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There is no concept of "violation" under my scheme.
the state already has means in place for dealing with neglect.
Migrant workers are essential to agriculture and visiting students clearly gain more from the experience if they can earn money during their stay.
Jail time or social services?
Quote from: alancalverd on 26/07/2022 11:36:48There is no concept of "violation" under my scheme.Just say that someone gets pregnant without license.
Quote from: alancalverd on 26/07/2022 11:36:48Migrant workers are essential to agriculture and visiting students clearly gain more from the experience if they can earn money during their stay.Until robots take over their jobs and vertical farming using GMO becomes more efficient than traditional way. It's not a matter of if, it's just when.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 26/07/2022 14:36:22Quote from: alancalverd on 26/07/2022 11:36:48There is no concept of "violation" under my scheme.Just say that someone gets pregnant without license. There is no "license". You get paid if you are not pregnant. That's all there is to it. Oddly enough, at least one US state (Georgia?) actually ran a project to curb teenage pregnancy by offering schoolgirls a dollar a day for not being pregnant. If it's good enough for a Republican state in a third world country, it's good enough for the UK.
Amygdala damage impairs moral judgmentPatients with amygdala damage rejected the widely accepted answer to the infamous "trolley problem," saying that it "hurts too much."KEY TAKEAWAYSOur sense of morality is inextricably linked to our brains. Many patients with Urbach-Weithe disease (UWD) have damage to a brain structure called the amygdala, an almond-shaped structure popularly known as the "fear center." UWD patients exhibited a breakdown of moral utilitarian judgment on the infamous trolley car problem, frequently choosing to save one person instead of thousands of others. Jack van Honk of Utrecht University in the Netherlands and his colleagues examined five South African patients with Urbach-Weithe Disease (UWD), a rare inherited condition that causes an accumulation of calcium salts in the skin and soft tissues, making them hardened and shrivelled. Approximately 400 cases of this disease have been documented to date, more than half of whom have damage to a brain structure called the amygdala.The amygdala is a small, almond-shaped structure that is known to be involved in emotional processing and is popularly referred to as the brain’s “fear center.” Previous studies of patient S.M., a 50-year-old woman who developed UWD as a child, showed that she cannot recognize emotions in the facial expressions of others and does not experience fear when exposed to live snakes, spiders, haunted houses, and horror films.Subsequent research showed, however, that inhalation of 35% carbon dioxide can evoke fear and panic attacks in S.M. and two other UWD patients, suggesting that while the amygdala seems crucial for fear triggered by external threats, other brain mechanisms are responsible for internally triggered fear. The complex neuroscience of moralityA study published last year showed that while S.M. and several other UWD patients cannot predict fear in others, they deem it impermissible to cause others fear, leading the researchers to conclude that although social emotion recognition and morality may be related, they are distinct from one another.The authors of the new study suggest that heightened sensitivity to social pain may play a role in their patients’ inability to make moral judgments. In interviews, the patients stated that they had understood both the actions required of them and their outcomes, but decided not to sacrifice the individual because it was too upsetting and “hurts too much.”
This video is an opinion and in no way should be construed as statements of fact. Scams, bad business opportunities, and fake gurus are subjective terms that mean different things to different people. I think someone who promises $100K/month for an upfront fee of $2K is a scam. Others would call it a Napoleon Hill pitch.
Subsequent research showed, however, that inhalation of 35% carbon dioxide can evoke fear and panic attacks in S.M. and two other UWD patients,
and probably everyone else. Autonomic breathing turns to hyperventilation and panic as CO2 levels rise, in all animals.
It's time to stop judging everyone in the past by the standards of the present.
No.
It seems like you need to learn to improve your argumentations skill.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 28/09/2022 13:50:42It seems like you need to learn to improve your argumentations skill.No need to argue, the obvious answer is no.
This sort of inquiry has been considered by many philosophers. The answer to this question hinges on how you characterise morality. That morality can't exist apart from religion is an opinion shared by some, while others hold that religion is neither relative nor relative truth. Thus, a set of universal moral principles follows from that framework.Leaving a religious worldview for a secular one can make life more challenging. There have been philosophical systems proposed that seem to describe a universal morality but aren't actually followed by anyone.As illustrations: Utilitarianism, the belief that society should aim to maximise the sum of people's happiness, is widely attributed to John Stuart Mill. In his discussion of the veil of ignorance, Rawls proposed that a just society is one in which its members agree on how each other should be treated before any of them have any idea of their actual circumstances. According to Nozick, morality is doing whatever you want without interference from your society so long as you aren't intentionally hurting others. One could continue listing...
Futurist Ari Wallach asks, “how do you want to be remembered?”Humans have a "lifetime bias." When we plan ahead, we do so by thinking in terms of years and decades rather than centuries and millennia.We need to escape this short-term thinking if we want to be great ancestors to the generations of humans that will come after us.One way to do so is through transgenerational empathy, by which we reconcile ourselves with the past in order to focus on the attributes that we want to pass on to the next generation.This video is part of The Progress Issue, a Big Think and Freethink special collaboration.In this inaugural special issue we set out to explore progress — how it happens, how we nurture it and how we stifle it, and what changes are required in how we approach our most serious problems to ensure greater and more equitable progress for all.