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@freemo @arteteco

Only because "centrist" in the contemporary European definition is Leftist: market socialism + civil rights + democracy.

Americans are more prone to like that which demonstrates itself over that which is merely popular. It's an important distinction, probably impossible to explain.

@amerika

that has not at all been my expeirnce as someone who lives in both america and europe. Though it is what you hear most often.

The leftists in america in my experience are far more extremist than anything I’ve ever seen in europe. In fact most europeans I know who have spent any real time in america tend to mock american leftists for their absurdity. Same is true for our right leaning people, also generally considered extreme.

@arteteco

@freemo @arteteco

Relativity, what is it?

When the center is Left, extremes will appear either redundant or dangerous, as you note.

American Leftists are generally single people, crazy people, or minorities.

@amerika I'm not sure, I don't think I know enough about the US to speak, either by statistics or by personal experience. From the biased internet view, US seems more "ideologist" than most countries I know, arguing a lot about principles. If the matter was what works and what not, I'd see very different political debates, more based on science and facts

@freemo

@arteteco @freemo

I disagree that it's not. However, America seems to have woken up first to how corrupt the scientific establishment has become, a.k.a. the replication crisis.

Principles are fine if realistic; if not, they're ideological (like the drive toward "equality," a non-factual notion).
@amerika @arteteco @freemo I've heard of this replication crisis. Is it occurring much in actual real science, or more in the secularized Jewish -ologies? Is scientific fraud widespread or committed more by certain ethnicities?
@TradeMinister @arteteco @freemo

In my view, it's likely hitting all fields

The need to "publish or perish" has a high cost, and much research being pushed through is cherry-picked and/or filtered.
@amerika @arteteco @freemo There is that, and the self-perpetuating dogmas. I've read that if you're getting a degree in theoretical physics and want to work, you need to do string theory, not loop quantum gravity or anything.
Still, peer review and others reproducing hard-science should continually preen the knowledge base, if it works right.

@TradeMinister

there is an expectation that you know certain theories and schools of though before you go onto more obscure or complex ones for sure. but that isnt dogma. Studying a thing doesnt inherently create dogma for the thing.

I study religion in some depth and while there is plenty floating around in the way of dogma when it comes to religion I have never adopted that dogma because I only study the topic, I dont adopt the faith.

I also never experienced teachers pushing too much dogma. Generally they care if you prove your point using logic and data, they dont force your conclusions. Most teachers not just accept dissenting thought they encourage it and want you to try to disprove theories, they even tend to promote projects where you attempt to do so.

the only reason scientific thought tends to align is because we have all went through the science and tried to disprove it and ultimately found we were wrong and could not.

@amerika @arteteco

@freemo @amerika @arteteco Consider the case of the 1918 influenza and Bacillus Haemophilus, an excellent example of dogma wasting careers and a decade or so of research. I'm sure that still happens, and I expect it will happen to String Theory in the fullness of time: my (unprofessional) guess is it will not be fundamental even if it is accurate at certain energies.

@TradeMinister

Not sure that is a great example.. Your not talking so much about dogma or wasted careers as you are talking about observing scientific progress where competing ideas and theories are over time refined and confirmed.

@amerika @arteteco

@freemo @amerika @arteteco You should maybe read up on it. One eminent German scientist insisted for decades that that irrelevant bacteria caused influenza, so at least one career and decades of work were wasted trying to prove that.

@TradeMinister
I am very familiar with it. Individuals have wrong theories all the time, and thats how science is suppose to work, thats how we learn we are wrong and ultimately what is correct.

@amerika @arteteco

@amerika @freemo @arteteco Which is a good thing and how science should work. Unfortunately the weight of Authority and control of funding mean that the scientific process is frequently impeded by old senile fucks who should have packed it in long ago but are Important so they control the funding and research: office politics wins again.

@TradeMinister

Sometimes funding can derail science and create some issues, no doubt.. A prime example of that is the whole autism vaccine nonsense where basically someone paid a bunch of money to a small minority of crooked scientists to produce a easily debunked paper. Even though the whole of the scientific community quickly rejected the paper its very existence was used as fodder by some for years to come. So yes a person with some money can certainly use psudo-science to cause some harm.

But these sorts of situations never get very far, they certainly dont pass any comprehensive peer review, and generally is not what we see from the majority of the scientific community.

@amerika @arteteco

@freemo @TradeMinister @arteteco

Lots of areas are not explored because they are politically incorrect.

Let's look at IQ research.

@amerika

There has been a great deal of research around IQ, even going so far as to investigate IQ differences among cultures we think of as different races, alot of that research is ongoing. Better IQ tests designed to be suited for tribal cultures with little contact with the outside world have been developed over the years for exactly that reason.

The issue is simply certain assertions have been made so often in the past and debunked so thuroughly, and almost always done under extreme bias, that most scientists arent going to rehash the same old nonsense unless someone actually comes up with a compelling high quality science, which is rarely the case in certain areas.

Every once in a while I come across some moron with a clearly racial bias trying to argue blacks are inherently lower IQ than whites, and every time when i give them the time and effort to review the evidence of their claim it is completely laughable the lack of evidence and the amount of bias they employed to collect it. Obviously when 99% of people arguing a particular point are always crackpots even if there is a valid point somewhere among them it isnt going to as easily get attention. Extraordinary claims take extraordinary evidence.

@TradeMinister @arteteco

@freemo @amerika @TradeMinister @arteteco so I have no interest in arguing that there are racial IQ differences between different groups, especially that black people may be less smart. That said those sorts of studies are the kind of study that you couldn’t publish if you found anything other than no difference, and where the researchers are only looking for one answer. I don’t think we can say we know whether there are IQ differences, and it might be tempting to think it’s possible since IQ is in part determined by genetics, and genetics vary between races.

@manarock

Hard to say. I mean we see studies that suggest black people have genetic deficiencies other races do not all the time. for example it is well known and established science that blacks have a much higher incidence of sickle cell anemia than non-blacks. Despite this effectively looking like they are genetically inferior in that regard, and thus would be something you might think couldn't get published, it tends to be free published and fairly well accepted science.

The reason such studies stand little chance of getting published isnt so much about the biases in the industry, its about the fact that we have tested the hypothesis for over a 100 years in great depth and never once have found anything to support that assertion. So naturally its not something you will see getting published unless there is some pretty solid and reproducible data, and there never is.

@amerika @TradeMinister @arteteco

@freemo

If I can chip my humble 50 satoshis on this, African people have way higher genetic diversity than the rest of humankind, not having experienced the bottleneck from getting out of Africa.
It's easier, therefore, to find higher diversity of problems too, and the sampling can wildly affect the results of any research. Talking about "black people" or Africans is really like putting together all the rest of humankind, papuasians, native americans, latins, australian aborigenal people etc, and say "see, they have this and that".

My main point is, we can't talk about "African people" as a group and pretend it makes sense.

This is something that until more recent genetic discovery was not well known, so a lot of studies even from a recent past have a huge bias in that sense

@manarock @amerika @TradeMinister

@arteteco @freemo @manarock @TradeMinister

You can talk about any group that has something in common. For example, we say "humans do X or Y"

@amerika

He never said you cant talk about africans as a group, in some respects you can.. but as he pointed out talking about africans as a group is such a huge biodiverse group that it would be like asians, indians, russians, and europeans as all one group and making generalizations about them. Sure you can get away with that some of the time, but with a group that diverse more often than not it will be far too general to be useful.

@TradeMinister @arteteco @manarock

@freemo @amerika @arteteco @manarock Ha! There you have completely dished yourself, quite exploded, busted. The orthodox theory of recent human evolution has Eurasians, meaning all non-Africans, descended from a mixture of what would have been relatively small and highly-selected groups making the difficult journey to the Caucasus area and breeding with the Neanderthal and Denisovan which evolved there and nowhere else AFAIK. And of course mitochondrial DNA and other genetic evidence supports this.
So in reality there are not three or four subspecies, there are two: sub-Saharan Africans and the recent descendants of Africans imported as livestock, and literally everyone else.

@TradeMinister

You clearly have no clue what the technical definition of sub-species is then, which is about what I'd expect from you to be honest.

@amerika @arteteco @manarock

@freemo @amerika @arteteco @manarock You are a windbag of politically-motivated assertions about data and terminology with little or no data offered to support anything you say. I have offered Murray, mitochondrial and other DNA, and you have done nothing but whine about cultures affecting IQ tests to avoid the blatantly obvious fact that American Blacks have grown up speaking something like English, with the same media and so forth, and still cling to the bottom of society and most metrics while dark-skinned non-English-speaking Indio-stock Latinos come here, climb right over the Blacks and their kids speak actual English, not 'Ebonics', and are on their way to the middle class.
Blacks don't just fail in comparison to Whites, where one could whine about slavery forever and I'm sure you would;
they fail in comparison to everyone, including Indios who were also enslaved and cruelly oppressed.
@TradeMinister @freemo @amerika @arteteco @manarock However I don't think that IQ is everything. Africans are less prone to bullshit. Europeans will swallow whatever bullshit the jews come up with, as long as it is "polite" and fancy. In many ways black peoples (excluding niggers/former slaves) are wiser.
@mystik @amerika @arteteco @freemo @manarock As a high (not genius) IQ person, I can say it definitely isn't everything.
There is much to be admired in my redneck logger friends and in Mexican workers, virtues and strengths they have I can't begin to touch.

@TradeMinister

hahahah, he thinks he is high IQ... how cute. This is some first rate kruger-dunning syndrome right here.

@mystik @amerika @arteteco @manarock

@TradeMinister

Nah, you are far too insignificant to be comparable to them in the least. Just an insignificant, grumpy, and not too bright, racist fool, little more.

@mystik @amerika @arteteco @manarock

@mystik

Not ad honimen when its literally true.

To quote him from earlier in the conversation " I just love it when they argue all races are identical despite obvious empirical facts like smart Negroes being about as rare as stupid North Asians."

freespeechextremist.com/object

@arteteco @manarock @TradeMinister @amerika

@freemo @mystik @arteteco @manarock @TradeMinister

Let's see, North Asian average is somewhere around 110 and African (Negroid) average is somewhere around 80-90.

@amerika @mystik @TradeMinister @freemo @manarock

do you have a source for it? I'm not in the psychology field, so I am not very up to date with researches

@arteteco @amerika @mystik @freemo @manarock You should look at the work of Charles Murray, packed with studies. IQ correlates strongly with things like higher earnings (no surprise) but also correlates strongly negatively with things like criminality and out-of-wedlock birth (who knew?).
It does not focus on race at all, but does show studies that human breeds perform differently on.

@arteteco

Just to clarify this dude (who has been excessively racist with his comments earlier in this thread) uses words like "breed" and "subspecies" in a way that is completely ignorant of the scientific definition of those terms. Apparently he things black people are a different "subspecies" from humans and now he is calling them a different "breed"... I wouldnt really trust much of what he says considering he hasnt even come to a point where he understands the most basic terminology.

@TradeMinister @mystik @amerika @manarock

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@amerika

Not really. Cultivar is only used for plants and is intended for plants that underwent an artificial selection for human use. They do not have to have significant genetic diversity as the term has a very applied meaning, so you jest need the phenotype to be different to give the "cultivar" status.

Subspecies is more general, you don't usually use it for artificially selected organisms.

There is a lot of debate on where to set the line, and the last word is by convention always the one of the ICZN (International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature)

This as far as science is involved. "Race", for example, is not a valid taxonomic group, as it's mainly use for applied zootechnical reasons (such as milk cows, or egg hens, even selected dogs), and shouldn't be used outside of that field

@mystik @TradeMinister @freemo @manarock

@amerika

This already happened a long time ago. Science it's too much of a rebel to fit in any propaganda because, as it seems, world and reality don't give a single fuck of what we human think

@mystik @TradeMinister @freemo @manarock

@arteteco @mystik @TradeMinister @freemo @manarock

I disagree. You are as captured as the soft sciences, and most of you are conformists for careerism reasons.

It's the nature of the System -- we can say this about just about any profession.

@amerika

I see. Thanks, but I'm not a scientist, I'm basically an overgrown teen-ager with self-esteem problems trying to get by by doing lame wordpress websites and painting walls for way too little, and I too often find myself easying my difficulties with this world by getting involved in toxic relationships and playing some music. Turns out I'm not that good at that, either.

There you have it, I figured if you want to do some ad hominem attack you should get a more comprehensive picture

@mystik @TradeMinister @freemo @manarock

@arteteco @mystik @TradeMinister @freemo @manarock

Ad hominem attack? That is this form: "you are stupid, therefore you are wrong," and does not apply here.

Interesting biography. I distrust modern anything, especially "science" and "academia," with good cause.

Also, whatever you played in your music is not worse than the utter feces I'm wading through as I go through the DeathMetal.org review queue, so take heart.

@amerika
Well, it became an ad hominem the moment you told me that I am captured and are conformist for career reason and therefore can't see it clearly. This is how I read it

@mystik @TradeMinister @freemo @manarock

@arteteco @amerika @mystik @manarock I would parse this as ad hominem only in the sense that he is suggesting a group you belong to is 'captured'; it is sort of soft ad hominem, not be compared with the genuine ad hominem masterpieces of our resident world-genuis.
@amerika @arteteco @manarock @mystik
There is (or used to be) a scientific ethos: if you were caught faking it, it was about like a monk changing bits of the Bible while scribbling on in the scriptorium: all credibility gone, busted, shunned, lucky to get work as a highschool teacher.
I grew up in that milieu, and in general, back in the day, academic scientists weren't primarily about money: those that were went to Wall St etc. They needed grant funding for research, to pay grad students etc, which introduced political angles and such. My father was one and at the top of his specialty, lived well but modestly, lived to work. If someone faked data, I think he would have crossed the street to avoid them.
He got money and status from the work, but he was all about the work, building and running the machines, producing the data.

@TradeMinister
For many, it still is like that. For others, it wasn't like that even before. I hear what you mean, and I know there is a lot of rot in the academia, even though I am not a scientist I jump from lab to lab to see what's up like an annoying kid.

I was talking about science per se, not "the academia": in the long term, is a tool that will explode in the face of anyone who tries to use it for political reasons, be it Marx with his whole "scientific materialism", be it the latest politician. That's why they cherry pick the truth from there, but never fully adopt the method.

Sorry if I wasn't clear, and thanks for the insight on your father's life

@mystik @amerika @manarock

@arteteco @mystik @amerika @manarock

I hesitated to bring my father up because it is personal and thus irrelevant, and also because it would help people like our world-genius who might come looking for me (I will not mention what field he was at the top of for that reason) , but I wanted to offer it as slight support for my opinion.

I too hung out in labs, played with one of the first caculators (a literal tty with a thick cable going to a briefcase-size box on the floor).

@TradeMinister
Yeah it is irrelevant, but it's interesting and I'm not here to fight: If you remember, this all thing started because I said I am borderline poor. This was a personal, chit chatting post, not a scientific debate one

@mystik @amerika @manarock

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