On Jul 4, 10:31 pm, alex23 <wuwe...@gmail.com> wrote: > rantingrick <rantingr...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I believe (unlike most people) that nature is striving for perfection > > Your belief is wrong. "Nature" doesn't "strive" for _anything_. Things > in the world are either fit enough to continue their existence or not. > As circumstances change, some things that were once suitably fit for > the environment are no longer so and are replaced. Same with ideas. > There is no "perfection", there is only "what works best now".
How could a belief be wrong? > > What do you think will be the eventual outcome of the human existence > > Alex? Since you have no imagination i will tell you, a singular > > intelligence. All from the land of creationism. > Firstly: cite some kind of evidence that this "will be the eventual > outcome" or admit you're talking shit. > > Secondly: I can imagine humanity evolving into a great many things and > something as limited as a 'botnet' is certainly nothing to be proud of > as a species. > > > It is selflessness on a grand scale. > > I don't really know if you're a troll, Beats me... I think everybody else does.. > have no self-reflective > capability, delusionally believe what you're spouting, or are on or > off medication, but sometimes your hypocrisy is just funny as hell. > > >> Because the people who ACTUALLY WROTE THE LANGUAGES wanted to explore > >> different implementations. > > Why can they not explore within the hive mind? Why must they hide > > their explorations from the greater group. SELFISHNESS > > You mean like how Guido hid the Python code base and never let anyone > else touch or influence it in any way? > > Rick, you remind me a lot of Bill Hicks yelling, "You are free to do > as we tell you! YOU ARE FREE TO DO AS WE TELL YOU!!" Using terms like > "hive mind" kinda shows that I'm wasting my time pushing the value of > diversity to you. Now you're taking a troll as an excuse for your own trolling. <snip> > No need to answer that last one, we already know the answer: from the > very beginning. In the beginning was a singularity... and Albert Einstein was a chain- smoker. Sal. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list