, there. It isn't much, for what I can see.

Edit - I know it's unlikely, but I prefer to see with my own eyes than reacting emotionally to association.

203. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256544 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 8:19 am

Titania, Nairb, Steve

I have been perusing a few of Fanusi's posts at nicedoggies.net, so far I ve come across a strenuous defence of evolution against a bunch of creotards, and other rants, free of racist content. If anything, he actually seems to challenge some of the popular views over there.
Perhaps you should suspend judgement until all facts are in.

204. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256529 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 7:58 am

GoatBoy36

That may be interesting, but my impression is that philosophy hasn't really been able to advance our understanding of consciousness to an appreciable degree, except for those philosophers - like Dennett - who base their research on the available science. Therefore, I would go for the real thing.

205. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256520 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 7:49 am

Comment #256506 by GoatBoy36

OK, if you don't mind a few videos, a good introduction to the field are the lectures and series by VS Ramachandran, who is a leading neuroscientist responsible for great recent discoveries.

Here is the first episode of a series. I am sure that you can find your way around for the second episode.

Here are a few of his lectures.

Then there is Neurologica blog, where related topics are discussed with great competence by Steven Novella. Specifically, there is an interesting debate between him and Egnor, a moronic dualist from the Disco Tute. You may have to skip those posts which aren't directly relevant, but you will find enough references to further readings that will keep you busy for a while.
http://www.theness.com/neurologicablog/index.php?cat=8

I'll give you another batch later.

206. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256503 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 7:26 am

al rawandi

I must remind you that not always ad homs are fallacious - they are totally relevant when they illuminate conflicts of interest, ideological commitments, incompetence etc.

207. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256499 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 7:23 am

Comment #256489 by GoatBoy36


Yes, consciousness is an exciting topic. However, if I may, I would suggest that you investigate it from a scientific POV, rather than a philosophical one.

Neuroscience has been doubling its accumulated knowledge every five years, during the past decades.
If it's the monism vs dualism diatribe that you are interested in, then be reassured that the issue is pretty much settled.
I will be glad to share a few interesting links, if that helps.

208. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256494 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 7:18 am

Comment by LC Fanusi Khiyal UNITED KINGDOM

Thanks for the prayers and condolences.


LOL

209. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256484 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 7:07 am

So, is Fanusi posting on a Giudeo-Christian supremacist site, too?

That's very interesting.

210. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256474 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 7:01 am

Comment #256470 by GoatBoy36


The point I was making is that for all this talk about "human rights" it's remarkably difficult to define the term


That may well be. Also 'consciousness' is very difficult to define, yet we have no reason to doubt its existence.

211. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256467 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 6:55 am

Comment #256463 by Titania

You have encountered a common bug of this site. Epeeist knew how to fix it, but I am not sure if I remember it correctly. I think you have to close all your browser instances, flush the cache and delete the cookies of this site, then close again before logging in.

212. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256460 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 6:48 am

Comment #256456 by GoatBoy36

Can you describe one


No need, since you enjoy many of them on a daily basis. I am sure that if someone attempted to forcibly deprive you of any one of them, you would react and defend it. Even if you now pretend to not knowing what it is.

Excuse me if I don't follow you in this exercise in futility.

213. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256451 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 6:35 am

Comment #256446 by GoatBoy36

What is a "human right"? ...

Tell me where I can find one. Under the bed maybe? In the boot of the car? Maybe if I take a walk down to the beach later and look under a stone?



You can find one in that repository that we like to call 'civilisation' in the 'enlightenment' session - where we keep justice, education, equality, secularism and a great variety of such precious, yet immaterial items.

214. Brunswick school board to consider creationism teaching

Comment #256417 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 5:51 am

Comment #256338 by InfuriatedSciTeacher

This is not at all surprising of a Board who made us sit through a gospel choir and sermon at the beginning of a compulsory in-service for all district teachers.


Compulsory or not, I simply wouldn't attend. Did you?

215. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256409 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 5:40 am

Comment #256407 by Laurie Fraser

Caught!

It's actually barbera I had with lunch, but very perceptive of you. :)

216. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256395 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 5:28 am

People drag their bodies around in motor vehicles so they can get at gay weddings.

In the post-Peak Oil world, instead of physically transporting people to gay weddings, we must redesign our processes to transport gay marriage to people, thereby chaining human progress and value generation to the exponentiating goodness of Moore's law.

217. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #256340 by decius on September 29, 2008 at 4:40 am

Dear evolins,

you come from worm. That is what makes evolins happy to come from worm.


Mister Dawkins,

my students want answer from you before you go back to pet your worms.
If you see Mona Lisa on the beach, why you think she comes from worms?

218. Debate: Would We Be Better Off Without Religion?

Comment #255874 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 1:25 pm

Comment #255864 by beanson

Vic is ageing, it seems. He may have been a bit hesitant in his delivery, but his arguments are as powerful as ever. His conclusion was very good, too.

219. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #255873 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 1:18 pm

GoatBoy36

Could you please explain what "assault to injury" meant in your case, and why you wear it as a badge of honour?

220. Debate: Would We Be Better Off Without Religion?

Comment #255856 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 12:28 pm

Has Iam Plimer gone mad?

He went from this to claiming that there is geological evidence for a global flood.

Edited for mistaken link.

222. Debate: Would We Be Better Off Without Religion?

Comment #255841 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 11:29 am

Who is this Richard Ackland fellow?

He seemed to me a rather brilliant orator, who managed to demolish Plimer's opening string of nonsense with witty improvisation, before delivering his delightful speech.

223. Why There Almost Certainly Is a God, By Keith Ward

Comment #255794 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 8:27 am

There really is quantum mystery, I believe.


Unfortunately, "mystery" is often misinterpreted as meaning "room for a spiritual dimension" or something equally silly.


http://spiritlibrary.com/gillian-macbeth-louthan/888-quantum-christ-portal

224. Mysterious New 'Dark Flow' Discovered in Space

Comment #255781 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 8:01 am

Steve, Oystein

Thanks, you are both very kind.


Comment #255780 by the great teapot


I saw "On the buses" on tv last month.
How do you explain that?


Your computer broke down and the library was closed?

225. Mysterious New 'Dark Flow' Discovered in Space

Comment #255777 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 7:41 am

Comment #255776 by Steve Zara

you can't use time to talk about time


But I can use a position on one dimension of the manifold.

226. Mysterious New 'Dark Flow' Discovered in Space

Comment #255774 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 7:29 am

Comment #255772 by Steve Zara

Whether it flows, stretches, or simply is a scalar quantity, it has dynamic properties, otherwise present past and future would be meaningless concepts.

In any case, why is it not affected by expansion? Unless it runs on its own independent axis, but then why speaking of continuum?

227. Mysterious New 'Dark Flow' Discovered in Space

Comment #255765 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 6:57 am

Comment #255759 by Oystein Elgaroy

Thanks, that helped a lot to understand what Peacock is saying.

I'll try to make my point about 'expanding time' better.
If the universe were not expanding there would be no redshift, yet I gather that time will still flow as it does now, in one direction and at the current pace.
So, in an expanding universe with redshifted distant objects, why don't we observe a 'timeshift' (bleurgh), too, if space and time are part of the same continuum?
Empirically speaking, shouldn't we expect the period of variability of the cepheids appear to increase proportiionally to their distance, as the continuum stretches? Or even better, given the relatively low luminosity of a cepheid, let's take gamma ray bursts duration as unit, even though the latter is variable.

Edited for clarity

228. Mysterious New 'Dark Flow' Discovered in Space

Comment #255748 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 5:41 am

Comment #255744 by Oystein Elgaroy

I find it all very confusing. If expansion is empirically measured, how can it be a 'misleading notion'.
I don't understand the math contained in the papers, so I should as well give up.

One dumb question to you, sir, if you indulge me. Why isn't time expanding too, if space and time are a single continuum? And if it is, could its expansion be detected? Shouldn't we expect time to dilate and appear to slow down at large distances?

I'll get me coat.

Edit- I don't mean the relativistic gravitational time dilation, but an hypothetical dilation due to expansion, just to be clear.

229. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #255735 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 4:52 am

Comment #255730 by Steve Zara

My mind is one of my few assets.


Anyone who attempts to deny that is simply dishonest, and I don't care if this sounds sycophantic.
Apart from your eclectic knowledge, I have seen time and again how easily evidence can change your mind, regardless of who presents it. Plasticity is the very fabric of cleverness and the very opposite of ideological dogmatism.

I bet you have a nice arse, too. :)

230. The world according to Hitchens

Comment #255720 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 4:02 am

Comment #255717 by Fanusi Khiyal

The moon is made of gorgonzola.
They are virtually identical in physical aspect.

No, don't ask me to back up my claim, for I am the only beholder of this final truth - the rest of the world, including the cream of lunar scientists, is too stupid to notice.

231. The world according to Hitchens

Comment #255716 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 3:54 am

Comment #255714 by Fanusi Khiyal

Please, provide scholarly reference to one or more reputable source backing up your view that national-socialism is a left-wing ideology.

232. Why There Almost Certainly Is a God, By Keith Ward

Comment #255709 by decius on September 28, 2008 at 3:41 am

Rather neatly, Ward uses one of science's finest achievements the discovery of the bizarre quantum world â€" as a weapon with which to undermine the materialist world-view


Really, and how would this weapon work?

"What is the point of being a materialist when we are not sure exactly what matter is?"


Ah, through a ludicrous argument from ignorance. I am humbled by the power of such weapon.

Ward only needs you to concede that his "God hypothesis" is simpler


Yeah, let's all pretend that divine infinite complexity equals simplicity.

Neat, indeed.

Who is this clown?

234. Palin: average isn't good enough

Comment #255376 by decius on September 27, 2008 at 11:58 am

Comment #255362 by hawt4dawk

just 'cause I'm in a bad mood


Scary. Meerkats are notorious for their ferocity.

236. Mathematics and faith explain altruism

Comment #255328 by decius on September 27, 2008 at 10:15 am

Yet as a Catholic deluded fool, he rejects Dawkins's notion that believing in evolution precludes belief in a God who included altruism in evolution's bequest to us.


Fixed.

Why doesn't this idiot apply his math to virgin's birth, miraculous healing, ghostly apparitions, stigmata and resurrections and test how much logical sense they make.

237. Zehirli Yilanlar, Kaygan Yilanbaliklari ve Harun Yahya

Comment #255270 by decius on September 27, 2008 at 7:13 am

Comment #255266 by Laurie Fraser

Why, Laurie, one should always assume good faith. He is a genuine illiterate dotard, I say.

Edited for uncharitable mood.

238. Zehirli Yilanlar, Kaygan Yilanbaliklari ve Harun Yahya

Comment #255263 by decius on September 27, 2008 at 6:56 am

Comment #255251 by Richard Dawkins

Isthatclear's veiled admission can be found in this page, comment 52, second from the top.

239. Zehirli Yilanlar, Kaygan Yilanbaliklari ve Harun Yahya

Comment #255252 by decius on September 27, 2008 at 6:35 am

Comment #255251 by Richard Dawkins


By the way, I have long wondered at the identity of "IsThatClear". Many people here assume that he is also Wooter. Could it be that he is also Adnan Oktar?


He is Wooter. Not only does his writing style reveal as much, he himself admitted it, too.

I doubt he is Oktar, though. He never trumpeted about your 'refusal' to engage Oktar in a debate, as all islamo-cretinists tend to do, here. If he were Oktar, he probably wouldn't miss the opportunity to smear.

Edit - I'll try to dig up his admission.

240. Ministers to Defy I.R.S. by Endorsing Candidates

Comment #255209 by decius on September 27, 2008 at 3:33 am

Comment #255138 by Jesus86

since my lessons are so clearly unappreciated



Ditto.

241. Diamonds May Be Life's Birthstone

Comment #255007 by decius on September 26, 2008 at 3:16 pm

Comment #254960 by PERSON

Apparently, it can be used as amorphous coating in bone transplant and as a substrate for growing proteins and neurons in an organised way.

244. Catholic maternity wards 'face closure' if abortion law passes

Comment #254790 by decius on September 26, 2008 at 8:00 am

Comment #254774 by Steve Zara

Sorry no. And as I apparently "litter my posts with ad-hominems", perhaps I should add I don't like your icon :


ROTFL

245. Catholic maternity wards 'face closure' if abortion law passes

Comment #254638 by decius on September 26, 2008 at 3:26 am

Steve, I've just sent you a couple of emails.

I guess the first one is now redundant.

249. Catholic maternity wards 'face closure' if abortion law passes

Comment #254590 by decius on September 26, 2008 at 1:48 am

Comment #254588 by Fanusi Khiyal

Sure, but only if you can find another person that deems it necessary. :lol:

250. Catholic maternity wards 'face closure' if abortion law passes

Comment #254587 by decius on September 26, 2008 at 1:41 am

Comment #254572 by Fanusi Khiyal

The reason I'm anti-abortion, hawt, is that I cannot see any moral standard by which it is ethical to sacrifice one human life to another.



Emphasis.