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Erik Naggum  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 6:33 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.no>
Date: 01 Sep 2002 22:33:12 +0000
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 6:33 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?
* "Coby Beck" <cb...@mercury.bc.ca>
| If I did I would.

  Then do you not voice your supprot for his current behavior by attacking
  those who criticize it.  Or do it by mail so you do not aggravate people by
  criticizing the critics just because you feel holier than everybody else.

| I do not understand people who are so eager to call others idiots and
| incompetents.

  Yes, you do, you only choose to do so on different occasions.  You go out of
  your way to accuse those who do something you do not like of ill will and
  hostility when nonesuch exists and you exacerbate every conflict situation
  by attacking those who defend something, making it impossible to establish
  better relations and to send the proper signals to the troublemakers, on
  whose side you have consistently placed yourself because you hate people who
  call others idiots and incompetents so much that you just have to speak up
  and make even more trouble.

| Actually, I do understand it, I just think it is an extremely negative part
| of human nature rooted in weakness and cruelty.

  Yet you prefer to engage in exactly the same tactics against those you think
  deserve it over doing something constructive.  If you do not understand
  this, you are an even less palatable hypocrite than I already think you are.

| It is that part I detest so much in the academic world, the glee people take
| in belittling and humiliating others and the false comfort and pride they
| take in being accepted and praised by their community.

  Ah.  You are the Revenger against ills that do not exist but which arise out
  of your hypersensitivity towards past suffering.  Your detesting something
  does not make it come into being.  People who are emotionally screwed-up
  tend to see threats and dangers that are not there because they are reminded
  of what happened to them in the past and react to their memories, not to the
  reality in which they actually live.  It seems that you are reminded of what
  you detest so much every time someone speaks up against the /real/ idiots in
  the world because some /non-idiots/ were unfairly harrassed in your past, and
  my guess is that that person was yourself.  So instead of just letting people
  speak up against the obnoxious idiots, you sit on your hands until someone
  speaks up and then you attack that person, instead, making the idiots more
  welcome and destructive because they have a "supporter" of their cause.

  Please realize that just because /you/ feel better after elevating yourself
  above those who criticize others, you have not actually improved anything by
  criticizing them in worse manners.  Your desire to tell people how bad they
  are reflect on your own personality more than anything else.  Other people
  criticize people for what they /do/ and /stop/ when the actions improve, but
  you choose to impute ill will and evil intentions to people on a scale that
  is truly evil because you harbor ill will against people long after you were
  offended based on your /own/ moralistic view of /them/ beyond what you think
  they have done.  You make the evil mistake of thinking you can do any harm
  you want to others because of your impression of them.  Lynch mobs had that
  same warped ethics that anything goes as long as you are insanely furious
  enough about something.  And you see your evil in others when they simply
  criticize others for actions that are /actually/ bad.  Your own reprehensible
  character speaks up against an evil that you should seek to correct primarily
  in yourself and keep out of public view.

| Putting other people down is never about anything accept trying to elevate
| your own self image.

  Your rebellion against this entails putting other people down.  You are very
  obviously on a mission to elevate your self-image when you detest ills that
  you impute to others and speak up to criticize what is not actually there.

| Well, that is off on a bit of a tangent, sorry (and kind of preachy, looking
| back over it) but it is true, so I will leave it as is.

  Your lack of insight is alarming.  You do not see the similiarity of yourself
  to that which you detest.  You have even become what you detest in others
  when you work so hard to put others down for what you believe is putting
  down, but which is far more honest and less sinister on the part of those
  /you/ unfairly blame for evils they have not committed.  A mere irritation
  with the presistency of obnoxious lunatics you interpret as an academic
  put-down intended to elevate the critic.

  You clearly have issues, my hypercritical friend, but this is not the forum
  to act on them, or even discuss them.

| I think dialogue with ilias could have been salvaged with a few less people
| so eager to be rude about it.

  Then engage in that instead of your standard preaching against those who
  speak up against the things /they/ do not like when you do that yourself for
  thing /you/ do not like.  Do what you think is right if you desire to speak
  up against those who do something you think needs to be criticized.  This
  becomes more and more important the more you criticize criticism over
  actions.  You attempt, in effect, to curb people's ability to criticize what
  they do not like while you reserve that right to yourself.  This is a symptom
  of a troubled soul.  Please bother someone else someplace else.  That same
  advice goes to the target of the criticism you scolded.  You two have more
  in common than you like in that regard, too.

--
Erik Naggum, Oslo, Norway

Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder.
Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder.


 
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Erik Naggum  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 6:34 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.no>
Date: 01 Sep 2002 22:34:02 +0000
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 6:34 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?
* "Coby Beck" <cb...@mercury.bc.ca>
| You may well be right (but obviously, I tend to disagree.)  I believe that
| more often than not, our enemies are the creation of our own actions.

  Then take this wisdom and use it to create fewer enemies.

--
Erik Naggum, Oslo, Norway

Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder.
Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder.


 
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Erik Naggum  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 6:37 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.no>
Date: 01 Sep 2002 22:37:30 +0000
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 6:37 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?
* Takehiko Abe
| How do you know somebody is hating you if you do not know him?

  To know somebody has two different meanings.  If you said you hated me in
  this newsgroup, would I thereby know you?  Hardly.  The people who have come
  out of nowhere to express hatred and anger think they know me, however, in
  the sense that they spout an enormous amount of drivel that they /invented/
  about me based on what they think they saw.  Clearly, these people are quite
  insane, but what does it mean to /know/ somebody except that you think that
  what you have concluded about them is true?

--
Erik Naggum, Oslo, Norway

Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder.
Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder.


 
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Coby Beck  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 6:42 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: "Coby Beck" <cb...@mercury.bc.ca>
Date: Mon, 2 Sep 2002 08:43:11 +1000
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 6:43 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?

"Paul F. Dietz" <di...@dls.net> wrote in message
news:3D727441.761DC4B4@dls.net...

> ilias wrote:

> > i'm talking about _{_ and _}_, which is conformant.

> > you are talking about _{_ and *)*, which is irrelevant to me.

> Coby, have you changed your opinion on this person yet?

No, but that probably does not mean quite what you think it means ;)

I marvel at Joe's patience, though... (and Tim's too, even if he finally
lost it)

--
Coby Beck
(remove #\Space "coby 101 @ bigpond . com")


 
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Coby Beck  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 6:54 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: "Coby Beck" <cb...@mercury.bc.ca>
Date: Mon, 2 Sep 2002 08:55:23 +1000
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 6:55 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?

"Marc Spitzer" <m...@oscar.eng.cv.net> wrote in message

news:slrnan33s4.21b.marc@oscar.eng.cv.net...

Though they do exist, situations where doing "The Right Thing" unavoidably
creates enemies are uncommon.  But the short answer to your question is no.

> It is impossable to go through life with out making enemies.  You may
> make them for the best or worst reasons, but you will make them.

This is true.  But is it always necessary to engage them?  This gets a
little away from the issue of stubborn newbies and insulted, angry experts.
I would hope few people elevate ilias to the stature "Enemy of lisp"

--
Coby Beck
(remove #\Space "coby 101 @ bigpond . com")


 
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Erik Naggum  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 7:07 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.no>
Date: 01 Sep 2002 23:07:54 +0000
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 7:07 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?
* "Coby Beck" <cb...@mercury.bc.ca>
| This is true.  But is it always necessary to engage them?

  You seem to have a knack for engaging the critics.  Why is that?  Would they
  not, according to your own standards, be likely to be /less/ hostile if they
  did not always have someone like you come up and brand them as immoral and
  evil and whatnot when they lose their patience after spending a lot of time
  trying to help someone?  Have you no empathy for those who find that their
  goodwill is abused by these morons, only for the morons who so abuse it when
  they are criticized for it?  Perhaps you create more morons by defending them?

--
Erik Naggum, Oslo, Norway

Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder.
Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder.


 
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Paul F. Dietz  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 7:10 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: "Paul F. Dietz" <di...@dls.net>
Date: Sun, 01 Sep 2002 23:10:33 GMT
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 7:10 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?

Coby Beck wrote:
> No, but that probably does not mean quite what you think it means ;)

Ah, ok. :)

        Paul


 
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ilias  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 7:16 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: ilias <at_n...@pontos.net>
Date: Mon, 02 Sep 2002 02:23:39 +0300
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 7:23 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?
could you please stop to post off-topic?

thank you!


 
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Discussion subject changed to "LISP - an excercise for experts? - Part II" by ilias
ilias  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 7:33 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: ilias <at_n...@pontos.net>
Date: Mon, 02 Sep 2002 02:39:53 +0300
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 7:39 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts? - Part II

i'm not a good target for your 'knowledge-games'.

i simply don't have many knowledge.

you have to find another target for playing your intelectual 'trivial
pursuit'.

except you enjoy to play with the 'weak'.

if so, i'm happy to be your private 'show-your-knowledge-clown'.


 
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Discussion subject changed to "LISP - an excercise for experts?" by c hore
c hore  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 7:43 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: carh...@yahoo.com (c hore)
Date: 1 Sep 2002 16:43:55 -0700
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 7:43 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?

Coby Beck wrote:
> I do not understand
> people who are so eager to call others idiots and incompetents.

> Actually, I do understand it, I just think it is an extremely negative part
> of human nature rooted in weakness and cruelty.  It is that part I detest so
> much in the academic world, the glee people take in belittling and
> humiliating others and the false comfort and pride they take in being
> accepted and praised by their community.  Putting other people down is never
> about anything accept trying to elevate your own self image.

Does the academic world have a lock on this.  Is this not true
in general, such as in professional and political world.

Or is it really more acute in the academic world, because
of the measures of success in that world.  In non-academic
world, the measures are amount of money, or service rendered,
or economic or political power.  In academic world, at least
for the masses of the practitioners, it is...amount of
peer recognition, in particular, of one's smartness?  If so,
how can you blame the practitioners entirely; the system
practically dictates the individual behavior, does it not.
And it has been like this throughout the ages, has it not.


 
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Coby Beck  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 8:06 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: "Coby Beck" <cb...@mercury.bc.ca>
Date: Mon, 2 Sep 2002 10:07:13 +1000
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 8:07 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?

"Erik Naggum" <e...@naggum.no> wrote in message

news:3239908392638920@naggum.no...

> * "Coby Beck" <cb...@mercury.bc.ca>
> | If I did I would.

>   Then do you not voice your supprot for his current behavior by attacking
>   those who criticize it.

I didn't.  If you read what I wrote a little more carefully I'm sure you
will see that.  I did not voice support for his behaviour, I did not attack
anyone, I did not respond to a criticism of his behaviour.

> Or do it by mail so you do not aggravate people by
>   criticizing the critics just because you feel holier than everybody

else.

If you were sincere about this advice, why did you not follow it yourself
and reply to me via email?  (I don't say you should have, but it follows
from your argument to me)

There is nothing in the above paragraph I can even begin to debate about.
My only answer is "No, you are wrong on every point"  Again, you will have
to show me things I have written that have given you this impression so I
can correct your misunderstandings or apologise for what I have said.  On a
strictly logical point, your assertions have no connection to the sentence
you have quoted.

> | Actually, I do understand it, I just think it is an extremely negative
part
> | of human nature rooted in weakness and cruelty.

>   Yet you prefer to engage in exactly the same tactics against those you
think
>   deserve it over doing something constructive.

You are completely incorrect in this assertion, it is however not likely to
be productive discussing it.

> | It is that part I detest so much in the academic world, the glee people
take
> | in belittling and humiliating others and the false comfort and pride
they
> | take in being accepted and praised by their community.

>   Ah.  You are the Revenger against ills that do not exist but which arise
out
>   of your hypersensitivity towards past suffering.  Your detesting
something
>   does not make it come into being.

Nor does your denying it keep it from existing.  Why don't you simply make a
point, such as "I do not believe this is a problem in the academic world"
instead of all this fabrication of what I am thinking and why?  It would
make it possible to have a discussion with you.

>  People who are emotionally screwed-up
>   tend to see threats and dangers that are not there because they are
reminded
>   of what happened to them in the past and react to their memories, not to
the
>   reality in which they actually live.  It seems that you are reminded of
what
>   you detest so much every time someone speaks up against the /real/
idiots in
>   the world because some /non-idiots/ were unfairly harrassed in your
past, and
>   my guess is that that person was yourself.

[snip]

Sorry, incorrect.  As the rest of your long speculations follow from this
premise, I will not bother to respond to it directly.

> | I think dialogue with ilias could have been salvaged with a few less
people
> | so eager to be rude about it.

>   Then engage in that instead of your standard preaching against those who
>   speak up against the things /they/ do not like when you do that yourself
for
>   thing /you/ do not like.

Well, I think this little bit started because I was bothered by Paul's use
of "we" in saying "we have concluded you are an idiot" or something.  I
doubt I would have replied except for that.  Paul did not seem to feel
attacked by me, I don't know why you feel threatened.

>  Do what you think is right if you desire to speak
>   up against those who do something you think needs to be criticized.

I have been "practicing what I am preaching" wrt ilias, so your advice is
unnecessary.

--
Coby Beck
(remove #\Space "coby 101 @ bigpond . com")


 
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Coby Beck  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 8:11 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: "Coby Beck" <cb...@mercury.bc.ca>
Date: Mon, 2 Sep 2002 10:12:40 +1000
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 8:12 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?

"Erik Naggum" <e...@naggum.no> wrote in message

news:3239910474231899@naggum.no...

> * "Coby Beck" <cb...@mercury.bc.ca>
> | This is true.  But is it always necessary to engage them?

>   You seem to have a knack for engaging the critics.  Why is that?  Would
they
>   not, according to your own standards, be likely to be /less/ hostile if
they
>   did not always have someone like you come up and brand them as immoral
and
>   evil and whatnot when they lose their patience after spending a lot of
time
>   trying to help someone?

Do you consider all criticism of personal behaviour to be a branding of
evil?  Is my saying, "I do not think it is right to do that" equivalent to
"you are immoral and evil" in your eyes?

If so, why do you not accept that I take "you are an idiot" as a hostile
statement?

--
Coby Beck
(remove #\Space "coby 101 @ bigpond . com")


 
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Discussion subject changed to "LISP - an excercise for experts? - Part II" by ilias
ilias  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 8:19 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: ilias <at_n...@pontos.net>
Date: Mon, 02 Sep 2002 03:26:37 +0300
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 8:26 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts? - Part II

Joe Marshall wrote:
> "ilias" <at_n...@pontos.net> wrote in message news:3D7276DA.2080104@pontos.net...
>>i think i've found a 2-line-solution for this problem, which works
>>clearer than the above code.

> Please post it.

;;; ------------------------------------------------------------
;;; The Challenge of Nested Macros
;;; ------------------------------------------------------------
(set-syntax-from-char #\[ #\,)
(set-syntax-from-char #\] #\Space)
;;; ------------------------------------------------------------

;;; this enables the following writing-style, which clarifies
;;; optically the level of the macro-variables.
;;;  [s1]  =  ,symbol = evaluate in first pass
;;; [[s2-1] [s2-2] = ,,symbol = evaluate in second pass

(defmacro alias (short long)
   `(defmacro [short] (&rest args)
      `( [ '[long] [@args] ] )))

;;; simple test code:
(alias df defun)

(df alias-test (x y z) (* x y z ) )

(alias-test 2 3 5)

;;; As ] is only whitespace, u can move them around as you like.
;;; this is a little bit dangerous. Keep in mind that:
;;; `( ['[long]] [@args]  ) ==
;;; `( ['[long]  [@args] ]) ==
;;; `( ,',long   ,@args   )
;;;
;;; I imagine the backquote '`' as a gun, which shots over lines
;;; and the 'ball' destroys one level of [].
;;; what happens in the above test-code:
;;; 1st shot:
;;;   (defmacro df (&rest args)
;;;     `(  '[long] [@args]  )))
;;; 2nd shot:
;;;   (defmacro df (&rest args)
;;;     ( defun (x y z) (* x y z) )))
;;;
;;; ------------------------------------------------------------
;;; Tested with  Allegro.
;;; Should run on any conformant CL.
;;; ------------------------------------------------------------
;;; ilias - 2002-09-02 - #V0.1
;;; ------------------------------------------------------------

any questions / corrections?

lets discuss!


 
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ilias  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 8:31 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: ilias <at_n...@pontos.net>
Date: Mon, 02 Sep 2002 03:38:23 +0300
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 8:38 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts? - Part II

aha. i understand now.

is the problem still unsolved?

what do you believe. did he found the proof?


 
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Discussion subject changed to "LISP - an excercise for experts?" by Erik Naggum
Erik Naggum  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 8:54 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.no>
Date: 02 Sep 2002 00:54:33 +0000
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 8:54 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?
* "Coby Beck" <cb...@mercury.bc.ca>
| Do you consider all criticism of personal behaviour to be a branding of
| evil?

  No.  I consider your criticism of those who criticize bad behavior to be
  branding of evil since you make broad, sweeping claims about those you
  criticize.  I fail to see how this could not have been communicated clearly,
  so I take your response to be intentionally deflective.

--
Erik Naggum, Oslo, Norway

Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder.
Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder.


 
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Erik Naggum  
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 More options Sep 1 2002, 9:15 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.no>
Date: 02 Sep 2002 01:14:58 +0000
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 9:14 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?
* Coby Beck
| I didn't.  If you read what I wrote a little more carefully I'm sure you
| will see that.  I did not voice support for his behaviour, I did not attack
| anyone, I did not respond to a criticism of his behaviour.

  Coby, please quit being such a snotty arrogant shithead and start to think.
  Of /course/ I read you carefully.  It is /because/ I read you carefully that
  I respond to you in the first place.  Had I read you less carefully, I would
  have kill-filed you for your immense lack of contributions to this forum and
  you incessant whining about the behavior of critics and never of those who
  misbehave in the first place.

  But let me tell you something you must have missed in your life.  When a
  person is criticized for something, he will interpret any and all /public/
  criticism of his critics as implicit support.  If you do not intend this dual
  function with your criticism, send it by mail.  By making the criticism
  public, you make it clear that you want to distance yourself from the
  criticism, and there is no way you can escape the consequence that you
  thereby support that which is being criticized.  If you think you should be
  able to escape such an obvious consequence, you need to say so up front.
  For instance, you just /had/ to comment negatively on me.  That shows that
  you know how to do it, yet you chose only to criticize the critic.  You have
  done this very often.  There is no way you can possibly hope to escape the
  conclusion that you are on the "victim's" side of the criticism and scold
  only those who want this to be a forum that is valuable to people who are
  not idiots.  That makes you strongly pro-idiot.  If you are not, speak up
  when you see something you do not like other than just criticism of those
  who speak up.

| If you were sincere about this advice, why did you not follow it yourself
| and reply to me via email?  (I don't say you should have, but it follows
| from your argument to me)

  No, it does not.  You would realize this if your main concern was to
  understand and not to throw blame away from yourself.

| Again, you will have to show me things I have written that have given you
| this impression so I can correct your misunderstandings or apologise for
| what I have said.

  How about everything you have ever written to me in this newsgroup?
  You have attacked me most unfairly on so numerous occasions and are so
  unapologetic about your lopsided ethics that I consider you an evil person.
  Your apologies would not help.  You are destructive towards this forum when
  you always criticize those who want the noisy idiots to keep quiet.  You are
  part of the problem.

| Why don't you simply make a point, such as "I do not believe this is a
| problem in the academic world" instead of all this fabrication of what I am
| thinking and why?  It would make it possible to have a discussion with you.

  I am utterly amazed.  It is a problem in the academic world.  This is not
  the academic world.  That you are reminded of a problem in the academic
  world when you see an idiot get criticized is your personal problem and you
  should stop bothering other people with it.  I suggest you seek professional
  help to get over your problems with rejection in academia.  It was immensely
  educational to see you speak of what you actually detest.  It has nothing to
  do with this forum at all.  That you should even bring up what you detest in
  "academia" is very interesting.  It shows that you never got over it and are
  constantly bothered by memories of it.  That you need to distance yourself
  from all /perceived/ instances of inclusion in such criticism explains so
  much about your personality as you have shown it to us here.  Please think
  about what I have written to you instead of dismissing it out of hand.

| Well, I think this little bit started because I was bothered by Paul's use
| of "we" in saying "we have concluded you are an idiot" or something.

  That you think you would be included had you not spoken is pathological.
  That you need to speak in order to distance yourself from others is likewise
  not a sign of a healthy mind.

| I doubt I would have replied except for that.  Paul did not seem to feel
| attacked by me, I don't know why you feel threatened.

  You keep imputing intent to people where you should not.  I wonder why.  I
  do not feel threatened.  I consider you damaging to this forum because you
  always rise to object when somebody makes a serious disturbance and he gets
  criticized for it.  You make things far worse with your incredulous desire
  to speak up just to be excluded from a rhetorical "we".  It looks demented.

  Everybody knows that a rhetorical "we" is not all-inclusive.  Lots of people
  never feel included by rhetorical "wes" and never have to speak up about it.
  I suggest that you become one of those people by getting a better grip on
  what you really object to and get over whatever horrible thing happened to
  you that made you need to make such distance.

| I have been "practicing what I am preaching" wrt ilias, so your advice is
| unnecessary.

  Then you both practice and preach hypocrisy.  I find that fascinating.

--
Erik Naggum, Oslo, Norway

Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder.
Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder.


 
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Coby Beck  
View profile  
 More options Sep 1 2002, 9:21 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: "Coby Beck" <cb...@mercury.bc.ca>
Date: Mon, 2 Sep 2002 11:22:33 +1000
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 9:22 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?

"Erik Naggum" <e...@naggum.no> wrote in message

news:3239916873704228@naggum.no...

> * "Coby Beck" <cb...@mercury.bc.ca>
> | Do you consider all criticism of personal behaviour to be a
> | branding of evil?

>   No.  I consider your criticism of those who criticize bad
>   behavior to be branding of evil since you make broad, sweeping
>   claims about those you criticize.  I fail to see how this
>   could not have been communicated clearly, so I take your response
>   to be intentionally deflective.

It was not.  You have yet to show me anything I have written that supports
your characterization of it.  Out of respect for your own brand of integrity
that you profess and exhibit, I have reviewed what I wrote recently and do
not find any broad sweeping claims about any individuals.  I have made
claims about social phenomena and its relation to individual behaviours and
I stand by them.  Is it the fact that I said (loose-quote "rudeness and
hostility in this intellectual forum is rooted in weakness and cruelty
similar to what is often found in academia") what makes you leap to your
conclusions?  If so, we will probably just have to agree to disagree unless
you can present some points not based on false presumptions about who I am
and what I think.

--
Coby Beck
(remove #\Space "coby 101 @ bigpond . com")


 
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ilias  
View profile  
 More options Sep 1 2002, 10:03 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: ilias <at_n...@pontos.net>
Date: Mon, 02 Sep 2002 05:09:53 +0300
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 10:09 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?
Erik Naggum wrote:

...
>   you incessant whining about the behavior of critics and never of those who
>   misbehave in the first place.
...
>   you always criticize those who want the noisy idiots to keep quiet.  You are
>   part of the problem.
...
>   world when you see an idiot get criticized is your personal problem and you
...
>   Then you both practice and preach hypocrisy.  I find that fascinating.

...

now i understand the bahaviour of 'xah'.

you are a *very* *very* unfriendly person.

fascinating unfriendly !


 
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Discussion subject changed to "LISP - an excercise for experts? - control lost, someone helps please !" by ilias
ilias  
View profile  
 More options Sep 1 2002, 10:20 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: ilias <at_n...@pontos.net>
Date: Mon, 02 Sep 2002 05:26:24 +0300
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 10:26 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts? - control lost, someone helps please !
may someone has detected, that 'Coby Beck' does not protect the 'idiot'
ilias (thats me).

may someone has detected, that the idiot ilias doesn't need 'protection'.

may someone has detected, that 'Coby Beck' tries to 'protect' some
people in the c.l.l.-community from outing themselves as *total*
socially incopetent 'idiots'.

i don't know this unfriendly person 'Erik Naggum', but i know that he
has lost control in what he's writing, as he's lost control over his egoism.

I ask friendly: may someone who knows him drops him an email so he wakes up.

I think that everyone has lost control sometimes somehow. Me too, of course.

P.S.: I write this way, cause i expect that he don't receive my messages.


 
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Discussion subject changed to "LISP - an excercise for experts?" by Craig Brozefsky
Craig Brozefsky  
View profile  
 More options Sep 1 2002, 10:49 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Craig Brozefsky <cr...@red-bean.com>
Date: Mon, 02 Sep 2002 02:48:07 GMT
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 10:48 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?

ilias <at_n...@pontos.net> writes:
> as i said, i 'do my best' to 'assist' the people to out theirselves as
> 'idiots' without sense for their limits.

Some would call this the definition of a troll.

Be wary that in the process of assisting others to out themselves as
idiots you don't assist yourself in the same.

<plonk>

--
Sincerely,
Craig Brozefsky <cr...@red-bean.com>
Free Scheme/Lisp Software  http://www.red-bean.com/~craig


 
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Erik Naggum  
View profile  
 More options Sep 1 2002, 11:36 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.no>
Date: 02 Sep 2002 03:36:28 +0000
Local: Sun, Sep 1 2002 11:36 pm
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?
* Coby Beck
| You have yet to show me anything I have written that supports your
| characterization of it.

  Look, you idiot.  The evidence is right there in front of you -- it is your
  own articles.  You should know what you write and what you do.  Demanding
  that you be shown what you have yourself written so that you can be relieved
  of the pain of revisiting your own writings is just being equally obnoxious
  as the idiots you defend from criticism.

| Out of respect for your own brand of integrity that you profess and exhibit,
| I have reviewed what I wrote recently and do not find any broad sweeping
| claims about any individuals.

  Why am I not surprised.  You have already shown us that you do not
  understand that publicly criticizing a critic is tantamount to defending
  that which is criticized and that everybody else see your actions this way.

| If so, we will probably just have to agree to disagree unless you can present
| some points not based on false presumptions about who I am and what I think.

  Are you finally beginning to learn?  That would be welcome.  Your own need
  to criticize others is based on your false presumptions about them.  That
  you now seem to indicate that you do not like this when it happens to
  yourself could be a good sign -- that you may yet understand /why/ your
  incessant whining about the behavior of critics or your stupid need to
  distance yourself from rhetorical "wes" is unwelcome because of the many
  layers of implicit accusations that are based on /your/ false presumptions.

  From what you write about what you "detest" from academia, which is utterly
  irrelevant here, I finally begin to understand your need to harrass those
  who /you/ see as transgressors without realizing your own role and function
  as an harrassing contributor to the hostile environment that you seem to
  "detest".  Less hostility on /your/ part against the critics would go a long
  way to decrease the /expectation/ that any exhaustion of patience will be
  met with similarly stupid distancing on your part.

  Go through your own "contributions" to this forum, and you, too, will find
  that you spend more time complaining about other people than you do anything
  useful.  Those /you/ criticize have at the very least tried to help those /they/
  criticize before they criticize anyone.  That is not true for you, so you do
  not actually have the same right to criticize anyone.  Losing your patience
  with someone after you have made an effort to understand and to explain is
  tolerable -- it is only human.  Mounting holier-than-thou wars against those
  who lose their patience because you had a bad experience in academia is not
  tolerable -- you should seek help to get over your bad experiences when you
  notice that they influence your actions and your perception negatively.

  But the fact that you refuse to consider anything I tell you is sufficient
  evidence that you are so convinced that you are better than those you
  criticize that there is no hope for you, and that you are a waste of time.

--
Erik Naggum, Oslo, Norway

Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder.
Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder.


 
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Takehiko Abe  
View profile  
 More options Sep 2 2002, 12:03 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: k...@ma.ccom (Takehiko Abe)
Date: Mon, 02 Sep 2002 13:00:43 +0900
Local: Mon, Sep 2 2002 12:00 am
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?

In article <slrnan4gbl.3rs.m...@oscar.eng.cv.net>, Marc Spitzer wrote:
> >> And I think that most of the people who are my enemies have never met
> >> me, they hate me because of the groups I belong to(american for example).

> > How do you know somebody is hating you if you do not know him?
> > Not because the person happens to live in Baghdad I hope.

> Well I was in the army durring durring desert storm, my unit did not
> get deployed though.  And there might be some people who hate the
> American military in Baghdad.

There must be some people in Baghdad who hate US military.
But I think it is wrong to assume that they hate _you_
because the fact that you were in the Army does not mean
you are eq to the American miritary.

> And I am Jewish, so lots of people hate me for that.

They hate you and see you as their enemy without knowing you.

--
This message was not sent to you unsolicited.


 
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Takehiko Abe  
View profile  
 More options Sep 2 2002, 12:03 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: k...@ma.ccom (Takehiko Abe)
Date: Mon, 02 Sep 2002 13:01:07 +0900
Local: Mon, Sep 2 2002 12:01 am
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?

In article <3239908650289...@naggum.no>, Erik Naggum wrote:
>   but what does it mean to /know/ somebody except that you think that
>   what you have concluded about them is true?

That whatever I have concluded about somebody might not be true makes
it dangerous to assume somebody is my enemy. This is more so, the less
I know about them.

--
This message was not sent to you unsolicited.


 
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ilias  
View profile  
 More options Sep 2 2002, 12:26 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: ilias <at_n...@pontos.net>
Date: Mon, 02 Sep 2002 07:33:13 +0300
Local: Mon, Sep 2 2002 12:33 am
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?
may someone has detected, that 'Coby Beck' does not protect the 'idiot'
ilias (thats me).

may someone has detected, that the idiot ilias doesn't need 'protection'.

may someone has detected, that 'Coby Beck' tries to 'protect' some
people in the c.l.l.-community from outing themselves as *total*
socially incopetent 'idiots'.

i don't know this unfriendly person 'Erik Naggum', but i know that he
has lost control in what he's writing, as he's lost control over his egoism.

I ask friendly: may someone who knows him drops him an email so he wakes up.

I think that everyone has lost control sometimes somehow. Me too, of course.

P.S.: I write this way, cause i expect that he don't receive my messages.


 
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ilias  
View profile  
 More options Sep 2 2002, 12:32 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: ilias <at_n...@pontos.net>
Date: Mon, 02 Sep 2002 07:39:20 +0300
Local: Mon, Sep 2 2002 12:39 am
Subject: Re: LISP - an excercise for experts?

Joe Marshall wrote:
> "ilias" <at_n...@pontos.net> wrote in message news:3D727A72.4010902@pontos.net...

>>must a conforming CommonLisp implementation provide this function?:

>>http://www.lispworks.com/reference/HyperSpec/Body/f_set_sy.htm#set-sy...

> Of course it must.  I don't think anyone denies that.

ok. we are a step further:

(set-syntax-from-char #\{ #\( )
(set-syntax-from-char #\} #\) )

is conforming CommonLisp code.

the function *accepts* #\( and #\) as source parameter

> What we deny is your assertion that copying the syntax of open-paren
> and close-paren to another pair of characters will make the target
> pair behave as if they were list delimiters.

you cannot deny this.

It is a fact:
After the above conforming CommonLisp code, the character {} behave like
list delimiters (at least they should, as Lispworks & Allegro do).

Until here we should agree.

Now its your turn.

The function *and* of course the results the functions produces are
conformant.

What *exactly* 'overrides' the conformancy of the function
set-syntax-from-char?


 
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