jasory

joined 10 months ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Wouldn't this just prevent you from allocating more memory (than zero)?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago

Nope. I only learned to use computers as an adult, and only learned programming incidentally as a tool for other work.

The truth is that it's actually much faster to learn as an adult, you just have more momentum if you start as a child.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago

Ada particularly the SPARK subset. It's approach is quite different than most languages, focusing on minimising errors and correctness. It's fairly difficult but I like to use it to teach people to actually understand the problem and how to solve it before they ever write the code.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 5 months ago

You will be sorely missed with your worthless commentary.... and your unwarranted arrogance.... sorely missed the people weep the loss....

[–] [email protected] 16 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

Basically in-depth computer science knowledge; graph theory, automata, aspects of system programming.

I technically have a physics background coupled with a bit of self-study of pure mathematics. But those 3 categories I feel hold me back in application (in physics primarily, I don't do real software development).

[–] [email protected] -1 points 5 months ago (2 children)

You've had plenty of time to prove your claim that marijuana is an important medicine and anyone who disagrees must be citing Fox news, and yet all you have been able to do is act incredulous that there might be a more effective methodology for finding relevant research than a keyword search. The amount of relevant high-quality papers is not in the thousands, it's not even in the hundreds. You arrived at your conclusion by the most useless and sophmoric methodology and are acting smug because you (supposedly) teach an introductory class to highschool graduates. Guess what dipshit? We don't use your shitty lessons.

"Then we can talk"

You already admitted that you don't understand pharmacology so what exactly do you think you're going to talk about? How you still don't understand how to perform graph traversal to find related studies?

[–] [email protected] -1 points 5 months ago (5 children)

No there is not. There is a few hundred, and most of then don't even cover efficacy in vivo which is the subject matter.

Keep LARPing as an academic, lets see how stupid you really are.

[–] [email protected] -1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

This attitude is why you're still a moron.

When you encounter a lengthy description of why something is true or false, your response is "OMG so many words!"

Guess what buddy? Life isn't about punchy one-liners and vapid analysis.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

"the past 30 days"

So you literally don't know how drug tests work? Marijuana clears an oral test in about a day, most jobs that test for it simply tell you to come back the next day. This is in legal state, and covers the vast majority of jobs. If you can't be sober for a full 24-hrs before a pre-employment check you're an addict. This would be like if someone admitted to being drunk the morning of an interview.

"Neither of those details speaks to sobriety at work"

Again you're confused by the efficacy of drug tests. If you can't be sober for 1 or 2 days to get your job that you applied for, it's far less likely that you are going to be sober on the clock. (Few places do uranalysis, and I've literally never heard of a blood or hair test which are the ones that actually can reliably test that far back).

Strictly speaking you cannot prove that the person who shot heroin during your interview, is also going to do drugs on the clock. It is however a very good indicator that they are unprofessional, will be a bad employee and are quite likely to drugs on the clock. Companies don't just spend thousands of dollars a year to be cruel to employees.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago (3 children)
  1. Weak arguments aren't going to be effective in leading to any train of thought. They are going to be immediately refuted.

  2. Your arguments are popular and extremely stupid. This is because the vast majority of people spend little time on ethics, ontology, and formal reasoning. This is like producing a theory of QM, when you flunked Calculus. Anyone can do it, everyone makes the same serious mistakes, and I have to hear the same arguments every single time.

"Once we acknowledge"...

How do we acknowledge something that isn't clearly true? (i.e not a tautology) First we must prove it to be true, then we can draw conclusions from it. As I already pointed out trying to prove that "human tissue only has value if it is thinking" fails because it's actually false.

Here's a formalisation of your reasoning.

  1. An entity has no value unless it is thinking. Or less value than the mere desires of a thinking entity.
  2. Fetuses do not think, therefore they have no value.

Problem is first premise is false and we can see that by determining what "thinking" is. Thinking or consciousness is a categorisation of intermittent and emergent behaviour. No human continously thinks, and even if they did it would not make sense to be able to classify them as thinking at any specific point of time. Individual firing of neurons is not thought, it is required for thought but it is not consciousness itself. It requires a system of neurons engaging in electrochemical action that meets some definition of thought (the exact definition doesn't matter, what matters is that it is emergent not instantaneous).

Your assertion leads to the claim that human moral value must collapse when they are in a non-thinking state. But as already shown every human regularly satisfies this condition, so it must therefore be permissible to kill them. In other words if abortion is permissible by your criteria, so is killing the mother.

Of course we can avoid this clearly immoral conclusion by changing the criteria by which we value humans to "members of a rational class". (Cancer cells clearly aren't this). This completely avoids the problems of killing people arbitrarily, killing people who don't solve a puzzle as fast as a rat, eating babies because we eat pork, all of which are logical conclusions of systems that only value thinking. (If you think this is motivated reasoning, simply research how moral systems are constructed and analytic descriptivism. You also used analytic descriptivism, you just horribly botched it by assuming that unproven premises were true).

Of course the only problem with this new system is that it doesn't permit killing fetuses (except to save another human life), which you really, really want.

"Just because cancer cells..."

I can't believe people delude themselves into thinking that this is a strong argument (again a very trite and silly argument). I fervently believe that we need government-mandated academic philosophers screaming into people's ears every time they say stupid shit like this. Or maybe get shocked by their keyboard.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

This blog covers a lot of topics, but very superficially.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

This blog covers a lot of topics, but very superficially.

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