That doesn't happen in a Delorean. In fact if there's no wind you can sit with the doors open and they act as a shelter that prevents rain coming inside. The one thing that does drip is if there's lots of condensation on the inside of the door/window it drips onto the seat when you open the door.
I find spreadsheets are useful as a data entry UI.
I have to use Sage for my company accounts, and I find that the UI for Sage is so clunky and restrictive that it's easier to collate all the relevant data in LibreOffice, then run some Python scripts I wrote to process the.odt file to convert the information into CSVs full of payment data and balanced journal data that Sage can import
It's way easier to scrutinise all the figures in LibreOffice Calc and make sure it all reconciles and balances then import to Sage than the teeth-pulling agony of trying to get Sage to be at all helpful.
The same goes for any situation where i need to compile a long list of things that is handy to reorder / sum values. It's easier to use a spreadsheet as a data entry UI and run a simple script to validate/dump into a database than build a GUI myself for each task.
1) Power and data do not belong on the same connector or cable. 2) Extra pins cost more up front, but make backward compatibility less of a pain down the road.
USB has put all of these to shame.
I don't understand - USB has power and data on the same cable and a minimal pin configuration.
Ignoring the childish trolling, the implied sentiment is correct - the entire world as a whole needs to take collective responsibility for the entire human race.
you added that constraint specifically to fit your argument.
No he didn't, you deleted it to fit yours. He wasn't arguing with your generalised concept of what a "theist" does and doesn't think (Enjoy it, it's yours), he was arguing specifically with the OP, who said:
mind-boggling complexity of life that could never be duplicated but by a mind-boggling intelligence.
"Well we don't understand this and probably never will, so we should ignore it."
Accepting that you don't understand something isn't the same as ignoring it. In fact making up myths about what might have happened is ignoring the reality that we don't know.
If it WAS created, then what? You are going to look pretty fucking stupid standing before the creator when you die, as smart as you think you are now.
This presupposes a long list of arbitrary ideas about the nature of a being that might have conciously created the universe:
When you die you continue to live in some other form
The creator of the universe cares what you do
After you die the creator of the universe will personally assess your behaviour
It matters if you look stupid, or there's some other implied consequence
The creator of the universe won't reward you for thinking critically and not mindlessly subscribing to any comforting or manipulative fantasy tossed at you
...thousands of other completely arbitrary assumptions that amount to an almost infinite array of possible mutually contradictory creators that you couldn't hope to appease by guessing what the criteria are for non-punishment.
There's absolutely no reason to believe any of these arbitrary assumptions to be the case, even if for some reason, apropos of no evidence whatsoever, you do decide to presume the universe is the consequence of a concious act.
Although evolution isn't an explanation of how life began, it does introduce some constrictions on what that explanation can include. For instance, all life on earth today is descended from a single common ancestor. Plants, animals and humans were not created apart from each other, one at a time. Humans are descended from Apes. Without explaining how that process began, the evolutionary evidence about this constraint is emphatic and undeniable. This flies in the face of one obvious prominent creation myth.
It's everyone's business, because we all have live on this planet together. Most of the world realises this, and we'd all feel a lot more comfortable if America would realise it too.
"directly causes things to happen" Implies some sort of hands-on second-by-second manipulation of events that could go any number of ways but god intervenes to make sure they go the way he wanted them to.
This is not the argument being made. It's far more fundamental than that. What I'm saying is the logical consequence of the very existance of any entity that knows with 100% certainty what will happen at any given moment is that choice is impossible. The omniscient entity doesn't need to intervene or "directly" cause anything. It doesn't matter. Everything is prewritten and no choice is possible. Everything everyone will do was never up for discussion. It may as well have already happened, much like the baseball game, given that the players have no ability to change the outcome.
If god knows what you're going to do before you do it, then it is impossible for you to make a different choice, therefore god and free will are logically contradictory.
That doesn't happen in a Delorean. In fact if there's no wind you can sit with the doors open and they act as a shelter that prevents rain coming inside. The one thing that does drip is if there's lots of condensation on the inside of the door /window it drips onto the seat when you open the door.
All car doors have seals. Wouldn't this be a problem on any car?
I read the headline as "Lepton University"
to be fair, apk is a fascinating character.
Careful, you'll summon ...him
Lousy Smarch weather...
I find spreadsheets are useful as a data entry UI.
I have to use Sage for my company accounts, and I find that the UI for Sage is so clunky and restrictive that it's easier to collate all the relevant data in LibreOffice, then run some Python scripts I wrote to process the .odt file to convert the information into CSVs full of payment data and balanced journal data that Sage can import
It's way easier to scrutinise all the figures in LibreOffice Calc and make sure it all reconciles and balances then import to Sage than the teeth-pulling agony of trying to get Sage to be at all helpful.
The same goes for any situation where i need to compile a long list of things that is handy to reorder / sum values. It's easier to use a spreadsheet as a data entry UI and run a simple script to validate/dump into a database than build a GUI myself for each task.
Why on earth do government let the manufacturers report their own consumption figures? That's like letting me write my own MOT certificate every year.
Do they come with Lotus Notes and a machine gun?
It's not obscure to this audience.
1) Power and data do not belong on the same connector or cable.
2) Extra pins cost more up front, but make backward compatibility less of a pain down the road.
USB has put all of these to shame.
I don't understand - USB has power and data on the same cable and a minimal pin configuration.
What the hell is a Gigafactory?
When Hitler does it, it's intended as a compliment.
Ignoring the childish trolling, the implied sentiment is correct - the entire world as a whole needs to take collective responsibility for the entire human race.
You're talking about the god ideas currently in circulation. All of which are no less arbitrary than the gods not yet postulated.
you added that constraint specifically to fit your argument.
No he didn't, you deleted it to fit yours. He wasn't arguing with your generalised concept of what a "theist" does and doesn't think (Enjoy it, it's yours), he was arguing specifically with the OP, who said:
mind-boggling complexity of life that could never be duplicated but by a mind-boggling intelligence.
"Well we don't understand this and probably never will, so we should ignore it."
Accepting that you don't understand something isn't the same as ignoring it. In fact making up myths about what might have happened is ignoring the reality that we don't know.
If it WAS created, then what? You are going to look pretty fucking stupid standing before the creator when you die, as smart as you think you are now.
This presupposes a long list of arbitrary ideas about the nature of a being that might have conciously created the universe:
There's absolutely no reason to believe any of these arbitrary assumptions to be the case, even if for some reason, apropos of no evidence whatsoever, you do decide to presume the universe is the consequence of a concious act.
Although evolution isn't an explanation of how life began, it does introduce some constrictions on what that explanation can include. For instance, all life on earth today is descended from a single common ancestor. Plants, animals and humans were not created apart from each other, one at a time. Humans are descended from Apes. Without explaining how that process began, the evolutionary evidence about this constraint is emphatic and undeniable. This flies in the face of one obvious prominent creation myth.
It's everyone's business, because we all have live on this planet together. Most of the world realises this, and we'd all feel a lot more comfortable if America would realise it too.
what do you mean by spot colour?
Aren't mergers and buyouts of that kind monitored and regulated?
There are two ideas being conflated here.
"directly causes things to happen" Implies some sort of hands-on second-by-second manipulation of events that could go any number of ways but god intervenes to make sure they go the way he wanted them to.
This is not the argument being made. It's far more fundamental than that. What I'm saying is the logical consequence of the very existance of any entity that knows with 100% certainty what will happen at any given moment is that choice is impossible. The omniscient entity doesn't need to intervene or "directly" cause anything. It doesn't matter. Everything is prewritten and no choice is possible. Everything everyone will do was never up for discussion. It may as well have already happened, much like the baseball game, given that the players have no ability to change the outcome.
If god knows what you're going to do before you do it, then it is impossible for you to make a different choice, therefore god and free will are logically contradictory.
I accidentally the the whole thing
I read it in Samual L. Jackson's voice.