Taken as read here Chris.  Some free speech is only appropriate from the 
gutter, where you lie waiting for the police van.

On Wednesday, 11 February 2015 22:22:19 UTC, Chris Jenkins wrote:
>
> And being one personally who is quite free with my thoughts, my position 
> on censorship is well known. 
>
> That being said, if the pub staff bounces you out on your nose for calling 
> all the female patrons tarts, it's a bit disingenuous to fall back on a 
> "but mah free speech!" defense. 
>
> On Wed, Feb 11, 2015 at 5:00 PM, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> That's obviously true Chris.  Never saw any of that behaviour from Chaz, 
>> but I was away a lot.  Pubs with crap landlords are no good.  The net is a 
>> big percentage jerk.  I wouldn't have said matey.  That would be a bit like 
>> calling you flower in our local brogue.  Censorship is the problem as we 
>> both know and the groupthink phenomenon.  Hard to know who to protect 
>> sometimes.  In a gender class you can give some Charlie his head and let 
>> him explain how useless women are, leaving it to the girls to beat him up.  
>> They always do, so should I protect the Charlie knowing this will happen? 
>> It's all much more difficult in reality.
>>
>> My work group swears like troopers, though everyone backs up 'bolloxs' 
>> with 'because this you daft old bat/young whippersnapper and terms much 
>> worse than flawless virgin.  Of course, none of us is stupid enough to be 
>> offended by this kind of language, tough we are driven to drink by stuff 
>> from the university bureaucracy.
>>
>>
>> On Wednesday, 11 February 2015 21:17:01 UTC, Chris Jenkins wrote:
>>>
>>> I don't believe you ever did, Arch, but I'll add that one to my 
>>> collection. :) 
>>>
>>> Atalante, Orn, ThePeasantKing...there were so many. I sorely miss Fran's 
>>> voice, although I get to see it in the occasional blog post. 
>>>
>>> Chaz was a sharp one, and we debated for hours amongst ourselves on his 
>>> banning, but the fact is, he was killing conversation as fast as he was 
>>> killing bottles, and no one wants to hang out in a room where any honest 
>>> effort at conversation is met with "fack off ye daft twat". There's a 
>>> difference between attacking a point and spitting in someone's face, and 
>>> old Chaz clearly couldn't see what that difference was. 
>>>
>>> I like having my position challenged. Some people take breaking into to 
>>> start expanding their view. Without someone enforcing some reasonable 
>>> modicum of basic human decency, all chats devolve into spamming and 
>>> trolling, and nothing of value is gained. 
>>>
>>> It's a delicate balance with bleeding feet walking across that razor's 
>>> edge. 
>>>
>>> On Wed, Feb 11, 2015 at 4:03 PM, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I actually don't remember Chris.  I'd been away at the time (Middle 
>>>> East).  People who could have a good barney and still invite you for a 
>>>> beer 
>>>> had largely gone.  I got a lot of emails about helping Allan from people 
>>>> who pissed off quick.  I always considered the rules rather fatuous 
>>>> undergrad-uppity-cupidity - a bit like that Rebecca Watson broad - 
>>>> half-read and not worth the fuss of a coffee offer.  I had made a lot of 
>>>> contribution here, but it was a good spot to write to myself and see if 
>>>> anyone else had a clue.  I liked Allan, so hung around.  Orn (who I really 
>>>> like) had it in for Allan for some reason never disclosed.  I never 
>>>> recovered from Chaz being banned and meant to leave in protest.  I always 
>>>> found the notion of rational debate amongst people who can't outline 
>>>> argument interesting.  Academics do it all the time.  The line 'so what's 
>>>> this to do with the price of fish?' rather kills all.
>>>>
>>>> Of course, I spend hours watching bees and ants.  My fluency in their 
>>>> communication and consensus languages is much greater than with humans, 
>>>> though the models are not much different.  Hygiene, for which you can 
>>>> substitute human manners, is one of the keys.  People rarely listen to 
>>>> anything beyond the buzz.  I would say a dozen people actually 
>>>> contributing 
>>>> ideas and feedback might form an expanding core, much as in a group of 100 
>>>> undergraduates - but they get smart quick the core, amongst the 
>>>> free-riders.  Why should they put the effort in for the others?  Chris, 
>>>> Craig, Ian and Pottsie, Molly, Francis, James, Chaz, Vam - plenty I 
>>>> wouldn't have missed - Tony now.  I wonder how many of the members really 
>>>> even said much though?
>>>>
>>>> The question is really whether there is any viable business model that 
>>>> might support the admin.  Porn was 98% of the original commercial traffic. 
>>>>  
>>>> Thanks for the old efforts Chris.  By the way, did I ever say 'fuck you 
>>>> matey'?  If not take one free now ...
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Wednesday, February 11, 2015 at 7:17:00 PM UTC, Allan Heretic wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> It may not be fancy new format,  but I personally  like it. 
>>>>>
>>>>> تجنب. القتل والاغتصاب واستعباد الآخرين
>>>>> Évitez; assassiner, le viol et l'esclavage des autres
>>>>> Avoid; murder, rape and enslavement of others
>>>>>
>>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>>> From: archytas <[email protected]>
>>>>> To: [email protected]
>>>>> Sent: Wed, 11 Feb 2015 8:13 PM
>>>>> Subject: Re: Mind's Eye Re: Delusions
>>>>>
>>>>> Orn also took on this crown from which you stole the jewels to feed 
>>>>> your raising-Allan-to-dust laser-tarot.  I was asked so suggested you, 
>>>>> already doing enough paid moderation for my needs.  The crown was known 
>>>>> to 
>>>>> be empty.  We could all have moved on, though the negativity of 
>>>>> non-enthusiasm was entirely in positive decline.  We could try the new 
>>>>> Gabbywit format with its underlying moaning minnie architecture and 
>>>>> stuck-in-the-mud operating system.  I do know of formats we could have 
>>>>> tried, but the essence, beyond smiling pussies in gif and Chris holding 
>>>>> up 
>>>>> a beer. is content and supervision of the nasties.  Let me read you a 
>>>>> bedtime story, with at least 4 policewomen standing by, from the Book of 
>>>>> Management.  That's what you get once people void themselves of 
>>>>> responsibility for content and can only turn up with gossip, small talk 
>>>>> and 
>>>>> wassup sexism.ageism and control fetish.  One almost misses the American 
>>>>> exceptionalists and their use of the world socialist as a pejorative like 
>>>>> an old spinster muttering 'sex'.  
>>>>>
>>>>> On Wednesday, February 11, 2015 at 5:37:42 PM UTC, Gabby wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>  Over a thousand members, 5 actually post?
>>>>>>
>>>>>>  
>>>>>> This question coming from you? YOU! Oh come on, Chrissy baby! This is 
>>>>>> an outdated format here that doesn't generate much traffic anymore. You 
>>>>>> know that, that`s your job to know that, that`s why you quit the mod job 
>>>>>> here! No one is blaming you for that but don´t play the innocent here! 
>>>>>> You 
>>>>>> introduced no transparent polling as to who should become your 
>>>>>> successor, 
>>>>>> but lay down your crown to the one who threw his hat in the ring, a 
>>>>>> method 
>>>>>> acceptable for the queen also. Nice try, dear.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 2015-02-11 17:34 GMT+01:00 Chris Jenkins <[email protected]>
>>>>>> :
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Yep, he passed the bar some time ago, which is a big part of why he 
>>>>>>> no longer had time for these conversations. 
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> He's not alone in that, apparently. Over a thousand members, 5 
>>>>>>> actually post?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Wed, Feb 11, 2015 at 11:32 AM, archytas <[email protected]> 
>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Such charm as ever Gabby.  The term paedophile is not well taken 
>>>>>>>> here and may really insult Allan and make him sad.  Molly was gone, in 
>>>>>>>> the 
>>>>>>>> sense of 'gone fishin'.  Craig was becoming a lawyer.  Hope he made 
>>>>>>>> it. He 
>>>>>>>> was a Mormon too.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> It would have been nice to hear updates on Bacon.  There were 
>>>>>>>> eleven Idols.  I expect your superior model incorporates them, or 
>>>>>>>> perhaps 
>>>>>>>> spits spleen.  We can only be sure of never seeing it.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> We model defeasibly now and use a lot of geometry because a lot of 
>>>>>>>> us think in shape.  The idea is to make natural language usable by the 
>>>>>>>> machine.  It has even more difficulty making sense of just what humans 
>>>>>>>> say 
>>>>>>>> than a pair of paranoid-schizoid positionists.  We do consider 
>>>>>>>> 'shapes' 
>>>>>>>> like the molygon as underliers in our logic and they are instructive.  
>>>>>>>> A 
>>>>>>>> gabbygon is on the horizon - some no doubt thinking this is the best 
>>>>>>>> place.  The general theory is called 'bag of words' - we look for 
>>>>>>>> shapes in 
>>>>>>>> text to give context meaning and identify root metaphors.  You 
>>>>>>>> probably 
>>>>>>>> know how the SNERT stands out like a sore thumb?  Maybe accusing old 
>>>>>>>> men 
>>>>>>>> and their dogs kind of thing?  We are trying to find much more routine 
>>>>>>>> issues in word use to get at some of Tony has described as dishonesty  
>>>>>>>> from 
>>>>>>>> 'bag of words' samples taken from the 'marketplace' and other Idol 
>>>>>>>> conversations.  What the machine establishes from metadata - 
>>>>>>>> considering we 
>>>>>>>> often haven't - is fascinating because we are not sure what it i doing 
>>>>>>>> at 
>>>>>>>> all.  We have it working on the self-justification of psychopaths at 
>>>>>>>> the 
>>>>>>>> moment.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Gravity obviously collapses on seeing a photograph of me.  Thanks 
>>>>>>>> for the memory.  
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Wednesday, February 11, 2015 at 3:13:50 PM UTC, Gabby wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> This here is my real lesson. You have been bringing up and pushing 
>>>>>>>>> this idol model so many times that I have forgotten what the one was 
>>>>>>>>> that I 
>>>>>>>>> found better. All that I remember is that it was either located in 
>>>>>>>>> the 
>>>>>>>>> alchemy or in the metaphysical poetry context. It was a perfect four 
>>>>>>>>> is all 
>>>>>>>>> that is left. It has been overwritten by your four idols.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> 2015-02-11 1:35 GMT+01:00 archytas <[email protected]>:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Francis Bacon classified the intellectual fallacies of his time 
>>>>>>>>>> under four headings which he called idols. He distinguished them as 
>>>>>>>>>> idols 
>>>>>>>>>> of the Tribe, idols of the e, idols of the Marketplace and idols of 
>>>>>>>>>> the 
>>>>>>>>>> Theatre. An idol is an image, in this case held in the mind, which 
>>>>>>>>>> receives 
>>>>>>>>>> veneration but is without substance in itself. Bacon did not regard 
>>>>>>>>>> idols 
>>>>>>>>>> as symbols, but rather as fixations.  They expand a bit like this:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> 1. Tribe
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> The example of desiring to see more order in the universe than is 
>>>>>>>>>> actually there is one of his examples of an idol of the tribe. He 
>>>>>>>>>> thinks 
>>>>>>>>>> that we all suffer from that one.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> 2. Cave
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> An example of an idol of the cave (one of Bacon's examples) is 
>>>>>>>>>> that some minds are more drawn to new things and new ideas than they 
>>>>>>>>>> are to 
>>>>>>>>>> what has been around for a long time, while other minds are more 
>>>>>>>>>> drawn to 
>>>>>>>>>> "tradition" and "old school" ideas and ways than they are to 
>>>>>>>>>> newness. Bacon 
>>>>>>>>>> thinks we should become aware what our own tendency is so that we 
>>>>>>>>>> can make 
>>>>>>>>>> corrections for it. He hopes that by becoming aware of our own 
>>>>>>>>>> mind's 
>>>>>>>>>> tendencies toward loving novelty or tradition that we might be able 
>>>>>>>>>> to 
>>>>>>>>>> "correct" for them and then hopefully see things more clearly and 
>>>>>>>>>> truly.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> 3. Marketplace
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> We often use words very loosely in common discourse. Bacon sees 
>>>>>>>>>> nothing wrong with that when we are just speaking ordinary language 
>>>>>>>>>> with 
>>>>>>>>>> friends and family. But, when it comes to trying to describe the 
>>>>>>>>>> world 
>>>>>>>>>> accurately and precisely, we should be aware of our tendency to use 
>>>>>>>>>> words 
>>>>>>>>>> loosely and should try to correct for it. When we are trying to 
>>>>>>>>>> speak 
>>>>>>>>>> precisely we should probably not say things like "The mountain is 
>>>>>>>>>> out 
>>>>>>>>>> today" (anyone outside of the Puget Sound area wouldn't have a clue 
>>>>>>>>>> what 
>>>>>>>>>> this means); or "The sun went under a cloud" (the sun did not go 
>>>>>>>>>> anywhere, 
>>>>>>>>>> let along underneath something); or "The sun came up this morning" 
>>>>>>>>>> (the 
>>>>>>>>>> earth actually just rotated). None of those sentences is precisely 
>>>>>>>>>> true, 
>>>>>>>>>> and if we use language imprecisely like this it can sometimes 
>>>>>>>>>> accidentally 
>>>>>>>>>> lead to huge misapprehensions about the world. Bacon thinks this 
>>>>>>>>>> misuse of 
>>>>>>>>>> words and language causes far more problems than we realize.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> 4. Theatre
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> If you can think of someone you know who has recently bought into 
>>>>>>>>>> a whole new religion or philosophy or psychology, you can probably 
>>>>>>>>>> see how 
>>>>>>>>>> they have suddenly come to interpret everything in the universe 
>>>>>>>>>> according 
>>>>>>>>>> to their new world view. That world view has become the new lens 
>>>>>>>>>> through 
>>>>>>>>>> which they perceive and interpret everything in their world. What 
>>>>>>>>>> Bacon 
>>>>>>>>>> says, though, is that we all do this. We all interpret the world 
>>>>>>>>>> through 
>>>>>>>>>> the lens of our own little world view. It's just easier to see other 
>>>>>>>>>> people 
>>>>>>>>>> doing it than it is to see ourselves doing it. Bacon thinks we 
>>>>>>>>>> should 
>>>>>>>>>> become aware of how these world views shape and distort our own 
>>>>>>>>>> perceptions 
>>>>>>>>>> of the world so that we might be able to correct for it a bit.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> This is old work.  My questions are about how we recognise the 
>>>>>>>>>> 'second head' as a delusion yet move hardly at all on obvious 
>>>>>>>>>> political 
>>>>>>>>>> delusions like economics, votes counting, social care, public 
>>>>>>>>>> ignorance and 
>>>>>>>>>> the making invisible of many social issues.  For me, deep questions 
>>>>>>>>>> on self 
>>>>>>>>>> are involved.  The internet self is unlikely to be, as Tony says, 
>>>>>>>>>> the same 
>>>>>>>>>> as the 'real'one - but then we have know for much longer than the 
>>>>>>>>>> internet 
>>>>>>>>>> people don't say the same things in different contexts.  In fact the 
>>>>>>>>>> man or 
>>>>>>>>>> woman in the bar often looks totally different the morning after, 
>>>>>>>>>> let alone 
>>>>>>>>>> what the politician says in a speech compared with when she is with 
>>>>>>>>>> her 
>>>>>>>>>> backroom boys in the spin room.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> .
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 10:17:04 PM UTC, archytas wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> At least with my knowledge of delusions I can imagine certain 
>>>>>>>>>>> people growing a second head overnight and shooting the wrong 
>>>>>>>>>>> spare.  
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 10:11:09 PM UTC, archytas wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> That seems to run to form Gabby.  
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 10:06:43 PM UTC, Gabby wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> Facil picked up your question and gave his answer, I agreed 
>>>>>>>>>>>>> and then came Allan barking at Facil and I told Allan to watch 
>>>>>>>>>>>>> his tongue 
>>>>>>>>>>>>> or leave to his own thread. Only then did you enter the group 
>>>>>>>>>>>>> timeline to 
>>>>>>>>>>>>> start your big daddy has come home show. Now tell me what my 
>>>>>>>>>>>>> deceitful 
>>>>>>>>>>>>> intent was ... Or better, tell me tomorrow, I'm off for today.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> Am Dienstag, 10. Februar 2015 schrieb archytas :
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> The only people I meet like that tend to be online students 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Tony.  We use Skype video conferencing for a few sessions, so 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> have actually 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> seen each other.  I'm quieter than people imagine, though none 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> have yet 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> said 'uglier'.  I'm very prone to catch whatever bugs go around 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> university 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> environments too, so rather like electronic distance.  With 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> colleagues, the 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> situation is we know a lot more about each other than most in 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> online 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> encounters.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> My version has 'confusion' written through it.  I say 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> something, Gabby takes it another way, or knows what I intended 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> and chooses 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> another slant for whatever reason.  Online, I assume she has a 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> sense of 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> humour and a good turn with words.  Deception is not part of 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> this in the 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> first place.  Just guesses with less risk than so called 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> reality.  I 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> suppose the classic online deceiver is the groomer - where the 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> intent is to 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> set up and image and then meet the victim.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 7:54:18 PM UTC, facilitator 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>  On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 2:11:33 PM UTC-5, archytas 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> The delusion that we are what we project is interesting 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Tony. 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> "We claim to be what we project".  Your version allows for 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> reality mine allows for dishonesty. I think most people want to 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> project a 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> filtered image of themselves enough so that if we ever meet 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> people who 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> we've only conversed with online we become slightly astonished 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> how 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> different they appear and act in "real life".  
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>  
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>  -- 
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