Great transformation Allan - not that I go much by personal looks, but
I'll be your friend now! Rigs' discovery game got me thinking. Only
7% of our language is declared in what we say - we read body language,
hormones, brain states - I even see shadows and auras at some times -
and you can add to that at least 9 varieties of argument types
including the eristic (in which ad hom is not necessarily a fallacy).
My suspicion, for many years, has been that objective-dispassionate
argument is a con - if we were capable of it I doubt advertising could
work. One wonders whether we ever get to "discovery".
I think we can safely say we can't build my 'relativity flight
machine' - let's blame Allan for refusing to lend me his hammer! The
farce in the thought experiment seems to many to be postulating
machine we can't build - but many of physic's experiments were once so
fantastic - we needed to send an evacuated lead balloon into space to
test some Einstein. My fascination with relativity flight (real
Planet of the Apes) is ludic. I'd probably like science fiction if
there was any. I've never come across any that engages biology other
than translating our present into gravity conditions we can't survive
and the stories are about such as friendship. We have no literature
I'm aware of that imagines a world in which we don't recreate old
chestnut human relations like friendship, love, hatred, revenge and
the usual soap. Relativity flight strikes me as restricted by
something much the same. We bubble our existing selves into the
future - but we do this by slowing everything in our speeding bubble
down whilst the outside ages as normal. The solar system we leave
disappears and our destination is a point in space-time yet to form as
it will be then (with us as 21st century earth-humans in it).
I'd guess we have already done something a bit like this. We are all
essentially primitive, small competing group humans ill-adjusted to
the modern, global world, perhaps as unsuited as relativity flight
humans would be emerging a couple of billion years into the future.
It could be that our notions of stuff like friendship are way off the
mark needed for modern society. Women were once stuck with economic
dependence and putting up with whatever went on in marriages - we
don't seem to remain friends on divorce as a rule - so what might
friendship mean really?
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