ZBB member photos, part 5. (Something for the weekend, sir?)

Discussions worth keeping around later.
User avatar
Pthagnar
Avisaru
Avisaru
Posts: 702
Joined: Fri Sep 13, 2002 12:45 pm
Location: Hole of Aspiration

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Pthagnar »

faiuwle wrote:
Pthug wrote:With regular utilitarian ethical systems in which a thing is good or bad on imperfect information, a thing can very easily change from being good to being bad. This is very confusing and doesn't really happen very often -- suppose you have a Jew in a box and a Nazi is holding a gun to your head and telling you to press the poison-activating button on the side: it is quite possible that it is a bad thing to press the button. If, however, Ascended Apotheosised Hitler suddenly descends from the sixth astral plane and makes all the Jews in the world dissolve into nothingness, you would have to have a very strange reason to think it is bad to push the button if the Nazi is still going to shoot you for not doing so.
Well, yes, whether or not something is right presumably is a function of the consequences of doing it. The consequences of eating meat (viz. supporting the corrupt meat industry in its mistreatment of animals/wastage of resources that could be more efficiently used/whatever your reason for vegetarianism is) do not change when your only option is to eat meat - they just don't effect your decision quite so much.
Yes they do. One of the consequences of eating meat when you are starving is that you get a meal. If you think that the utility gain from eating the meat outweighs the utility gain that you get by *not* eating meat in general, then you will [and *should*] eat the meat. This makes starving to death just another example of the general case, and not a special example that has to be considered separately when you come against a thing when you consider starvation!

Indeed, if you have no other option than to do a thing -- as you claim is the case in starvation -- it is not an ethical problem by *definition*! But you do not claim that a vegan eating meat rather than starving is an amoral situation -- you recognise that a decision *is* being made, and that the consequentialist arguments against veganism *are* present and valid -- just that they do not "affect your decision [!] very much". Now, this is precisely what I mean when I say that the utilities at hand are different -- if you divide all the contributions to the decision of whether or not to eat the meatballs then the component of it that comprises your arguments to maintain vegan conduct do not change - you are correct. What changes is the component that is to do with how willing you are to keep on surviving at *any cost*. This does not [or *should not*] change the power of the vegan set of arguments -- it is simply the case that this negative component becomes insignificant compared to the towering bulk of utility that survival gives you.

Having said that, I guess if you prefer to think of utility as bounded -- say between [-1, 1] rather than between [0, inf] (or [-inf, inf)!, then you are applying some sort of normalisation to it and so the negative-utility contribution of vegan precepts *does* affect your decision less, in which case it becomes a matter of convention, I guess, unless it turns out there are more consequences to picking a bounded set of values for utility rather than an unbounded one which I think I remember reading somewhere.

Well, if you use "utility" as some kind of abstract scalar quality, like "redness"
This is, indeed, what utility is. I did not make it up -- the concept of utility is widely used by economists, utilitarian philosophers, decision theorists, psychologists etc. etc.
The useless/useful/necessary scale was a scale of the degree to which something is required to accomplish some end - if something is necessary, it is impossible to do whatever it is without that thing, if it is useless then having it has no effect on how easily you can do something, and if it is somewhere in the middle it is possible to do whatever it is without that thing, but more difficult.
This is the main problem I have with your conception of necessity, though I am having difficulty explaining it -- I should probably read more about necessity and utilitarianism.

*flashes the Salmoneus-Signal*

As I see it, one does not, strictly speaking, *need* to eat; suppose I somehow get the Jew out of the box but FUCK, Ascended Apotheosised Hitler strikes again!! *This* time, the rascally Nazi-xian sends the Jew off into a prison pocket dimension and only provides him with pork to eat!! Would you suggest to the Jew that it is *necessary* that he eat the meat [1] and *not* start a hunger-strike? Sure, if he *wanted* to stay alive, *then* it would be necessary to eat the pork, but he doesn't -- therefore the decision fits neatly according to utility principles anyway -- if he values his life over keeping kosher [1 again if you feel like nitpicking this point] -- then the utility to him of eating the pork is greater than that of his keeping kosher, otherwise it is the other way round.

Or to put it another way, you can claim that it is *necessary* to keep kosher [1!], but it is impossible to do this without not eating pork and so pork is useless!
Meat, for example, helps quite a bit to dispel hunger, but making it more filling (i.e. more useful) does not eventually make it necessary - it is only necessary when nothing but meat is available, and its usefulness mostly becomes independent of how filling it is at the ends of the scale, while linear increases in redness correspond to linear advancement along the scale, no matter where you started. If you have only a hamburger to eat, the hamburger does have some degree of usefulness for satisfying hunger, but what it is no longer matters as far as your choice is concerned.
I disagree. If you are starving, then a hearty meal is much more useful than a peeled grape. Both of them are much more useful than their equivalents offered to you when you are *not* starving, yes, and that is why it is fallacious to assume that the *only* contribution to the utility of food is how nutritious it is -- something I have not done -- but I do not see that the differential utility between them is totally wiped out when you are in extremis. After all, if the relative nutritive values of the grape and the slap-up meal were *independent* of utility, then we would expect starving people to feel extremely undecided as to which they would prefer! But this is absurd, and so it cannot be the case.

[1] Of course, halakhically speaking, in situations like this, he is free to eat the pork, but let's assume that Ascended Apotheosised Hitler is
a) powerful enough to rewrite the Torah
and/or
b) so obnoxiously in need of being sent down a peg that the Jew is willing to go through with it *anyway*

Shm Jay
Avisaru
Avisaru
Posts: 823
Joined: Thu Nov 14, 2002 11:29 pm

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Shm Jay »

I’d rather look at 8 new pictures of Skomakar'n, all exactly like the other in pose and hairstyle, than have to wade through all this philosophy.

User avatar
Pthagnar
Avisaru
Avisaru
Posts: 702
Joined: Fri Sep 13, 2002 12:45 pm
Location: Hole of Aspiration

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Pthagnar »

vampyre_smiles wrote:But, aside from the first line, those actions would be immoral for multiple reasons from my point of view, and if you had actually read my post you should be able to understand why.
Which line? I kinda wrote a whole paragraph so it's hard to tell which line you mean exactly. I think I pretty much listed most of the main things you could do with the last batch of industrial livestock, and keeping them alive in farms until they die of old age etc. seems like it would be the least worst [which is the definition of "best" btw] thing to do. Doing the best thing is the axiom of ethics and so...

vampyre_smiles wrote:Edit: Actually, you thinking that it's "Utilitarianism" might be the flaw between what I mean and what you think I mean.
Yes?

User avatar
Delthayre
Lebom
Lebom
Posts: 222
Joined: Sun Mar 16, 2003 8:47 am

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Delthayre »

This is supposed to be a pictures thread, damn it!

So here is a picture of one of my family's cats underneath a blanket on an armchair, which, ironically, was meant to prevent cat fur from being shed onto the chair.

Image
"Great men are almost always bad men."
~Lord John Dalberg Acton

User avatar
Gulliver
Avisaru
Avisaru
Posts: 433
Joined: Mon May 05, 2003 2:58 pm
Location: The West Country
Contact:

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Gulliver »

Image
My kitties!

I gave them catnip yesterday, and had a small-scale drugs war as one fought for it and the other fought to see what all the fuss was about then meowed at the food cupboard. The nip-head then rolled around in the doorway on his back and then sat monged out on the sofa.

User avatar
jal
Sumerul
Sumerul
Posts: 2633
Joined: Tue Feb 06, 2007 12:03 am
Location: Netherlands
Contact:

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by jal »

Skomakar'n wrote:photographs of me are taken in a studio
So explain again why it's cool to look like a girl when you're not?


JAL

User avatar
Torco
Smeric
Smeric
Posts: 2372
Joined: Thu Aug 30, 2007 10:45 pm
Location: Santiago de Chile

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Torco »

jal wrote:
Skomakar'n wrote:photographs of me are taken in a studio
So explain again why it's cool to look like a girl when you're not?

JAL
How do you know he's not ? [she's not? how does english deal with that? they're not?]

User avatar
Jipí
Smeric
Smeric
Posts: 1128
Joined: Sat Apr 12, 2003 1:48 pm
Location: Litareng, Keynami
Contact:

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Jipí »

Torco wrote:they're not?
Yes. At least in informal language. Teachers won't usually let you get away referring to a singular entity with "they", though, even if it can be found in texts for as long as English has been written.

User avatar
finlay
Sumerul
Sumerul
Posts: 3600
Joined: Mon Dec 22, 2003 12:35 pm
Location: Tokyo

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by finlay »

the reason for that is that learners will attempt to use it places where they actually can't, and it's only because we're natives in the language or have a high level that we understand the rules governing its use...

incidentally, yes you can get away with it, but it actually sounds a bit odd in this case.

User avatar
Nannalu
Avisaru
Avisaru
Posts: 698
Joined: Sun Aug 15, 2010 5:00 pm
Location: United Kingdom

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Nannalu »

He looks like the snow queeeeeeeeeen.
næn:älʉː

User avatar
Xephyr
Avisaru
Avisaru
Posts: 821
Joined: Sat May 03, 2003 3:04 pm

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Xephyr »

finlay wrote:the reason for that is that learners will attempt to use it places where they actually can't, and it's only because we're natives in the language or have a high level that we understand the rules governing its use...

incidentally, yes you can get away with it, but it actually sounds a bit odd in this case.
No, No, the reason is that "teachers" are morons who have no idea how languages they've been speaking all their lives work, and even when confronted with incontrovertible proof just Affirm the bullshit they've been taught out of their Arcane Tomes of Grammar Usage without even fulling understanding the bullshit rules themselves let alone why the rules are bullshit.
"It will not come by waiting for it. It will not be said, 'Here it is,' or 'There it is.' Rather, the Kingdom of the Father is spread out upon the earth, and men do not see it."
The Gospel of Thomas

User avatar
finlay
Sumerul
Sumerul
Posts: 3600
Joined: Mon Dec 22, 2003 12:35 pm
Location: Tokyo

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by finlay »

hey, which of us has a TEFL qualification? right.

(although you're probably right for most cases, this is a reason i was taught for not breaking basic grammar rules as a low level student. to be fair i don't know if this would fall under that. see also the concept "lies to children" – you need to teach a basic rule first and then expand on it/replace it later because teaching the most complex rules first can be counterproductive.)

User avatar
jal
Sumerul
Sumerul
Posts: 2633
Joined: Tue Feb 06, 2007 12:03 am
Location: Netherlands
Contact:

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by jal »

finlay wrote:the reason for that is that learners will attempt to use it places where they actually can't, and it's only because we're natives in the language or have a high level that we understand the rules governing its use...
In that case, you could easily give up teaching any rules, as EFL learners will always overregularize any rule presented. "No, no, don't teach 'm plural is formed by the -s suffix, or they will start saying 'mouses'!"
incidentally, yes you can get away with it, but it actually sounds a bit odd in this case.
I think Americans can get away with it.


JAL

User avatar
jal
Sumerul
Sumerul
Posts: 2633
Joined: Tue Feb 06, 2007 12:03 am
Location: Netherlands
Contact:

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by jal »

Torco wrote:How do you know he's not?
No tits.


JAL

User avatar
rickardspaghetti
Avisaru
Avisaru
Posts: 399
Joined: Mon Feb 23, 2009 9:45 pm
Location: Sweden

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by rickardspaghetti »

jal wrote:
Torco wrote:How do you know he's not?
No tits.


JAL
Many people think Justin Bieber is a guy. We all know that is not true.
Image
そうだ。死んでいる人も勃起することが出来る。
俺はその証だ。

User avatar
Tropylium⁺
Lebom
Lebom
Posts: 77
Joined: Fri Nov 19, 2010 4:21 pm
Location: Finland

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Tropylium⁺ »

Shm Jay wrote:I’d rather look at 8 new pictures of Skomakar'n, all exactly like the other in pose and hairstyle, than have to wade through all this philosophy.
My apologies for feeding the Pthug. I submit my likeness in compensation.
Attachments
3448327.jpg
3448327.jpg (131.54 KiB) Viewed 3649 times
Not actually new.

User avatar
Viktor77
Sumerul
Sumerul
Posts: 2635
Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2008 11:27 pm
Location: Memphis, Tennessee

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Viktor77 »

Guitarplayer wrote:
Torco wrote:they're not?
Yes. At least in informal language. Teachers won't usually let you get away referring to a singular entity with "they", though, even if it can be found in texts for as long as English has been written.
Which has always struck me as ironic. We try and try to establish written grammatical rules for language but language is inherently a spoken phenemenon. Language changes and we have to respect that by avoiding the enforcement of archaic rules. You can't force someone to speak an archaic form of the language, it's just unnatural and unreasonable. Also, it's just silly to assume someone who speaks using changing forms of language is henceforth uneducated and of a lower class. I understand teachers don't have a choice, they have objectives set down by governments and they must meet them, whether they like it or not, but writers of dictionaries and academies of languages do have such a choice. It's imperitive that we record the evolution of our language and recognise the changes. Some good English examples that are long overdue to be recognised are they singular neuter, as above, as well as wanna, gonna, gotta, dunno, ain't, should've, could've, would've, and perhaps even I'd've. Why should we change how we speak to accommodate archaic rules in the name of standardisation? We are equally as well understood.[/rant]
Falgwian and Falgwia!!

Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum videtur.

User avatar
Io
Avisaru
Avisaru
Posts: 591
Joined: Sun Dec 19, 2004 5:00 am
Location: a.s.l. p.l.s.
Contact:

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Io »

Language changes and we have to respect that by avoiding the enforcement of archaic rules.
Can you wish to preoccupy yourself solely anymore with this question?

User avatar
makvas
Avisaru
Avisaru
Posts: 251
Joined: Wed Jul 19, 2006 6:13 pm
Location: The Southland

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by makvas »

Viktor77 wrote:We try and try to establish written grammatical rules for language but language is inherently a spoken phenemenon.
You'll notice that it is custom for there to be differences in written language (esp. more formal written language) and in spoken language. I know this is particularly true for Mandarin Chinese, where certain characters are preferred when writing that do not exactly correspond to the spoken word.

User avatar
Viktor77
Sumerul
Sumerul
Posts: 2635
Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2008 11:27 pm
Location: Memphis, Tennessee

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Viktor77 »

Zoris wrote:
Viktor77 wrote:We try and try to establish written grammatical rules for language but language is inherently a spoken phenemenon.
You'll notice that it is custom for there to be differences in written language (esp. more formal written language) and in spoken language. I know this is particularly true for Mandarin Chinese, where certain characters are preferred when writing that do not exactly correspond to the spoken word.
I think for sake of reading comprehension it makes more sense to update the written word to reflect the spoken word. Since reading is already an unnatural phenomenon that was created by society to communicate, why make it any harder? Once words or symbols or what not become enough recognised such as the above examples, they should be incorporated into existing grammars. Grammar can't remain stagnant, they must change as the language changes.
Falgwian and Falgwia!!

Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum videtur.

User avatar
makvas
Avisaru
Avisaru
Posts: 251
Joined: Wed Jul 19, 2006 6:13 pm
Location: The Southland

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by makvas »

Viktor77 wrote:...
Standards. While language may change in one region in a certain way, it helps facilitate communication to other regions. If Americans and British were to both write in a more phonemically correct way than we currently do, for example, American kids would have to learn two writing systems just to read their Harry Potter.

I'm not disagreeing, just pointing out that there are benefits to resisting change here.

User avatar
Xephyr
Avisaru
Avisaru
Posts: 821
Joined: Sat May 03, 2003 3:04 pm

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Xephyr »

finlay wrote:hey, which of us has a TEFL qualification? right.

(although you're probably right for most cases, this is a reason i was taught for not breaking basic grammar rules as a low level student. to be fair i don't know if this would fall under that. see also the concept "lies to children" – you need to teach a basic rule first and then expand on it/replace it later because teaching the most complex rules first can be counterproductive.)
I'm familiar with the Lies To Children principle, but in this case not only do we have people lying to children because it's too early to teach them complications, but also have ignorant schmucks pontificating nonsense to adults that are much, much more intelligent than they are.
"It will not come by waiting for it. It will not be said, 'Here it is,' or 'There it is.' Rather, the Kingdom of the Father is spread out upon the earth, and men do not see it."
The Gospel of Thomas

User avatar
Nae
Sanci
Sanci
Posts: 20
Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2004 4:42 pm
Location: Helsinki, Finland

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Nae »

Zoris wrote:Standards. While language may change in one region in a certain way, it helps facilitate communication to other regions. If Americans and British were to both write in a more phonemically correct way than we currently do, for example, American kids would have to learn two writing systems just to read their Harry Potter.
No they wouldn't, they'd just read a translated version. Especially considering that 1) English to American often goes through a localisation process already (Sorcerer's Stone, anyone?), and 2) A "translation" in this case would be quite trivial compared to real translation, and could be done by an automated process.

This one of my biggest peeves with people going "oh but then they won't be able to read [old stuff]!": I have great news to you! They aren't reading them NOW either! All of that Shakespeare and Chaucer? No kid is reading that stuff. You almost need a college education for Shakespeare (and a dirty 16th century sense of humour), and you certainly do need some sort of extra language education for Chaucer. Do you know what happens to texts in old archaic languages that no one knows how to read anymore? They get translated by university people into the colloquial, if anyone bothers (because no one is reading that stuff in any case). And certainly, with something like Harry Potter a translation from Brenglish to American is quite likely, because that shit be popular. SO DON'T WORRY. There will be enough Harry Potter for the whole world!

User avatar
Torco
Smeric
Smeric
Posts: 2372
Joined: Thu Aug 30, 2007 10:45 pm
Location: Santiago de Chile

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Torco »

Writing is unnatural ?

THEM WHO WRITE ARE PROFLIGATES, LITERACY IS A SIN AGAINST NATURE AND THUS, AN ABOMINATION UNTO THE LORD.

Also, yeah, registries. You don't talk to your grandmother the same as you talk to your girlfriend... or boyfriend, I guess. You don't talk on the phone the same as you talk across a bridge or face to face at the dinner table. so you don't talk the same in an job-related email or in the zbb and shit.

Also, written oral registry looks awful.

It's like... yeah, I think it would, huh, look kinda like, huh, crap, dont'ch'think?

User avatar
Risla
Avisaru
Avisaru
Posts: 800
Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 12:17 pm
Location: The darkest corner of your mind...

Re: ZBB member photos, part 5.

Post by Risla »

[removed for privacy reasons]
Last edited by Risla on Wed Mar 07, 2012 9:25 am, edited 1 time in total.

Post Reply