starspacer said:DB, I believe I have answered your question with my post to frugi.
I have done what you asked frugi. I could argue the point - fair use, non-profit, reference, less than 400 words and so on, but I recognize this would be futile since these are T2W's rules and not the Copyright Act of 1976's. Quite interesting considering fxmarkets earlier post on operation mind control about CIA (read any authoritative body)controlling effects on citizens.frugi said:Dead philosphers are fair game, but I was referring to the above linked articles of Eric Verhine, Fred Foldvary and Raymond Lloyd Richmond, all of which seem to have been written in the last ten years and which you have plagiarised sufficiently to warrant your Ctrl, C and V keys' taking out critical illness cover, as mine did during English A-level coursework, although they were called pens in those days.
Please give credit where it's due, that's all I'm asking, or reluctantly we will have to delete your "brief excerpts" (see guidelines below). It's nowt personal I can assure you and especially irritating for me as what you posted was interesting. I've certainly fallen victim to anger on the M1, but eventually found that blowing a kiss to miscreants usually has a much more satisfactory effect than seeking the usual pointless revenge.
Hi starspacer, thanks for your reply. Even if it is a little ambiguous/confusing.starspacer said:We would do well to ponder that aggression (whether verbal or physical) results as a psychological defense against threats of fragmentation. That is, as infants, we are just a jumble of diverse biological processes over which we have no authority, and our first task in life is to develop a coherent identity which “pulls together” this fragmented confusion.
This identity may give the appearance of a unified personality, but it really is just a psychological illusion that hides our essential human vulnerability and weakness. And when anything, or anyone, threatens us with the truth of our essential fragmentation, the quickest and easiest defense available—to hide the truth of weakness and give the illusion of power—is aggression. As a result, some persons will fly into a rage about almost anything. But some persons, don't get any closer to anger than apathy. And yet apathy really is a veiled form of anger because, like all anger, apathy, even though it achieves its goal through passive indifference, ultimately wishes harm on another person.
And that is why, in this case, I believe Socrates is correct .
TheBramble said:Hi starspacer, thanks for your reply. Even if it is a little ambiguous/confusing.
Not sure what it is you are claiming Socrates is correct in. From your post it seems you may be indicating you believe Socrates is in fear of fragmentation. And in turn become aggressive. But you are condoning this response? (You 'believe Socrates is correct')
And having read all the other posts from you and others, I understand most of what you are posting is quoted from others. Again, that can be useful. But normally more useful in context (if this thread any longer has one) and as a reference point to some original thought following on from or in support of the quoted text(s). Reams of quotes tend to leave most people none the wiser unless there's a point to quoting it or a in a context which adds anything or makes sense.
If you are saying Socrates is aggressive (ordnance, cannon balls etc.) I am not sure. These are just playful terms I am sure. And is similar in spirit to that bonhomie and merrie riposte with which most other engage him on these boards. Where the problems arise is where he is rude and personally insulting to other members. Were you saying that all those who do not call him to heel on these issues and attempt to correct his behaviour are culpable by their inaction? Hardly fair. The moderators can't be expected to police the boards every minute of the day.
Passive indifference is precisely that. Not caring and not doing. However, wishing another harm by taking no action is not passive indifference - it it passive intent. Active indifference would be akin to someone hitting the ignore poster facility on these boards for instance.
Highly confused by your posts as seem to be a number of other members, but I'm sure you can perhaps at least clear up your stance on precisely what it was you thought Socrates was correct in. Probably best if you do it in your own words than by resorting to another quote as that may be where the problems are arising. The illusion that communication has taken place because words have been written.
chump,chump said:What was interesting was the view of "truth" expressed ..typically a "truth" is nothing more than an expression of belief.
timsk said:chump,
Good post. The sentence quoted seems to sum up the heart of your message. At least, that's my belief
Essentially, what what one person believes to be true may be different from what the next person believes to be true. There is a lot of evidence to support the notion that 2 + 2 = 4. However, it has no relevance whatsoever to the person who believes 2 + 2 = 5. While I imagine that most people reading this board will subscribe to the addition totalling 4, there are relatively few such black and white examples when it comes to trading. In the context of the markets, perceived 'truths' are largely - if not entirely - subjective. Therefore, to offer evidence for one's beliefs - no matter how compelling these may be - is a pretty pointless exercise.
Tim.
Dbp,dbphoenix said:If you're going to try to apply all of this to trading, and if you're trading based on belief, then offering evidence to support those beliefs is not only not a pointless exercise, it IS the exercise.
--Db
On the contrary Bramble, Bertie is correct in all of his posts, excepting the slur, which I assume was a Socratic Paradox. We know that Athenian Socrates believed that "virtue is knowledge." In other words, If one knows the good, one will always action the good. Anyone who does anything wrong doesn't really know what the good is. Thus for Bertie, it could be that this was sufficient justification to question a person’s moral position, for if they have incorrect or insufficient knowledge about “psychological activity”, “soul”, “excellence”, “justice or any other ethical idea, they can't be trusted to do the right thing. I am sure that Bertie will speak for himself, I am simply putting forward a possible explanation for his post.TheBramble Hi starspacer, thanks for your reply. Even if it is a little ambiguous/confusing. Not sure what it is you are claiming Socrates is correct in. From your post it seems you may be indicating you believe Socrates is in fear of fragmentation. And in turn become aggressive. But you are condoning this response? (You 'believe Socrates is correct')
A rather sweeping statement, Bramble, which serves, ipso facto, to prove Bertie’s posting “To tell someone who is ignorant of a fact and persists in insisting is perfectly acceptable, because to be patently ignorant is not an insult, it is a statement of fact. To be ignorant is a normal state of being for everybody until they are given the correct information and then they cease to be so.”And having read all the other posts from you and others, I understand most of what you are posting is quoted from others. Again, that can be useful. But normally more useful in context (if this thread any longer has one) and as a reference point to some original thought following on from or in support of the quoted text(s).
Reams of quotes tend to leave most people none the wiser unless there's a point to quoting it or a in a context which adds anything or makes sense.
If you are saying Socrates is aggressive (ordnance, cannon balls etc.) I am not sure. These are just playful terms I am sure. And is similar in spirit to that bonhomie and merrie riposte with which most other engage him on these boards. Where the problems arise is where he is rude and personally insulting to other members. Were you saying that all those who do not call him to heel on these issues and attempt to correct his behaviour are culpable by their inaction? Hardly fair. The moderators can't be expected to police the boards every minute of the day.
Passive indifference is precisely that. Not caring and not doing. However, wishing another harm by taking no action is not passive indifference - it it passive intent. Active indifference would be akin to someone hitting the ignore poster facility on these boards for instance.
Highly confused by your posts….
timsk said:Dbp,
I agree completely. To trade without having some foundation that leads one to believe that one's actions are likely result in the outcome that one desires is, at best, gambling.
However, this is a different proposition from putting forward those same views for the consideration of others. I can have loads of what I consider evidence to support my beliefs but, to you or the next man, this 'evidence' may be meaningless and / or worthless.
Tim.
SOCRATES said:The title is The Technology of Political Control...
It explains how the herd is controlled and misdirected and dumbed down.
Recommended reading for deep thinkers.
Kind Regards.sp1 said:Is the mainstream view of accepted history one facet of the misdirection?
Yes, one must always disregard what is mainstream because it is mainstream, and therefore neither empowered, specific or necessarily accurate.
If yes is there a particular strand of revisionist history that you recommend for deep thinkers?
No, I cannot do that, I am not a historian. But I recommend you inspect to verify, and not just to read for the sake of reading. If you think deeply, it will enhance your overall understanding of everything, as everything is relative to eveything else.
Or do you view some or all of them as wrong?
Nothing can be wrong until it is verified not to be correct. For you to do this, you have to change your intellectual posture first and then apply effort to sustain a revised intellectual posture. This is not an easy task because, the intellectual posture you may have adopted may have as a consequence of inputs not suitable for the task, amd may even be the consequence of acquired habits. Therefore you have not only to change your posture, but your inputs as well.
As an aside Socrates Have you had a PM bomb attack?
No, I have been very busy with other matters, and therefore disabled the PM facility for the duration.
Regards
You have not considered the dichotomy from both side, only from one side.Splitlink said:Quote:
Originally Posted by starspacer
And yet apathy really is a veiled form of anger because, like all anger, apathy, even though it achieves its goal through passive indifference, ultimately wishes harm on another person.
I agree that apathy can cause harm on another person but do not agree that it wishes harm on him. I question , also, whether anger necessarily wishes harm, either.
Apathy or indifference causes less stress to oneself than the act of losing one's temper, especially if the subject causes the other to lose his temper, too. Why bother? Far better to be apathetic or indifferent to it.
Split
Quite so. It either works or it does not work. If it does work, it does, and if it doesn't it fails for a reason. There is no point in persisting in trying to reinvent the wheel, just for the sake of finding something to do.dbphoenix said:It's not different at all. Either your strategy does what it's supposed to do or it doesn't, and this is easily verifiable by anyone who knows your rules. What you or anyone "believes" is irrelevant.
--Db
Good evening Silvia,silviaic said:wow guys, this is really an elevated discussion!
I am staring in amazement.
By the way, I just came here to see if someone has a toothpick to lend me, I have this very annoying piece of parsley stuck between my teeth I can't get rid off. Thanks.
Silvia.
(keep the difficult words coming, no idea what they mean but they sound nice and I'm going to impress my man next time he accuses me of cheating on him. For example:
Unfortunately , analysing the utility value of beliefs is not always ... simple ..... Oscar Wilde gave us "The truth is rarely pure , and never simple "
and you know what dear?
Criticism is meaningless since according to the Socratic paradigm of sagacious inner strength, a good man (woman) cannot be harmed
But the lads told me they saw you at the pub!
Dear: The robustness of (their) discourse has no relevance
And if he decides to start sulking:
And yet apathy really is a veiled form of anger. Make me a cuppa and don't forget the sugar babe)