![]() |
|
|
#34 | |
|
"Jason Goatcher"
Mar 2005
3·7·167 Posts |
Quote:
(Okay, now it's majorly off-topic, sorry) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#35 | |
|
Nov 2003
11101001001002 Posts |
Quote:
The optimality of tit-for-tit is an empirical result for the multi-player and iterated form of the prisoner's dilemma (and its variations). But these forms do not have a stable sadle-point solution. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#36 | |
|
"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7×467 Posts |
Quote:
At this point I would also just like to express my huge appreciation for the comments, sometimes in great detail, which many people have made in this thread, also the various interesting articles to which people have referred. I have been reading with great interest and learning quite a lot. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#37 | |
|
Nov 2003
22×5×373 Posts |
Quote:
The red states, populated and run by intolerant relatively uneducated religious nuts and hypocrites, and the blue states. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#38 | |
|
Aug 2006
597910 Posts |
We could play a reasonably interesting game of "spot the fallacy" on this thread.
----- Quote:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#39 | ||
|
"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7×467 Posts |
Quote:
Quote:
I still maintain that that is a poor model for social interaction. I believe that there is a strong element of altruism in the human race (it varies in degree of course from one individual to another). I believe that people's perceived personal benefits of behaving to the exclusive benefit of others are not always measurably beneficial to themselves. |
||
|
|
|
|
|
#40 | |
|
Aug 2006
3·1,993 Posts |
Probably naive, but I drew the separator to make it clear that my 'fallacy' comment was independent of my response to your game theory statement.
Quote:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#41 |
|
May 2003
60B16 Posts |
For the benefit of those not from the U.S., let me just say that this view of our culture is, to say the least, relatively intolerant, uneducated, hypocritical, and the view of only a small minority. For the most part, we Americans get along with each other even if we disagree with one another and we don't view each other's beliefs in such a bigoted way.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#42 |
|
"Gang aft agley"
Sep 2002
1110101010102 Posts |
Incredibly obnoxious concepts can be sugarcoated and swallowed like pablum while heartfelt and caring thoughts can provoke extremes of rage if certain words are used. Some concepts themselves have become so charged that discussion itself is reckless. I had a teacher who some got in trouble in the 1990's for describing his experiences as a white man who'd drunk from a "colored" fountain in a park in the 1960's. He was a published poet and careful about how he spoke but apparently the topic itself was too poisonous.
I personally find the Ethnic-American hyphenate naming system currently used somewhat distressing. I don't like drawing distinctions between Americans and don't like the broad-brush usage especially for African-American. The usage assumes that the polite thing is to draw this label, often from observed appearance, and apply it to someone while resting assured that that is how they might like to be categorized. My father was Jewish. If there is some defining appearance that could be applied to this background of Russian Judaism specifically, I am sure I would dislike being categorized as Jewish-American or Russian-American. And every time we relabel things with more prestigious nomenclature it doesn't change the fundamentally ugly way some people think or treat other people or their things. Because of this, the terms erode and then some new term needs must be applied but since the fundamentals haven't changed, the new terms are yet again a short-term fix. The terms themselves, when examined, are often so condescending or patronizing too. Ebonics is from "Ebony + Phonics." Is that nicer than saying Black English Vernacular? How about the history and culture of Kwanza? Is suddenly recognizing this less patronizing than saying that blacks should get their own holiday? I don't know. Many people draw some comfort from them. That seems to be good enough for many purposes. The sudden surge of how new terms are used for a situation shows that many people don't want to offend, but I find the facile way each next term is seized upon without much examination to be itself offensive. We are also reduced to coded baby-talk to each other identifying coded words like "the 'X' word" under the observationally true situation that coding these words to fly over the heads of babies avoids offence. Everyone in the conversation knows what word is being talked around. There are no babies present -- or are there? |
|
|
|
|
|
#43 | |
|
"Mark"
Apr 2003
Between here and the
2·32·353 Posts |
Quote:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#44 |
|
∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
2D7F16 Posts |
My dad was a white European, but happened to be born on banana plantation his parents ran in the 1930s, before the war, while Cameroon was still a German colony. We emigrated to the US in the 70s and he later became a naturalized citizen. Does that make him African-American?
|
|
|
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| What language should I study next? | EdH | Programming | 25 | 2014-10-26 14:52 |
| What type of language is offensive to you? | jasong | jasong | 80 | 2013-03-05 13:44 |
| Offensive politics ftw | jasong | jasong | 0 | 2012-11-10 15:58 |
| Fortress: A new math language | mephisto | Programming | 1 | 2006-11-17 11:06 |
| Body Language | Orgasmic Troll | Lounge | 2 | 2005-11-29 16:52 |