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Answers, answers, answers. I have too many answers. All for the same questions. If it were one per question, I could cope. But no... doesn't seem to work like that. Alas.
VIEW 12 of 12 COMMENTS
adelina:
Sigh. Your post was disheartening. To be over-educated yet by the same token supposedly "under-qualified" for employment is the maniacal absurdity that just kills kills KILLS me.
tiffanyjewel:
i HAD a girl cats but they never bothered her. I assumed it was because they were fixed, now I know otherwise smile
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Questions... questions... questions. I have too many questions.

I have lots of answers, too... the problem is I don't know which answers go with which questions.

On the plus side, Linux kernel 2.6.3 seems to be working well (provided I disable the APIC on my NForce2 motherboard). I guess that's some kind of answer. Not the one I was hoping for, though... I want the...
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VIEW 3 of 3 COMMENTS
beledi:
it's like a giant matching game.

never leave home without your towel.
alienprincess:
Of course I'm envious of your new linux kernal! I like your bird avatar.
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I'm in the middle of configuring the latest Linux kernel (2.6.3) for my laptop. Aren't you envious?

C'mon, admit it... you're envious.
VIEW 9 of 9 COMMENTS
zarina:
hahaha... we'll see
galvagin:
Now that I've totally dropped the ball on our conversation...

I'm not sure what kind of evidence you want for the idea that language (e.g.) is a shared phenomenon. You're right - if the point of language is to get you to have the same inner experiences that I'm having, there's no *proof* that we can accomplish that. That's not what I meant. What I mean is that we all get together and manipulate symbols with each other in various interesting ways - and that, unless there simply is no external world, is obviously shared and raises no *special* problems of mentalism.

As far as general skepticism goes... there are a few elements to my anti-skeptical position:

1. Of course we have *evidence* of the external world's existence! I see things, touch them, eat them, encounter them in various ways. All of these seem like good evidence of their existence. Of course, also, I might be wrong - but that just means that I maybe can't 100% deductively prove that these things are out there, it doesn't mean that I don't have good evidence for them.

2. But: foundationalism is a suspect epistemological doctrine, anyway. Most general skepticism is founded on a kind of foundationalism that basically says that, if you are warranted in believing something, you need to be able to trace that belief back (found it upon) some 100% provable indubitable claim, or a claim that we know indubitably and non-inferentially, without needing any background knowledge (basically, Descartes' view). This runs us into a problem Sellars called 'the myth of the given,' however. Not everything is going to be traceable back to deductively provable claims (e.g., pure mathematics). So we're going to need something like indubitable non-inferential observation claims to found any knowledge whatsoever. But any conceptualized claim can't be completely independent of inferentially articulated background knowledge (I can't look at an apple and say, "oh, that's red" without knowing a lot of stuff about how to use 'red'), and an unconceptualized claim can't function in an inference (going from "the apple is red" to the "the apple is colored" is a good inference, but going from *look at apple* to "the apple is colored" simply isn't an inference at all). So it's not just that we may not have any of the requisite sorts of observations, they don't seem to be in-principle possible. That would seem to indicate that the problem isn't that we're missing something, but that we've misconceived how evidence is supposed to work.

3. What to replace it with? Contextualism. Unmotivated doubt is pathological. If I have decent evidence for something, I should only doubt it (beyond bare fallibilism, saying "I could, of course, be wrong") if I have some *reason* to. I have no reason to doubt that I am sitting in front of my computer right now. If I were to learn that I'd just been dosed with LSD, I would then have reason to doubt it, and would be justified in seeking further evidence, not taking the computer's existence for granted, etc. Similarly, this is why skepticism has trouble keeping most people up nights. We should accept bare fallibilism with respect to the external world, but most wholesale skeptical scenarios are implausible - that is, if the competing hypotheses for explaining why things seem the way the are are a) for the most part, they are the way they seem or b) an omnipotent demon is controlling my perceptions, a) wins. It's just good sense to believe the more likely explanation, or the one that fits better with your background theory.

That was horribly compressed. I hope it made some degree of sense...
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VIEW 4 of 4 COMMENTS
nopantsdave:
I do love philosophy, I just don't know if I love academia. I know I want to concentrate in Ancient Philosophy, but I don't have any clue about what I would do for a thesis.

I graduated in December, I was planning on getting into to Grad school starting in January '05 or August '05. My problem is, I haven't taken a philosophy class in a few years because I loaded up on them early and filled my major out when I was still a junior. Then I took some time off before finishing up undergrad. Unfortunately, this means that some of my teachers have moved on to other schools and I doubt the ones that are still there would remember me well enough to write a letter of recommendation for one. So, I don't know if I will even have any letters of recommendation and I need three of them. I am hoping maybe I can slip in on probationary status or something, I can't imagine I am the only one who faces a problem like this.
aster:
i took this one!

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Currently reading: "Beyond the Post-Modern Mind", by Huston Smith

His intent is pretty clear from the title: how to rescue philosophy (and human thought generally) from the relativism and lack of meaning that is postmodernism. He suggests that our current non-worldview is merely a transitional stage to a new, better way of looking at the world. I'm only a little way in, but I have...
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VIEW 9 of 9 COMMENTS
beledi:
mmmm...salmon. the BEST meal i had when i was on Vancouver Island last summer was this absolutely amazing wild salmon BBQ that was held at the Leading Edge conference. i still salivate when i think of wild salmon grilled with a little lemon on top. *drool*
pihka:
Love your userpic. smile
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Memo to self: Do not drink and post. The reputation you save may be your own.
VIEW 3 of 3 COMMENTS
juliana:
Addendum to Note to Zork:

Posting profile pics often serve to portray pic poster in a flattering manner.

... in the new pic, you look like you gained a little weight.

... and my, those legs!

p.s. i'm in a weird mood today.
beledi:
nice pic wink

when i was in Victoria this summer a glaucous-winged gull decided to visit the balcony of the hotel i was staying at. he came back multiple times to beg bread from me. then he bit my finger. boo. biggrin
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One of my all-time favourite quotes:

"I believe I know the only cure, which is to make one's centre of life inside of one's self, not selfishly or excludingly, but with a kind of unassailable serenity -- to decorate one's inner house so richly that one is content there, glad to welcome any one who wants to come and stay, but happy all the same...
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galvagin:
Hey, Righteous Endeavor is a good Puritan name!

We *are* serious about Ruth Lysistrata (the first name after a grandmother and the SC Justice). At least we're not thinking of saddling a kid with Lysistrata as a first name. She can be hipster and go by "Liz, spelled L-Y-S."

Sorry, can't be any help on the Wharton ref.
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I'm becoming overwhelmed by stuff. I have too much stuff, and I don't know where it all came from. It's becoming a burden.

I admit I'm responsible for some of it. I convince myself that I really need that PCMCIA-to-USB bridge, that life will not be complete without the portable MP3 player, and that dignity demands a combination printer/scanner/photocopier. Books cause trouble. They cry...
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VIEW 16 of 16 COMMENTS
malloreigh:
humans aren't meant to share.
alienprincess:
totally I think the lack of music is super-freeing- It adds a lot of the sort of zen, enptiness factor, which I think leaves space for creation...

I suck at dances where you have to be in time with the rhythem, even in capoeirsa you're only loosly going with the music.
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I've tried a few different kinds of tea recently: Keemun, Assam, Darjeeling, Iron Goddess of Mercy... and liked them all. I didn't like them all equally, but I liked them. So far so good. (I didn't like Earl Gray, but I figured that was the bergamot oil, not the tea.)

But I began to worry. What if I like all teas? Do I have...
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VIEW 11 of 11 COMMENTS
knecht:
If you want to try a tea that'll knock your socks off, try Shou Mei. It's a Chinese white tea that has a very subtle flavor. What kind of tea is the Iron Goddess of Mercy?

Where do you buy your tea? I can only find loose leaf tea in chinatown here in Boston. frown
beledi:
damn you and your pleasant island weather

i am envious. tongue
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"The beautiful is as useful as the useful. More so, perhaps."

- Victor Hugo, Les Miserables
VIEW 9 of 9 COMMENTS
galvagin:
Yep, and thanks. I like the quote, by the by.
dango:
So where can I catch some big salmon in Canada? I live in Alaska and about the only salmonid research ive done is different ways to cook them. I'll be that way in April through June. Maybe I could learn more about Salmon. Take care. Laters.