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etc. etc.....
^^^^^^
***Sure!!! And what's .3 of a woman??? Any hypothesis??
How can you trust a report from people that have *no idea*
of what a MEDIAN is?
The same bullshit article reported that 22,5% of all the men have
sex 10 times or more a week (Elf, how many times did you fill
one of those questionnaires?) and had other statistics that took
in no consideration different class backgrounds, marital status
etc. No information on sampling were given.
Do you think you can compare so lightly secondary data from 2 very
different (and discutible) surveys???
It just shows how dramatically ignorant are press release writers and
most pople that read them.....
| 13 | trimmed_train |
1,418 |
Have you read the applicable part of the Constitution and interpreted it IN
CONTEXT? If not, please do so before posting this misinterpretation again.
It refers to the right of the people to organize a militia, not for individuals
to carry handguns, grenades, and assault rifles. | 7 | trimmed_train |
10,799 |
First of all as far as I know, only male homosexuality is explicitly
mentioned in the bibles, so you're off the hook there, I think. In
any event, there are *plenty* of people in many denominations who
do not consider a person's sexual identification of gay/lesbian/bisexual
as an "immoral lifestyle choice"
This is another misconception. You are not being told the whole story.
My former minister is a lesbian, and I know personally and
professionally several openly gay and lesbian ministers. I am
a Unitarian-Universalist and like most others in my denomination,
am pro-choice. You needn't go looking to the Unitarian Universalists
(which is a liberal religion) for acceptance of your sexual
identification and pro-choice views, however; there are many of us
who believe in spirituality AND freedom of conscience.
Good Luck on your journey!
| 15 | trimmed_train |
735 |
You are right but PLEASE DON'T DO THIS. It makes my brain hurt.
USPosition and USSize should ONLY be set if the USER specified the
position and size.
You say: "Tom, don't blow a gasket, what's the harm?"
Some window managers do very different things (besides positioning the window)
when they see USPosition rather than PPosition.
| 16 | trimmed_train |
2,076 |
Well, may I point out that paranoia is an IRRATIONAL fear, without basis
in reality. As we've seen here in the US, there is nothing irrational
about it. Perhaps you folks in Finland have been down on your knees
being good little boys and girls so that the former Soviet Union didn't
come across the border and stomp the snot out of you for so long that
you just figure everybody should be so accomodating to tyranny.
If you don't like us talking about political issues involving attacks
on people for owning guns, don't read talk.politics.guns.
Nobody's trying to save YOU from anything, so butt out. I couldn't
care less about what somebody on the other side of the world thinks
about this. Of course, you do have a right to an opinion... but I've
always figured that opinons are like hemmorhoids. Every asshole's
got them, I just don't care about yours.
| 9 | trimmed_train |
2,581 | Government-Mandated Energy Conservation is Unnecessary and Wastful, Study Finds
Washington, DC -- The energy tax and subsidized energy-efficiency
measures supported by President Clinton and Energy Secretary Hazel
O'Leary are based on faulty assumptions, a new study from the Cato
Institute points out.
According to Jerry Taylor, Cato's director of natural resource studies,
we are not running out of sources of energy. The world now has almost 10
times the proven oil reserves it had in 1950 and twice the reserves of
1970. Proven reserves of coal and natural gas have increased just as
dramatically.
When standards of living, population densities, and industrial
structures are controlled for, the United States is no less energy
efficient than Japan and more energy efficient than many of the Group
of Seven nations.
Energy independence provides little protection against domestic oil
price shocks because the energy economy is global. Moreover, since the
cost of oil represents only about 2 percent of gross national product,
even large increases in the price of oil would have little impact on the
overall U.S. economy.
Market economies are, on average, 2.75 times more energy efficient per
$1,000 of GNP than are centrally planned economies.
Utilities' subsidized energy-efficiency measurs, known as demand-side
management programs, encourage free riders, overuse of competing resource
inputs, an competitive inequities. Furthermore, DSM programs do not
reduce demand.
Taylor concludes that government-mandated energy conservation imposes
unnecessary costs on consumers and wastes, not conserves, energy; that
subsidizing energy-conservation technologies will stymie, not advance,
gains in energy conservation; and that central control over the lifeblood
of modern society--energy--would transfer tremendous power to the state
at the expense of the individual.
"Energy Conservation and Efficiency: The Case Against Coercion" is no.
189 in the Policy Analysis series published by the Cato Institute, an
independent public policy research organization in Washington, DC.
Available from:
Cato Institute
224 Second Street SE
Washington, DC 20003
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Cato Institute
Founded in 1977, the Cato Institute is a public policy research
foundation dedicated to broadening the parameters of policy debate
to allow consideration of more options that are consistent with the
traditional American principles of limited government, individual
liberty, and peace. To that end, the Institute strives to achieve
greater involvement of the intelligent, concerned lay public in
questions of policy and the proper role of government.
The Institute is named for Cato's Letters, libertarian pamphlets
that were widely read in the American Colonies in the early 18th
century and played a major role in laying the philosophical foundation
of the American Revolution.
Despite the achievement of the nation's Founders, today virtually
no aspect of life is free from government encroachment. A pervasive
intolerance for individual rights is shown by government's arbitrary
intrusions into private economic transactions and its disregard for
civil liberties.
To counter that trend the Cato Institute undertakes an extensive
publications program that addresses the complete spectrum of policy
issues. Books, monographs, and shorter studies are commissioned
to examine the federal budget, Social Security, regulation, military
spending, international trade, and myriad other issues. Major policy
conferences are held throughout the year, from which papers are
published thrice yearly in the Cato Journal.
In order to maintain its independence, the Cato Institute accepts
no government funding. Contributions are received from foundations,
corporations, and individuals, and other revenue is generated from
the sale of publications. The Institute is a nonprofit, tax-exempt,
educational foundation under Section 501(c)3 of the Internal Revenue
Code. | 13 | trimmed_train |
10,925 |
Scott --
look on ftp.cica.indiana.edu for gws.....zip. They embed the release
number in the name, and I'm not sure what the lates is. It is Graphics
Workshop. There is a DOS and a Windows version. Both work Great. I even
had someone bring me some images from the Amiga, and converted them to
great looking wallpaper as 256-color .BMP files
If you can't find it, repost, or let me know, and I'll dig up the archive.
dave
-- | 18 | trimmed_train |
7,199 |
DMorf (Dave's Morph, I think is what it means) and DTax (Dave's
TGA Assembler) are available in the MSDOS_UPLOADS directory
on the wuarchive.
They are arjed and bundled with their respective xmemory versions,
dmorfx.exe and dtax.exe, you can also find a version of aaplay.exe
there, with which you can view files you create with dta.exe or
dtax.exe.
I downloaded the whole bunch last week and have been morphing
away the afternoons since. The programmes are all a bit buggy and
definitely not-ready-to-spread-to-the-masses, but they are very
well written.
The interface is frustrating at first, but it gets easy once you
figure out the tricks.
I have noticed that dmorfx will crash horribly if you try to morph
without using the splines option. Not sure why, since I don't have
the source. I think it was written for TP 6.0.
If anyone else comes up with any other hints on getting the thing
to work right, tell me; it took me several hours the first time
just to figure out that if I just used the durned splines then
it would work...
| 1 | trimmed_train |
598 |
sure sounds like they got a ringer. the 325is i drove was definitely
faster than that. if you want to quote numbers, my AW AutoFile shows
0-60 in 7.4, 1/4 mile in 15.9. it quotes Car and Driver's figures
of 6.9 and 15.3. oh, BTW, these numbers are for the 325i.
i don't know how the addition of variable valve timing for 1993 affects it.
but don't take my word for it. go drive it. | 4 | trimmed_train |
8,767 |
Bullshit. You've been in Iceland for the past 30 years. You told us
so yourself. It had something to do with not wanting to suffer the
fate of your mother, who has lived with Jews for a long time or
somesuch. Sounded awful.
Are you as concerned about peace and justice in Palestine (Jordan)?
Let's say that Israel grants the PLO _EVERYTHING THEY EVER ASKED FOR_.
That Israel goes back to the 1967 borders. What will the "Palestinean
Arabs" in Tel-Aviv call themselves? The Palestineans in West
Jerusalem? In Haifa? Will they still claim to be "occupied"?
Or do you suggest that Israel expell or kill off any remaining Arabs,
much as the Arabs did to their Jews?
Indeed, there is much which is not symmetrical about the conflict in
the M.E. And most of this lack of symmetry does NOT favor Israel.
| 6 | trimmed_train |
491 | Archive-name: atheism/logic
Alt-atheism-archive-name: logic
Last-modified: 5 April 1993
Version: 1.4
Constructing a Logical Argument
Although there is much argument on Usenet, the general quality of argument
found is poor. This article attempts to provide a gentle introduction to
logic, in the hope of improving the general level of debate.
Logic is the science of reasoning, proof, thinking, or inference [Concise
OED]. Logic allows us to analyze a piece of reasoning and determine whether
it is correct or not (valid or invalid). Of course, one does not need to
study logic in order to reason correctly; nevertheless, a little basic
knowledge of logic is often helpful when constructing or analyzing an
argument.
Note that no claim is being made here about whether logic is universally
applicable. The matter is very much open for debate. This document merely
explains how to use logic, given that you have already decided that logic is
the right tool for the job.
Propositions (or statements) are the building blocks of a logical argument. A
proposition is a statement which is either true or false; for example, "It is
raining" or "Today is Tuesday". Propositions may be either asserted (said to
be true) or denied (said to be false). Note that this is a technical meaning
of "deny", not the everyday meaning.
The proposition is the meaning of the statement, not the particular
arrangement of words used to express it. So "God exists" and "There exists a
God" both express the same proposition.
An argument is, to quote the Monty Python sketch, "a connected series of
statements to establish a definite proposition". An argument consists of
three stages.
First of all, the propositions which are necessary for the argument to
continue are stated. These are called the premises of the argument. They
are the evidence or reasons for accepting the argument and its conclusions.
Premises (or assertions) are often indicated by phrases such as "because",
"since", "obviously" and so on. (The phrase "obviously" is often viewed with
suspicion, as it can be used to intimidate others into accepting suspicious
premises. If something doesn't seem obvious to you, don't be afraid to
question it. You can always say "Oh, yes, you're right, it is obvious" when
you've heard the explanation.)
Next, the premises are used to derive further propositions by a process known
as inference. In inference, one proposition is arrived at on the basis of
one or more other propositions already accepted. There are various forms of
valid inference.
The propositions arrived at by inference may then be used in further
inference. Inference is often denoted by phrases such as "implies that" or
"therefore".
Finally, we arrive at the conclusion of the argument -- the proposition which
is affirmed on the basis of the premises and inference. Conclusions are often
indicated by phrases such as "therefore", "it follows that", "we conclude"
and so on. The conclusion is often stated as the final stage of inference.
For example:
Every event has a cause (premise)
The universe has a beginning (premise)
All beginnings involve an event (premise)
This implies that the beginning of the universe involved an event (inference)
Therefore the universe has a cause (inference and conclusion)
Note that the conclusion of one argument might be a premise in another
argument. A proposition can only be called a premise or a conclusion with
respect to a particular argument; the terms do not make sense in isolation.
Sometimes an argument will not follow the order given above; for example,
the conclusions might be stated first and the premises stated
afterwards in support of the conclusion. This is perfectly valid, if
sometimes a little confusing.
Recognizing an argument is much harder than recognizing premises or
conclusions. Many people shower their writing with assertions without ever
producing anything which one might reasonably describe as an argument. Some
statements look like arguments, but are not. For example:
"If the Bible is accurate, Jesus must either have been insane, an evil liar,
or the Son of God."
This is not an argument, it is a conditional statement. It does not assert
the premises which are necessary to support what appears to be its
conclusion. (It also suffers from a number of other logical flaws, but we'll
come to those later.)
Another example:
"God created you; therefore do your duty to God."
The phrase "do your duty to God" is not a proposition, since it is neither
true nor false. Therefore it is not a conclusion, and the sentence is not an
argument.
Finally, causality is important. Consider a statement of the form "A because
B". If we're interested in establishing A and B is offered as evidence, the
statement is an argument. If we're trying to establish the truth of B, then
it is not an argument, it is an explanation.
For example:
"There must be something wrong with the engine of my car, because it will not
start." -- This is an argument.
"My car will not start because there is something wrong with the engine."
-- This is an explanation.
There are two traditional types of argument, deductive and inductive. A
deductive argument is one which provides conclusive proof of its conclusions
-- that is, an argument where if the premises are true, the conclusion must
also be true. A deductive argument is either valid or invalid. A valid
argument is defined as one where if the premises are true, then the
conclusion is true.
An inductive argument is one where the premises provide some evidence for the
truth of the conclusion. Inductive arguments are not valid or invalid;
however, we can talk about whether they are better or worse than other
arguments, and about how probable their premises are.
There are forms of argument in ordinary language which are neither deductive
nor inductive. However, we will concentrate for the moment on deductive
arguments, as they are often viewed as the most rigorous and convincing.
It is important to note that the fact that a deductive argument is valid does
not imply that its conclusion holds. This is because of the slightly
counter-intuitive nature of implication, which we must now consider more
carefully.
Obviously a valid argument can consist of true propositions. However, an
argument may be entirely valid even if it contains only false propositions.
For example:
All insects have wings (premise)
Woodlice are insects (premise)
Therefore woodlice have wings (conclusion)
Here, the conclusion is not true because the argument's premises are false.
If the argument's premises were true, however, the conclusion would be true.
The argument is thus entirely valid.
More subtly, we can reach a true conclusion from one or more false premises,
as in:
All fish live in the sea (premise)
Dolphins are fish (premise)
Therefore dolphins live in the sea (conclusion)
However, the one thing we cannot do is reach a false conclusion through valid
inference from true premises. We can therefore draw up a "truth table" for
implication.
The symbol "=>" denotes implication; "A" is the premise, "B" the conclusion.
"T" and "F" represent true and false respectively.
Premise Conclusion Inference
A B A=>B
----------------------------
F F T If the premises are false and the inference
F T T valid, the conclusion can be true or false.
T F F If the premises are true and the conclusion
false, the inference must be invalid.
T T T If the premises are true and the inference valid,
the conclusion must be true.
A sound argument is a valid argument whose premises are true. A sound
argument therefore arrives at a true conclusion. Be careful not to confuse
valid arguments with sound arguments.
To delve further into the structure of logical arguments would require
lengthy discussion of linguistics and philosophy. It is simpler and probably
more useful to summarize the major pitfalls to be avoided when constructing
an argument. These pitfalls are known as fallacies.
In everyday English the term "fallacy" is used to refer to mistaken beliefs
as well as to the faulty reasoning that leads to those beliefs. This is fair
enough, but in logic the term is generally used to refer to a form of
technically incorrect argument, especially if the argument appears valid or
convincing.
So for the purposes of this discussion, we define a fallacy as a logical
argument which appears to be correct, but which can be seen to be incorrect
when examined more closely. By studying fallacies we aim to avoid being
misled by them. The following list of fallacies is not intended to be
exhaustive.
ARGUMENTUM AD BACULUM (APPEAL TO FORCE)
The Appeal to Force is committed when the arguer resorts to force or the
threat of force in order to try and push the acceptance of a conclusion. It
is often used by politicians, and can be summarized as "might makes right".
The force threatened need not be a direct threat from the arguer.
For example:
"... Thus there is ample proof of the truth of the Bible. All those who
refuse to accept that truth will burn in Hell."
ARGUMENTUM AD HOMINEM
Argumentum ad hominem is literally "argument directed at the man".
The Abusive variety of Argumentum ad Hominem occurs when, instead of trying
to disprove the truth of an assertion, the arguer attacks the person or
people making the assertion. This is invalid because the truth of an
assertion does not depend upon the goodness of those asserting it.
For example:
"Atheism is an evil philosophy. It is practised by Communists and murderers."
Sometimes in a court of law doubt is cast upon the testimony of a witness by
showing, for example, that he is a known perjurer. This is a valid way of
reducing the credibility of the testimony given by the witness, and not
argumentum ad hominem; however, it does not demonstrate that the witness's
testimony is false. To conclude otherwise is to fall victim of the
Argumentum ad Ignorantiam (see elsewhere in this list).
The circumstantial form of Argumentum ad Hominem is committed when a person
argues that his opponent ought to accept the truth of an assertion because of
the opponent's particular circumstances.
For example:
"It is perfectly acceptable to kill animals for food. How can you argue
otherwise when you're quite happy to wear leather shoes?"
This is an abusive charge of inconsistency, used as an excuse for dismissing
the opponent's argument.
This fallacy can also be used as a means of rejecting a conclusion. For
example:
"Of course you would argue that positive discrimination is a bad thing.
You're white."
This particular form of Argumentum ad Hominem, when one alleges that one's
adversary is rationalizing a conclusion formed from selfish interests, is
also known as "poisoning the well".
ARGUMENTUM AD IGNORANTIUM
Argumentum ad ignorantium means "argument from ignorance". This fallacy
occurs whenever it is argued that something must be true simply because it
has not been proved false. Or, equivalently, when it is argued that
something must be false because it has not been proved true. (Note that this
is not the same as assuming that something is false until it has been proved
true, a basic scientific principle.)
Examples:
"Of course the Bible is true. Nobody can prove otherwise."
"Of course telepathy and other psychic phenomena do not exist. Nobody has
shown any proof that they are real."
Note that this fallacy does not apply in a court of law, where one is
generally assumed innocent until proven guilty.
Also, in scientific investigation if it is known that an event would produce
certain evidence of its having occurred, the absence of such evidence can
validly be used to infer that the event did not occur. For example:
"A flood as described in the Bible would require an enormous volume of water
to be present on the earth. The earth does not have a tenth as much water,
even if we count that which is frozen into ice at the poles. Therefore no
such flood occurred."
In science, we can validly assume from lack of evidence that something has
not occurred. We cannot conclude with certainty that it has not occurred,
however.
ARGUMENTUM AD MISERICORDIAM
This is the Appeal to Pity, also known as Special Pleading. The fallacy is
committed when the arguer appeals to pity for the sake of getting a
conclusion accepted. For example:
"I did not murder my mother and father with an axe. Please don't find me
guilty; I'm suffering enough through being an orphan."
ARGUMENTUM AD POPULUM
This is known as Appealing to the Gallery, or Appealing to the People. To
commit this fallacy is to attempt to win acceptance of an assertion by
appealing to a large group of people. This form of fallacy is often
characterized by emotive language. For example:
"Pornography must be banned. It is violence against women."
"The Bible must be true. Millions of people know that it is. Are you trying
to tell them that they are all mistaken fools?"
ARGUMENTUM AD NUMERAM
This fallacy is closely related to the argumentum ad populum. It consists of
asserting that the more people who support or believe a proposition, the more
likely it is that that proposition is correct.
ARGUMENTUM AD VERECUNDIAM
The Appeal to Authority uses the admiration of the famous to try and win
support for an assertion. For example:
"Isaac Newton was a genius and he believed in God."
This line of argument is not always completely bogus; for example, reference
to an admitted authority in a particular field may be relevant to a
discussion of that subject. For example, we can distinguish quite clearly
between:
"Stephen Hawking has concluded that black holes give off radiation"
and
"John Searle has concluded that it is impossible to build an intelligent
computer"
Hawking is a physicist, and so we can reasonably expect his opinions on black
hole radiation to be informed. Searle is a linguist, so it is questionable
whether he is well-qualified to speak on the subject of machine intelligence.
THE FALLACY OF ACCIDENT
The Fallacy of Accident is committed when a general rule is applied to a
particular case whose "accidental" circumstances mean that the rule is
inapplicable. It is the error made when one goes from the general to the
specific. For example:
"Christians generally dislike atheists. You are a Christian, so you must
dislike atheists."
This fallacy is often committed by moralists and legalists who try to decide
every moral and legal question by mechanically applying general rules.
CONVERSE ACCIDENT / HASTY GENERALIZATION
This fallacy is the reverse of the fallacy of accident. It occurs when one
forms a general rule by examining only a few specific cases which are not
representative of all possible cases.
For example:
"Jim Bakker was an insincere Christian. Therefore all Christians are
insincere."
SWEEPING GENERALIZATION / DICTO SIMPLICITER
A sweeping generalization occurs when a general rule is applied to a
particular situation in which the features of that particular situation
render the rule inapplicable. A sweeping generalization is the opposite of a
hasty generalization.
NON CAUSA PRO CAUSA / POST HOC ERGO PROPTER HOC
These are known as False Cause fallacies.
The fallacy of Non Causa Pro Causa occurs when one identifies something as the
cause of an event but it has not actually been shown to be the cause. For
example:
"I took an aspirin and prayed to God, and my headache disappeared. So God
cured me of the headache."
The fallacy of Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc occurs when something is assumed to
be the cause of an event merely because it happened before the event. For
example:
"The Soviet Union collapsed after taking up atheism. Therefore we must avoid
atheism for the same reasons."
CUM HOC ERGO PROPTER HOC
This fallacy is similar to post hoc ergo propter hoc. It asserts that
because two events occur together, they must be causally related, and leaves
no room for other factors that may be the cause(s) of the events.
PETITIO PRINCIPII
This fallacy occurs when the premises are at least as questionable as the
conclusion reached.
CIRCULUS IN DEMONSTRANDO
This fallacy occurs when one assumes as a premise the conclusion which one
wishes to reach. Often, the proposition will be rephrased so that the
fallacy appears to be a valid argument. For example:
"Homosexuals must not be allowed to hold government office. Hence any
government official who is revealed to be a homosexual will lose his job.
Therefore homosexuals will do anything to hide their secret, and will be open
to blackmail. Therefore homosexuals cannot be allowed to hold government
office."
Note that the argument is entirely circular; the premise is the same as the
conclusion. An argument like the above has actually been cited as the reason
for the British Secret Services' official ban on homosexual employees.
Another example is the classic:
"We know that God exists because the Bible tells us so. And we know that the
Bible is true because it is the word of God."
COMPLEX QUESTION / FALLACY OF INTERROGATION
This is the Fallacy of Presupposition. One example is the classic loaded
question:
"Have you stopped beating your wife?"
The question presupposes a definite answer to another question which has not
even been asked. This trick is often used by lawyers in cross-examination,
when they ask questions like:
"Where did you hide the money you stole?"
Similarly, politicians often ask loaded questions such as:
"How long will this EC interference in our affairs be allowed to continue?"
or
"Does the Chancellor plan two more years of ruinous privatization?"
IGNORATIO ELENCHI
The fallacy of Irrelevant Conclusion consists of claiming that an argument
supports a particular conclusion when it is actually logically nothing to do
with that conclusion.
For example, a Christian may begin by saying that he will argue that the
teachings of Christianity are undoubtably true. If he then argues at length
that Christianity is of great help to many people, no matter how well he
argues he will not have shown that Christian teachings are true.
Sadly, such fallacious arguments are often successful because they arouse
emotions which cause others to view the supposed conclusion in a more
favourable light.
EQUIVOCATION
Equivocation occurs when a key word is used with two or more different
meanings in the same argument. For example:
"What could be more affordable than free software? But to make sure that it
remains free, that users can do what they like with it, we must place a
license on it to make sure that will always be freely redistributable."
AMPHIBOLY
Amphiboly occurs when the premises used in an argument are ambiguous because
of careless or ungrammatical phrasing.
ACCENT
Accent is another form of fallacy through shifting meaning. In this case,
the meaning is changed by altering which parts of a statement are
emphasized. For example, consider:
"We should not speak ILL of our friends"
and
"We should not speak ill of our FRIENDS"
FALLACIES OF COMPOSITION
One fallacy of composition is to conclude that a property shared by the parts
of something must apply to the whole. For example:
"The bicycle is made entirely of low mass components, and is therefore very
lightweight."
The other fallacy of composition is to conclude that a property of a number
of individual items is shared by a collection of those items. For example:
"A car uses less petrol and causes less pollution than a bus. Therefore cars
are less environmentally damaging than buses."
FALLACY OF DIVISION
The fallacy of division is the opposite of the fallacy of composition. Like
its opposite, it exists in two varieties. The first is to assume that a
property of some thing must apply to its parts. For example:
"You are studying at a rich college. Therefore you must be rich."
The other is to assume that a property of a collection of items is shared by
each item. For example:
"Ants can destroy a tree. Therefore this ant can destroy a tree."
THE SLIPPERY SLOPE ARGUMENT
This argument states that should one event occur, so will other harmful
events. There is no proof made that the harmful events are caused by the
first event.
For example:
"If we legalize marijuana, then we would have to legalize crack and heroin
and we'll have a nation full of drug-addicts on welfare. Therefore we cannot
legalize marijuana."
"A IS BASED ON B" FALLACIES / "IS A TYPE OF" FALLACIES
These fallacies occur when one attempts to argue that things are in some way
similar without actually specifying in what way they are similar.
Examples:
"Isn't history based upon faith? If so, then isn't the Bible also a form of
history?"
"Islam is based on faith, Christianity is based on faith, so isn't Islam a
form of Christianity?"
"Cats are a form of animal based on carbon chemistry, dogs are a form of
animal based on carbon chemistry, so aren't dogs a form of cat?"
AFFIRMATION OF THE CONSEQUENT
This fallacy is an argument of the form "A implies B, B is true, therefore A
is true". To understand why it is a fallacy, examine the truth table for
implication given earlier.
DENIAL OF THE ANTECEDENT
This fallacy is an argument of the form "A implies B, A is false, therefore B
is false". Again, the truth table for implication makes it clear why this is
a fallacy.
Note that this fallacy is different from Non Causa Pro Causa; the latter has
the form "A implies B, A is false, therefore B is false", where A does NOT in
fact imply B at all. Here, the problem is not that the implication is
invalid; rather it is that the falseness of A does not allow us to deduce
anything about B.
CONVERTING A CONDITIONAL
This fallacy is an argument of the form "If A then B, therefore if B then A".
ARGUMENTUM AD ANTIQUITAM
This is the fallacy of asserting that something is right or good simply
because it is old, or because "that's the way it's always been."
ARGUMENTUM AD NOVITAM
This is the opposite of the argumentum ad antiquitam; it is the fallacy of
asserting that something is more correct simply because it is new or newer
than something else.
ARGUMENTUM AD CRUMENAM
The fallacy of believing that money is a criterion of correctness; that those
with more money are more likely to be right.
ARGUMENTUM AD LAZARUM
The fallacy of assuming that because someone is poor he or she is sounder or
more virtuous than one who is wealthier. This fallacy is the opposite of the
argumentum ad crumenam.
ARGUMENTUM AD NAUSEAM
This is the incorrect belief that an assertion is more likely to be true the
more often it is heard. An "argumentum ad nauseum" is one that employs
constant repetition in asserting something.
BIFURCATION
Also referred to as the "black and white" fallacy, bifurcation occurs when
one presents a situation as having only two alternatives, where in fact other
alternatives exist or can exist.
PLURIUM INTERROGATIONUM / MANY QUESTIONS
This fallacy occurs when a questioner demands a simple answer to a complex
question.
NON SEQUITUR
A non-sequitur is an argument where the conclusion is drawn from premises
which are not logically connected with it.
RED HERRING
This fallacy is committed when irrelevant material is introduced to the issue
being discussed, so that everyone's attention is diverted away from the
points being made, towards a different conclusion.
REIFICATION / HYPOSTATIZATION
Reification occurs when an abstract concept is treated as a concrete thing.
SHIFTING THE BURDEN OF PROOF
The burden of proof is always on the person making an assertion or
proposition. Shifting the burden of proof, a special case of argumentum ad
ignorantium, is the fallacy of putting the burden of proof on the person who
denies or questions the assertion being made. The source of the fallacy is
the assumption that something is true unless proven otherwise.
STRAW MAN
The straw man fallacy is to misrepresent someone else's position so that it
can be attacked more easily, then to knock down that misrepresented position,
then to conclude that the original position has been demolished. It is a
fallacy because it fails to deal with the actual arguments that have been
made.
THE EXTENDED ANALOGY
The fallacy of the Extended Analogy often occurs when some suggested general
rule is being argued over. The fallacy is to assume that mentioning two
different situations, in an argument about a general rule, constitutes a
claim that those situations are analogous to each other.
This fallacy is best explained using a real example from a debate about
anti-cryptography legislation:
"I believe it is always wrong to oppose the law by breaking it."
"Such a position is odious: it implies that you would not have supported
Martin Luther King."
"Are you saying that cryptography legislation is as important as the
struggle for Black liberation? How dare you!"
TU QUOQUE
This is the famous "you too" fallacy. It occurs when an action is argued to
be acceptable because the other party has performed it. For instance:
"You're just being randomly abusive."
"So? You've been abusive too." | 8 | trimmed_train |
1,500 | In rec.autos you write:
This McLaren auto-transmission (I still think it's only half auto,
but You may be right) has NOTHING to do with Your GM, Chrysler, Volvo,
or whatever auto transmission. It's a normal manual transmission
gearbox with clutch and all, but there are servo motors, which do
the shifting.
That means, there is no power loss in the drivetrain (if You take out
minimal mechanical friction), and the sami-auto transmissions
(Ferrari, Williams, McLaren(?),...) don't tell You, when to shift,
either. However, these transmissions share an important disadvantage
with Your stock auto-trannie: They are EXPENSIVE.
As long as these servo-shifted gearboxes aren't available on
'normal' cars I'm gonna stick with my manual. I just can't see an
advantage to make up for two grand I lose in this deal and the
loss in mileage and power (except maybe in real heavy traffic). But
then I drive mostly on the autobahn and country roads anyway.
There's no point in making a religion out of this, I just wanted to
point out a few technical facts and MY OWN opinion, so there's
no need for a flame war.
Have a safe ride | 4 | trimmed_train |
3,855 | Hi there,
I've made a VGA mode 13h graphics library available via FTP. I originally
wrote the routines as a kind of exercise for myself, but perhaps someone
here will find them useful. They are certainly useable as they are, but
are missing some higher-level functionality. They're intended more as an
intro to mode 13h programming, a starting point.
*** The library assumes a 386 processor, but it is trivial to modify it
*** for a 286. If enough people ask, I'll make the mods and re-post it as a
*** different version.
The routines are written in assembly (TASM) and are callable from C. They
are fairly simple, but I've found them to be very fast (for my purposes,
anyway). Routines are included to enter and exit mode 13h, define a
"virtual screen", put and get pixels, put a pixmap (rectangular image with
no transparent spots), put a sprite (image with see-thru areas), copy
areas of the virtual screen into video memory, etc. I've also included a
simple C routine to draw a line, as well as a C routine to load a 256
color GIF image into a buffer. I also wrote a quick'n'dirty(tm) demo program
that bounces a bunch of sprites around behind three "windows".
The whole package is available on spang.camosun.bc.ca in /pub/dos/vgl.zip
It is zipped with pkzip 2.04g
It is completely in the public domain, as far as I'm concerned. Do with
it whatever you like. However, it'd be nice to get credit where it's due,
and maybe an e-mail telling me you like it (if you don't like it don't bother) | 1 | trimmed_train |
3,947 |
By '8 grey level images' you mean 8 items of 1bit images?
It does work(!), but it doesn't work if you have more than 1bit
in your screen and if the screen intensity is non-linear.
With 2 bit per pixel; there could be 1*c_1 + 4*c_2 timing,
this gives 16 levels, but they are linear if screen intensity is
linear.
With 1*c_1 + 2*c_2 it works, but we have to find the best
compinations -- there's 10 levels, but 16 choises; best 10 must be
chosen. Different compinations for the same level, varies a bit, but
the levels keeps their order.
Readers should verify what I wrote... :-) | 1 | trimmed_train |
7,249 | If "I forgot" doesn't have as much credibility as you'd like, consider
this alternative. Somewhere on the hard disk, duplicated a few times,
keep a 128-bit random number. When the 128-bit digest of your
passphrase is computed, it is XORred with the random number before being
used as the key for your hard disk. Writing random junk over the random
numbers makes the hard disk unreadable by anyone. | 7 | trimmed_train |
10,734 |
For the purpose of a contest, I'd bet some things could be cut. Like fuel
for re-entry, any kind of heat shielding, etc., etc. Even still, if the
contest participants had to fund DC-1 development, it probably wouldn't be
worth it to develop DC-1 (just for the contest). Just give me the cheapest
heaviest lift man rated (or at least under 6 or so Gs) booster... If I
don't have to pay for DC-1 development, great!, I'll use it.
But back to the contest goals, there was a recent article in AW&ST about a
low cost (it's all relative...) manned return to the moon. A General
Dynamics scheme involving a Titan IV & Shuttle to lift a Centaur upper
stage, LEV, and crew capsule. The mission consists of delivering two
unmanned payloads to the lunar surface, followed by a manned mission.
Total cost: US was $10-$13 billion. Joint ESA(?)/NASA project was $6-$9
billion for the US share.
I didn't find a mention of how long the crew could stay, but I'd bet that
its around 30 days. And the total payload delivered was about 30 metric
tonnes. So if you ignore the scientific payload, hitch a ride in the crew
habitation module (no return trip...), and toss in a few more tonnes for
the additional consumables to last another 11 months, then you *might* be
able to get a year visit out of 15 tonnes (and in case its not obvious,
that's a wild ass guess). A pretty boring visit, since every trip outdoors
eats up a bit of LOX. And I'm not certain if a home brewed (or
college-brewed) life support system could last a year. But let's round
this up to 19.4 tonnes (convient, since the GD plan talks about 9.7 ton
payloads delivered to the lunar surface. This adds up to two Centaurs, two
LEVs, two Shuttle flights... All to put a single man on the moon for a
year. Hmmm. Not really practical. Anyone got a cheaper/better way of
delivering 15-20 tonnes to the lunar surface within the decade? Anyone
have a more precise guess about how much a year's supply of consumables and
equipment would weigh?
And I was wondering about the GD LEV. Is it reusable? Or is it discarded
to burn up on return to LEO? If its not discarded, could it be refueled?
Henry: Do you know anything about the GD LEV? I noted that it uses RL-10
engines. Aren't they reusable/restartable? Would a LEV fit in a DC-1?
I've forgotten (if I ever knew) what the cargo bay dimensions are for the
DC-1.
All in all, I'm not certain that the single goal/prize of staying on the
moon for a year is wise and/or useful. How about: A prize for the first
non-government sponsered unmanned moon landing, then another for a manned
moon landing, then yet another for a system to extract consumables from
lunar soil, another for a reusable earth/moon shuttle, and so forth. Find
some way to build civilian moonbase infrastructure... Having a single goal
might result in a bunch of contestents giving up after one person appeared
to win. And for those that didn't give up, I find something a little scary
about a half dozen people huddling in rickety little moon shelters. I'd
like to see as much a reward for co-operation as for competition.
Lastly, about ten or fifteen years back I seem to recall that there was an
English space magazine that had an on-going discussion about moonbases on
the cheap. I recalled it discussed things like how much heat the human
body produced, how much lunar material it'd need for protection from solar
flares, etc. Unfortunately I don't remember the name of this magazine.
Does this ring a bell to anyone? | 10 | trimmed_train |
3,453 | Hello, recently I have been printing out a lot of files on school's laser printer and feeling guilty about it. Please help me by showing me where to get a post script viewer for X-windows. Thank you for your help.
| 16 | trimmed_train |
9,957 | : I am in the market for a bike and have recently found a 1990
: Honda VRF 750 at a dealership. The bike has about 47,000 miles
: and is around $4500. It has had two previous owners, both employees
: of the dealership who, I have been told, took very good care of the
: bike.
: I have two questions: 1) Is this too many miles for a bike? I know this
: would not be many miles for a car but I am unfamiliar with the life
: span of bikes. 2) Is this a decent price? I am also unfamilar with
: prices for used bikes. Is there a blue book for bikes like there is
: for cars?.
: Thanks for any advice you can give.
: --Mark
--
Mark,
47k is not too many miles on a VFR750. I sold my (well maintained)
'87 VFR700 with 52k miles on it and the engine was in mint condition.
All that the bike needed was steering head bearings and fork bushings
and seals. The guy who bought it had a mechanic pull the valve covers
to look at the top end, do a compression check etc. He confirmed it was
mint.
As for price, $4500 seems a little steep. I bought my '90 with 12k
miles on it a year ago (and in absolutely cherry condition) for $4800.
There is a bluebook, ask your bank or credit union for the going price.
I've seen a couple of ads for VFR's in the $4500 dollar range. They all
said low miles & mint condition but I didn't actually go look at them.
A VFR is a very sweet bike and will last you forever if you maintain
it at all. One thing to look for, BTW, is a soft front end. If my
VFR is any indication, at 12k miles the fork springs were totally shot.
Progressive springs ($55) fixed it right up.
Good luck, | 12 | trimmed_train |
11,273 |
yeah, just like we have here in the US.
-- | 13 | trimmed_train |
10,086 | A brief political/cultural item.
Radio station WGMS in Washington is a classical music station with
a large audience among high officials (elected and otherwise).
Imagine a radio station that advertises Mercedes Benzes, diamond
jewelry, expensive resorts and (truthfully) Trident submarines.
This morning I heard a commercial for the space station project.
Didn't catch the advertiser.
Guess they're pulling out all the stops. | 10 | trimmed_train |
6,466 | Can someone tell me the maximum horizontal and vertical refresh rates of the
NEC 5fgx.(not the 5fge) | 3 | trimmed_train |
4,506 |
This does sound good, but I heard it tends to leave more grit, etc in the
oil pan. Also, I've been told to change the old when it's hot before the
grit has much time to settle.
Any opinions?
| 4 | trimmed_train |
6,314 |
Just felt it was important to add four letters that Steve left out of
his Subject: header. | 6 | trimmed_train |
2,875 |
How about Jews who were expelled from their homelands in Iraq, Syria,
Jordan, Algeria, etc.? Don't they deserve justice, too?
Why is your criticism ALWAYS directed against Israel, but never
against the Arab states, even when they are so much more guilty of the
accusations you make? Is it because you now call yourself a
Palestinean?
This is why the "land-for-peace" formula is so foolish. Land-for-land
or peace-for-peace seems much more just, except that it would cost the
Arabs something and so is not under consideration.
Let's not forget that about half of Israel's population are refugees
from Arab countries. Somehow, THEIR land now being occupied by Arab
states and THEIR homes now being lived-in by Arab people are not
included in any negotiations. Is this your prescription for peace?
Again, you've somehow managed to overlook the fact that the Arab
states are much more restrictive on these points. In fact, the
officially Judenrein policies of almost all of the Arab states makes
them resemble Nazi Germany chillingly closely.
There are many states in which Christians can live happily, many which
have official religions and Christian majorities and Christian-based
laws. There are some 2 dozen Arab and Islamic states. There is only
1 (one) Jewish state. Do you have a problem with this? Is this one
Jewish state too many? There are others who might agree with you, you
know.
Have you just arrived on tpm recently??? Again, the supporters of the
Arab and Islamic camps are frequently and massively guilty of
"emotional, infantile outbursts" which have weakened their positions
dramatically. Somehow, your criticisms are very one-sided and
simple-minded.
P.S. How's the Fund coming along?
| 6 | trimmed_train |
5,045 | ---------- cut here ---------- part 03/03
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:+DE.1E!+!08 P # *P #M[P$
end
---------- cut here ---------- | 18 | trimmed_train |
4,659 | A list of options that would be useful. They can be existing
options on a car, or things you'd like to have...
1) Tripmeter, great little gadget. Lets you keep rough track of
mileage, makes a good second guesser for your gas gauge...
2) Full size spare
3) Built in mountings and power systems for radar detectors.
4) a fitting that allows you to generate household current with
the engine running, and plug ins in the trunk, engine compartment
and cabin.
Feel free to add on...
Regards, Charles
x | 4 | trimmed_train |
8,969 |
Ditto for me.. | 12 | trimmed_train |
6,584 |
I use the ashtray to keep change and other items in. I converted the
cigarette lighter into a volume control knob for my in trunk subwoofer!
.
/
Larry __/ _______/_
[email protected] / \
_____ __ _____ \------- ===
----------- / ____/ / / /__ __/ \
/ ___ / / ___ / / / / ____ |
| / \/ /__ / | / /__ __/ /__ / \ /
/___ \_______/ /_____/ /______/ ====OO
\ / \ /
- 1990 2.0 16v -
---------------- FAHRVERGNUGEN FOREVER! --------------------
The fact that I need to explain it to you indicates
that you probably wouldn't understand anyway! | 4 | trimmed_train |
8,462 |
If you want to have some fun.
Plug the basic formulas into Lotus.
Use the spreadsheet auto re-calc, and graphing functions
to produce bar graphs based on latitude, tilt and hours of day light avg.
| 10 | trimmed_train |
7,483 | [email protected] (Kent Sandvik) writes...
Which Jews KS?
(ex. as a people, as a language, religiously, politically, or...)
Do you mean those Jews who are God's chosen?
{And Malcolm, please, if you will, set your word wrap at 75 or less
to avoid clutter?} | 15 | trimmed_train |
3,426 |
I find these to be intriguing remarks. Could you give us a bit
more explanation here? For example, which religion is anti-semitic,
and which aesthetic? | 8 | trimmed_train |
5,469 | : I'd appreciate any feedback on capture/playback tools for use with X clients.
: Any comparisons/comments on regression testing tools would be great -
: particularly XTM, XRunner, Autotester, and SRI's CAPBAK, SMARTS and EXDIFF.
How about starting where I could find ANY of these. For the commercial
ones, at least a phone number would be appreciated.
| 16 | trimmed_train |
6,287 | I have a like new Hayes JT FAX for sale $125 or offer or trade! | 3 | trimmed_train |
9,277 |
Actually, what the study shows is that 2 percent of the men surveyed
*said* they engaged in homosexual sex and 1 percent *said* they
considered themselves exclusively homosexual.
The point being that what people say and what they acutally do
may be different.
It is interesting that this clip from the newspaper did not
mention that difference. Maybe it is conservative media bias. :-)
| 13 | trimmed_train |
6,025 | Paraphrase of initial post:
Can I fight a speeding ticket in court?
My reply:
Fight your ticket : California edition by David Brown 1st ed.
Berkeley, CA : Nolo Press, 1982
The second edition is out (but not in UCB's library). Good luck; let
us know how it goes. | 12 | trimmed_train |
4,365 | A friend has what is apparently a fairly minor case of Crohn's
disease.
But she can't seem to eat certain foods, such as fresh vegetables,
without discomfort, and of course she wants to avoid a recurrence.
Her question is: are there any nutritionists who specialize in the
problems of people with Crohn's disease ?
(I saw the suggestion of lipoxygnase inhibitors like tea and turmeric). | 19 | trimmed_train |
8,812 | I need a off-the-shelf method of transmitting small amounts of data up to
300 feet. The data is low speed and can be encoded as needed. Low power
on the transmitting end would be a plus. An FCC certified product would
be prefered.
If you have any pointers to products or companies I'd appreciate hearing from
you. | 11 | trimmed_train |
458 | [insert deletion of unnecessary quote]
First of all, God does not take any sort of pleasure from punishing
people. He will have mercy on whom he will have mercy and compassion on
whom he will have compassion (Ex 33:19). However, if he enjoyed
punishing people and sending them to hell, then why would he send Jesus
to "seek and save that which was lost" (Luke 19:10)?
You asked for it.
2 Peter 2:4-ff talks about how those who are ungodly are punished.
Matthew 25:31-46 is also very clear that those who do not righteous in
God's eyes will be sent to hell for eternity.
2 Thessalonians 1:6-10 states that those who cause trouble for the
disciples "will be punished with everlasting destruction and shut out
from the presence of the Lord".
2 Thessalonians 2:9-12 talks about those who refuse to love the truth
being condemned.
Revelation 21:6-8 talks about the difference between those who overcomes
and those who do not. Those who do not, listed in verse 8, will be in
the "fiery lake of burning sulfur".
Revelation 14:9-12 gives the indication that those who follow the beast
"will be tormented with burning sulfur" and there being "no rest day or
night" for them because of it.
Psalm 9:17: "The wicked return to the grave, all the nations that
forget God."
I think those should be sufficient to prove the point.
Joe Fisher
[In the following I'm mostly playing "devil's advocate". I'm not
advocating either position. My concern is that people understand that
it's possible to see these passages in different ways. It's possible
to see eternal destruction as just that -- destruction. Rev often
uses the term "second death". The most obvious understanding of that
would seem to be final extinction. The problem is that the NT speaks
both of eternal punishment and of second death. I.e. it uses terms
that can be understood either way. My concern here is not to convince
you of one view or the other, but to help people understand that
there's a wide enough variety of images that it's possible to
understand them either way. As Tom Albrecht commented, the primary
point is to do our best to keep people out of the eternal fire,
whatever the details. (To make things more interesting, Luke 20:35
implies that the damned don't get resurrected at all. Presumably
they just stay dead. -- yes I'm aware that it's possible to
understand this passage in a non-literal way.)
2 Peter 2:4-ff is talking about angels, and talks about holding them
in hell until the final judgement. This isn't eternal punishement.
Matthew 25:31-46 talks about sending the cursed into eternal fire
prepared for the devil and his angels. The fact that the fire is
eternal doesn't mean that people will last in its flames forever.
Particularly interesting is the comment about the fire having been
prepared for the devil and his angels. Rev 20 and 21 talk about the
eternal fire as well. They say that the beast and the false prophet
will be tormented forever in it. When talking about people being
thrown into it (20:13-14), it is referred to as "the second death".
This sounds more like extinction than eternal torment. Is is possible
that the fire has different effects on supernatural entities such as
the devil, and humans?
2 Thessalonians 1:6-10 similarly, what is "everlasting destruction"?
This is not necessarily eternal torment. This one can clearly be
understood either way, but I think it's at least possible to think
that everlasting is being used to contrast the kind of destruction
that can occur in this life with the final destruction that occurs in
eternity.
2 Thessalonians 2:8 again talks about destruction.
Revelation 21:6-8: see comment above
Revelation 14:9-12 is probably the best of the quotes. Even there,
it doesn't explicitly say that the people suffer forever. It says
that the smoke (and presumably the fire) is eternal, and that
there is no respite from it. But it doesn't say that the people
are tormented forever.
Psalm 9:17: I don't see that it says anything relevant to this issue. | 0 | trimmed_train |
4,211 |
It's normal for the BMW K bikes to use a little oil in the first few thousand
miles. I don't know why. I've had three new K bikes, and all three used a
bit of oil when new - max maybe .4 quart in first 1000 miles; this soon quits
and by the time I had 10,000 miles on them the oil consumption was about zero.
I've been told that the harder you run the bike (within reason) the sooner
it stops using any oil.
| 12 | trimmed_train |
2,096 |
Since running any GUI over a network is going to slow it down by a
fair amount, I expect Windows NT will be multiuser only in the sense
of sharing filesystems. Someone will likely write a telnetd for it so
one could run character-based apps, but graphics-based apps will have
to be shared by running the executables on the local CPU. This is how
things are shaping up everywhere: client-server architectures are
taking over from the old cpu-terminal setups.
Note that the NeXT does this: you can always telnet into a NeXT and
run character-based apps but you can't run the GUI. (Yeah, I know
about X-Windows, just haven't been too impressed by it...)..
-- | 18 | trimmed_train |
5,480 | Here are some ideas for those of you who want to oppose the White
House Clipper chip crypto initiative. I think this is going to be a
tough measure to fight, since the Government has invested a lot of
resources in developing this high-profile initiative. They are
serious about it now. It won't be as easy as it was defeating Senate
Bill 266 in 1991.
Possible actions to take in response:
1) Mobilize your friends to to all the things on this list, and
more.
2) Work the Press. Talk with your local newspaper's science and
technology reporter. Write to your favorite trade rags. Better yet,
write some articles yourself for your favorite magazines or
newspapers. Explain why the Clipper chip initiative is a bad idea.
Remember to tailor it to your audience. The general public may be
slow to grasp why it's a bad idea, since it seems so technical and
arcane and innocent sounding. Try not to come across as a flaming
libertarian paranoid extremist, even if you are one.
3) Lobby Congress. Write letters and make phone calls to your
Member of Congress in your own district, as well as your two US
Senators. Many Members of Congress have aides that advise them of
technology issues. Talk to those aides.
4) Involve your local political parties. The Libertarian party
would certainly be interested. There are also libertarian wings of
the Democrat and Republican parties. The right to privacy has a
surprisingly broad appeal, spanning all parts of the political
spectrum. We have many natural allies. The ACLU. The NRA. Other
activist groups that may someday find themselves facing a government
that can suppress them much more efficiently if these trends play
themselves out. But you must articulate our arguments well if you
want to draw in people who are not familiar with these issues.
4) Contribute money to the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and
Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR), assuming
these groups will fight this initiative. They need money for legal
expenses and lobbying.
5) Mobilize opposition in industry. Companies that will presumably
develop products that will incorporate the Clipper chip should be
lobbied against it, from within and from without. If you work for a
telecommunications equipment vendor, first enlist the aid of your
coworkers and fellow engineers against this initiative, and then
present your company's management with a united front of engineering
talent against this initiative. Write persuasive memos to your
management, with your name and your colleagues' names on it. Hold
meetings on it.
6) Publicize, deploy and entrench as much guerrilla
techno-monkeywrenching apparatus as you can. That means PGP,
anonymous mail forwarding systems based on PGP, PGP key servers,
etc. The widespread availability of this kind of technology might
also be used as an argument that it can't be effectively suppressed
by Government action. I will also be working to develop new useful
tools for these purposes.
7) Be prepared to engage in an impending public policy debate on
this topic. We don't know yet how tough this fight will be, so we
may have to compromise to get most of what we want. If we can't
outright defeat it, we may have to live with a modified version of
this Clipper chip plan in the end. So we'd better be prepared to
analyze the Government's plan, and articulate how we want it
modified.
| 7 | trimmed_train |
6,995 | From article <[email protected]>, by [email protected] (Hossien Amehdi):
Tell me then, would you also fight the Syrians in Lebanon?
Oh, no of course not. They would be your brothers and you would
tell that you invited them. | 6 | trimmed_train |
10,376 |
Only my common sense. The fire was caused by either Koresh and his
followers or by the FBI/ATF/CIA/KGB/and maybe the Harper Valley PTA. Since
you are throwing around the evidence arguement, I'll throw it back. Can
you prove any government agency did it? (Please don't resort to "they
covered it up so that proves they did it" or any wild theories about how
the government agencies intentionally started the fire. The key words
are proof and evidence.)
proves they did it"
Please explain how Koresh was defending himself from those children who
burned.
| 15 | trimmed_train |
2,181 | Avoiding mistakes is certainly highly desirable. However it is also
widely acknowledged that perfectionism is inimicable to creativity.
And in ordinary life, perfectionism carried beyond a certain point is
indicative of a psychological disorder. In the extreme case, a
perfectionist becomes so paralyzed by all the possible mistakes he might
make that he is unable to even leave the house.
In science, we want to discover as much truth about the world as possible
and we also want to have as much certainty as possible about these
discoveries. Usually there is some trade-off between these two desiderata
--- the search for scope and the search for certainty.
If 18th century mathematicians had demanded total rigor from Newton and
Leibniz then there would probably be no calculus today, because neither
of the two could explain calculus in a way that really made sense, since
they lacked the concept of a limit. And in fact, because of the lack of
a rigorous foundation, they made a number of errors in their use of calculus.
It was only a hundred years later that Weistrass was able to give a solid
grounding for the ideas of Newton and Leibniz. Nonetheless, what Newton
and Leibniz did was undoubtedly science and mathematics gained a great
deal more from the application of their important ideas than it lost
through the mistakes they made.
These are not the rules according to many who post to sci.med and
sci.psychology. According to these posters "If it's not supported by
carefully designed controlled studies then it's not science."
Taken to the extreme, I believe that the attitude that empirical studies
are everything and ideas are nothing results in a complete stultification
of science.
For one thing, an insistence on an elaborate and expensive methodology
results in a sort of scientific trade-unionism, where those outside
the establishment and lacking institutional or corporate support have
no chance to obtain a hearing. (I don't in the least believe that this
is the intention of the arbiters of scientific methodology. Nonetheless,
it is one of the results.) And although institutional science has
certainly produced many wonderful results, I think it is a foolish
arrogance for scientists to believe that no one outside the establishment
--- and using less than perfect empirical methodology --- will ever come
with anything worthwhile.
Furthermore, the big bucks approach to science promotes what I think is
one of the most significant errors in science: choosing to investigate
questions because they can be readily handled by the currently
fashionable methodology (or because one can readily get institutional
or corporate sponsorship for them) instead of directing attention to
those questions which seem to have fundamental significance.
For instance, certain questions cannot be easily investigated with
statistical methods because the relevant factors are not quantitative.
(One could argue that this is the case for almost all questions in many
areas of psychology. In my opinion, a perusal of many of the papers
resulting from the attempt by psychologists to force these questions
into a statistical framework gives the lie to Russell Turpin's
assertion that current scientific methods "avoid all known errors.")
I think that asking the wrong question is probably the most fundamental
error in science. (Ignoring potentially valuable ideas is one of the
others.) And I think that scientific journals are full of all
too many studies done with impeccable empirical methods but which are
worthless because the wrong question was asked in the first place.
--
In the arguments between behaviorists and cognitivists, psychology seems
less like a science than a collection of competing religious sects. | 19 | trimmed_train |
10,601 | How many runs will be scored in Denver?
I don't know.
but some idea can be gotten by looking at the runs scored in
Mile High Stadium during the last few years of the Bears/Zephyrs
tenure in the American Association.
Here's the total runs scored per game in Zephyrs games,
all league games and the ratio. I found the same ratios for HR.
Year rpg lea ratio hrpg lea ratio
1992 10.22 9.10 1.12 1.65 1.58 1.04
1991 9.53 8.87 1.07 1.41 1.26 1.12
1990 10.71 8.72 1.23 1.49 1.24 1.20
1989 9.07 8.34 1.09 1.27 1.11 1.14
1988 9.90 8.37 1.18 1.29 1.08 1.19
1987 12.55 10.70 1.17 2.39 1.92 1.24
1986 9.45 9.33 1.01 1.35 1.38 .98
1985 9.50 8.54 1.11 1.53 1.34 1.14
1984 9.99 9.10 1.10 1.55 1.59 .97
1983 10.60 9.99 1.06 2.03 1.74 1.17
1982 11.29 10.35 1.09 2.24 1.91 1.17
1981 10.29 9.25 1.11 1.43 1.49 .96
1980 10.59 9.43 1.12 1.63 1.46 1.12
1446/13-->1.11 1444/13-->1.11
It seems pretty clear that Denver will have a large effect
on runs scored (I'll stick with my prediction from last year
that it'll be one of the top 3 in the NL this year)
and a fairly large effect on Homeruns - though apparently not as large as
Atlanta, Wrigley, Cincinnati and San Diego.
Still it ought to be a pretty decent home run park. | 2 | trimmed_train |
2,033 | A few days ago I posted a question about trying to call a function which set
up an X app multiple times. It was pointed out that XtAppInitialize() should
never be called more than once. This helped. However, I am still having
some problems. Below is a new little test program that more closely models
my real program. In the actual program, I am writing a library, callable
from any other program. This means that the first time the lib function is
called, it must initialize things, and after that, it should just use the
old stuff (still around because of static variables). In the demo below,
main() represents the main program calling my library and doit() represents
the interface to the library function.
#include <X11/Xlib.h>
#include <Xm/Xm.h>
#include <Xm/PushB.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
void bla(XtAppContext app, Widget top)
{
Widget topone = top; // in real prog, these are member vars
XtAppContext theapp = app; // of a class
int junk = 0;
Display *dis = XtOpenDisplay(theapp, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, 0, &junk,
NULL);
Widget box = XtVaCreateManagedWidget("blaaa", xmPushButtonWidgetClass,
topone,
XmNheight, 50,
XmNwidth, 50,
NULL);
XtRealizeWidget(topone);
for (int i=0;i<=25;i++) // real prog returns when "Exit" button clicked
{
XEvent event;
XtAppNextEvent(theapp, &event);
XtDispatchEvent(&event);
}
XtDestroyWidget(box);
XtCloseDisplay(dis);
}
// SetItUp - should be called once only
void SetItUp(XtAppContext *app, Widget *top)
{
int junk = 0;
(*top)=XtAppInitialize (app, "test", NULL, 0, &junk, NULL,
NULL, NULL, 0);
}
// doit - some library function callable from the outside
void doit()
{
static XtAppContext app; // use these every time called
static Widget top;
static int setup = 0;
if (!setup)
{
SetItUp(&app, &top);
setup = 1;
}
bla(app, top);
}
// main - program which links to my library
main()
{
for (int i=0;i<=20;i++)
{
doit();
printf("sleeping...\n");//widget still on screen at this point
sleep(5);
}
}
The problem is that the widget does not go away until the new one is created.
(It is still on the screen -- unusuable -- during the "sleep" in the main prog,
despite the XtDestroyWidget call).
Anyone see something I'm missing?
Thanks very much.
(Please respond via email)
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
David Rex Wood -- [email protected] -- University of Colorado at Boulder | 16 | trimmed_train |
9,556 |
Xenophobic trash deleted.
If you're going to go to those extremes, I guess you'd better start
packing. Because unless you're a Native North American, this isn't
your continent either. | 17 | trimmed_train |
4,547 | } >>
} >>>Has Jack lost a bit of his edge? What is the worst start Jack Morris has had?
} >>
} >>Uh, Jack lost his edge about 5 years ago, and has had only one above
} >>average year in the last 5.
} >
} >Again goes to prove that it is better to be good than lucky. You can
} >count on good tomorrow. Lucky seems to be prone to bad starts (and a
} >bad finish last year :-).
} >
} >(Yes, I am enjoying every last run he gives up. Who was it who said
} >Morris was a better signing than Viola?)
}
} Hey Valentine, I don't see Boston with any world series rings on their
} fingers.
oooooo. cheap shot. :^)
} Damn, Morris now has three and probably the Hall of Fame in his
} future.
who cares? he had two of them before he came to Toronto; and if the
Jays had signed Viola instead of Morris, it would have been Frank who
won 20 and got the ring. and he would be on his way to 20 this year, too.
} Therefore, I would have to say Toronto easily made the best
} signing.
your logic is curious, and spurious.
there is no reason to believe that Viola wouldn't have won as many games
had *he* signed with Toronto. when you compare their stupid W-L records,
be sure to compare their team's offensive averages too.
now, looking at anything like the Morris-Viola sweepstakes a year later
is basically hindsight. but there were plenty of reasons why it
should have been apparent that Viola was the better pitcher, based
on previous recent years and also based on age (Frank is almost 5
years younger! how many knew that?). people got caught up in the '91
World Series, and then on Morris' 21 wins last year. wins are the stupidest,
most misleading statistic in baseball, far worse than RBI or R. that he
won 21 just means that the Jays got him a lot of runs.
the only really valid retort to Valentine is: weren't the Red Sox trying
to get Morris too? oh, sure, they *said* Viola was their first choice
afterwards, but what should we have expected they would say?
} And don't tell me Boston will win this year. They won't
} even be in the top 4 in the division, more like 6th.
if this is true, it won't be for lack of contribution by Viola, so who cares? | 2 | trimmed_train |