Friday, July 25, 2014
dogs feel jealousy
By CNu at July 25, 2014 0 comments
Labels: ethology
Thursday, July 24, 2014
how america changed the meaning of war
By CNu at July 24, 2014 24 comments
Labels: Living Memory , resource war , unspeakable , What Now?
somewhere in new mexico before the end of time...,
Here some of the premiere thinkers often referred to as "doomers" talk about climate change and the impacts of an industrial system on earth systems. Is it already too late?
By CNu at July 24, 2014 0 comments
Labels: Collapse Casualties , Peak Capitalism
the right to exclude others (property rights) is the foundational american religious principle
By CNu at July 24, 2014 0 comments
Labels: austerity , Collapse Casualties
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
never mind the rhetoric - the property "right" is the might to exclude others...,
The conquest of Gaza is accelerating. Israel has now launched its ground invasion, bringing the Palestinian death toll to 260, 80% of whom are civilians.
A further 1,500 have been wounded and 1,300 Palestinian homes destroyed. Israel's goal, purportedly, is to "restore quiet" by ending Hamas rocket attacks on Israel.
Last Tuesday, Israeli defence minister and former Israeli Defence Force (IDF) chief of staff Moshe Ya'alon announced that Operation Protective Edge marks the beginning of a protracted assault on Hamas.
The operation "won't end in just a few days", he said, adding that "we are preparing to expand the operation by all means standing at our disposal so as to continue striking Hamas."
The price will be very heavy ... yes, $4 billion!
The following morning, he went on: "We continue with strikes that draw a very heavy price from Hamas. We are destroying weapons, terror infrastructures, command and control systems, Hamas institutions, regime buildings, the houses of terrorists, and killing terrorists of various ranks of command ...
"The campaign against Hamas will expand in the coming days, and the price the organization will pay will be very heavy."
But in 2007, a year before Operation Cast Lead, Ya'alon's concerns focused on the 1.4 trillion cubic feet of natural gas discovered in 2000 off the Gaza coast, valued at $4 billion.
By CNu at July 23, 2014 1 comments
Labels: killer-ape , resource war , The Hardline
children exposed to religion have difficulty distinguishing fact from fiction...,
By CNu at July 23, 2014 18 comments
Labels: the wattles , theoconservatism , What IT DO Shawty...
Nassim Taleb: Two Myths About Rivalry, Scarcity, Competition, and Cooperation
By CNu at July 23, 2014 0 comments
Labels: as above-so below , chess-not checkers , The Hardline
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
how can moral science exist?
It would have to use the scientific method to develop a transparent set of social agreements about basic moral principles – whatever we agree those most basic of moral principles to be – instead of on the assumptions of natural moral facts (as there are no such things). To the non-philosopher, this translates as reducing the moral principles we wish our societies to be guided by to the most basic sets they can possibly be – however we wish this to look – and then using reason and science to build consistent moral rules, and make consistent moral decisions based on these most basic of principles. For example, we might look at our current principles about murder/violent crime and then reduce them to a basic principle that suffering and death should be avoided wherever possible. From there we would judge whether our laws were rationally consistent with what we socially agreed.
All be it a very different type of science, moral science can exist in a socially created space like this without contravening the rules of rationality, all the while allowing the most important of humanities problems to be exposed to the fruits of scientific method. Indeed, most areas of politics and morality need not be thought of as subjective at all once moral science is on the table, unless the problem is wholly without reason or evidence on either side. This doesn’t mean opponents of rationality will suddenly drop their beliefs and join us, but it does provide a consistent framework to stop people having to turn to religion or other methods in order to form moral beliefs. We shouldn’t underestimate the secular advantage this would have in future generations.
Moral science is important: it’s more rational than what we currently have, ie, a system where we just slightly amend historically decided ideas when we really have to. But more than this, it’s important because it gives us a chance to rationally judge moral issues – no longer having to allow for dangerous and often irrational subjective differences. What’s more, it allows for the whole method to be scientific in attitude; not allowing for certainty where there is none and helping to do away with as much potential for uncompromising aggression as possible.
By CNu at July 22, 2014 18 comments
Labels: as above-so below , The Straight and Narrow , truth
the social brain and the myth of empathy
By CNu at July 22, 2014 0 comments
Labels: institutional deconstruction , The Hardline
the neuroethology of friendship
By CNu at July 22, 2014 0 comments
Labels: ethology , What IT DO Shawty...
the conscientiousness of kidspeak?
By CNu at July 22, 2014 0 comments
Labels: Gender , narrative , quorum sensing?
Monday, July 21, 2014
ancient earthenworks pre-date amazonian rainforest
By CNu at July 21, 2014 18 comments
Labels: ancient , History's Mysteries
the final century of civilization?
By CNu at July 21, 2014 0 comments
Labels: Great Filters , weather report
Sunday, July 20, 2014
superintelligence
By CNu at July 20, 2014 6 comments
Labels: cultural darwinism , Great Filters , What Now?
evolutionary forecasting
By CNu at July 20, 2014 5 comments
Labels: tactical evolution , What IT DO Shawty...
bacteria that subsist on electricity
By CNu at July 20, 2014 0 comments
Labels: high strangeness , microcosmos
Saturday, July 19, 2014
why not try and breed the kwisatz haderach?
126 year old Jose Aguinelo dos Santos - world's oldest living person |
By CNu at July 19, 2014 14 comments
Labels: Genetic Omni Determinism GOD
wade in the nytimes: adventures in very recent evolution
By CNu at July 19, 2014 0 comments
Labels: agenda , elite , establishment , eugenics
the 10,000 year explosion?
By CNu at July 19, 2014 0 comments
Labels: big don special , dopamine , Genetic Omni Determinism GOD , hegemony
Friday, July 18, 2014
let's talk about dopamine hegemony...,
By CNu at July 18, 2014 17 comments
Labels: big don special , cultural darwinism , dopamine , Genetic Omni Determinism GOD , hegemony , What IT DO Shawty...
Thursday, July 17, 2014
our polity is our way of life...,
By CNu at July 17, 2014 29 comments
Labels: conspicuous consumption , industrial ecosystems , What IT DO Shawty...
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
where the seignurial elites are taking us...,
By CNu at July 16, 2014 31 comments
Labels: Collapse Crime , neofeudalism , niggerization , Peak Capitalism , What Now?
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
catching feelings is downright unamerican...,
By CNu at July 15, 2014 7 comments
Labels: American Original , psychopathocracy
self-segregation on the basis of core western values
By CNu at July 15, 2014 0 comments
Labels: cultural darwinism , Peak Capitalism , The Hardline
friendship segregation by genetic compatibility
By CNu at July 15, 2014 0 comments
Monday, July 14, 2014
metropolitan segregation by education
By CNu at July 14, 2014 32 comments
Labels: cultural darwinism , galt's gulch , What IT DO Shawty...
corporate segregation by inversion
By CNu at July 14, 2014 0 comments
Labels: cultural darwinism , galt's gulch , global system of 1% supremacy
economic segregation by stupidity
By CNu at July 14, 2014 0 comments
Labels: Ass Clownery , Collapse Crime , cultural darwinism
Sunday, July 13, 2014
to understand a thing is to know whether or not to waste your breath in futile conversation with it...,
pbs | On Making Sen$e this week, we’ve been publishing Paul Solman’s never-aired conversation with economic historian Gregory Clark about his 2007 book,“A Farewell to Alms.” In Friday’s installment, we get to the really controversial part: that genetics may explain why some societies, specifically industrial England, grew economically.
But, first, a recap of the journey Clark has taken us on this week. In the beginning of human history, population was limited by the limited resources to keep humans alive (this is the “Malthusian” economic view developed by Thomas Malthus.) And so with more violence (not to mention fewer working hours), hunter-gatherer society, Clark argued in part one of this interview, was easier than life in pre-industrial England, where material life was harder.
But that changed with the Industrial Revolution. Suddenly, the West got rich. One of the world’s intellectual puzzles has been, why and how did England break out of that Malthusian trap? In part two, Clark explained how human nature – indeed our very patience for gratification – changed as we moved from hunter-gatherer society to 1800.
England wasn’t the site of fast economic growth, as the economics literature has long preached, because of the existence of political and market institutions. No, Clark said in part three, England’s economic growth stemmed from the “survival of the richest;” those who personalities were best suited for capitalism thrived.
And now for the truly controversial part. Those traits, like being materially-driven and being able to wait for gratification (think of the marshmallow test), vary by class, and even if Clark believed (and hoped) that cultural transmission explains the class variance, he saw nothing to rule out a genetic explanation.
Paul Solman: The reason that the New York Times science section did this whole big story on you, even before this book came out, surely is because of the genetic part of this explanation, yes? Is that fair?
Greg Clark: Absolutely. And it is a fascinating possibility. Most of the assumption has been that basically human nature was completed in the hunter-gatherer era, that there wasn’t enough time between the hunter-gatherer era and the modern world for any further significant changes in people’s basic nature.
I think the data from somewhere like England, and this is just suggestive, and also the information about these fairly fundamental changes in features like people’s patience, or the amount of work that people do, at least raises the possibility that there was a further change in people, booting the Neolithic revolution and the onset of the Industrial Revolution.
By CNu at July 13, 2014 12 comments
Labels: essence , global system of 1% supremacy , What IT DO Shawty...
the detroit experiment: evolve or die...,
Species develop characteristics which give them competitive advantage. Dinosaurs get big so no predators can eat them up. Saber tooth tigers develop monster jaws so they can chomp on mastadons and other large prey.
But the problem is that species continue to develop these characteristics beyond the point of maximum advantage. Dinosaurs get so big that they need to get a second brain in their midsection to manage their bodies and they die of anatomical schizophrenia. Saber-tooth tiger become such efficient killers of large prey that they begin to wipe them out, and their hypertrophied jaws are badly adapted to killing smaller prey, so they die of starvation. And humans have developed overly large brains and are in the process of thinking themselves to death.
By CNu at July 13, 2014 2 comments
Labels: Collapse Casualties , essence , What IT DO Shawty...
Fuck Robert Kagan And Would He Please Now Just Go Quietly Burn In Hell?
politico | The Washington Post on Friday announced it will no longer endorse presidential candidates, breaking decades of tradition in a...
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theatlantic | The Ku Klux Klan, Ronald Reagan, and, for most of its history, the NRA all worked to control guns. The Founding Fathers...
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Video - John Marco Allegro in an interview with Van Kooten & De Bie. TSMATC | Describing the growth of the mushroom ( boletos), P...
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dailybeast | Of all the problems in America today, none is both as obvious and as overlooked as the colossal human catastrophe that is our...