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Apr 15 2026 05:57pm
I use my meal allowance left overs and trade balance for fg.
Itโ€™s pretty niche.
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Apr 15 2026 06:08pm
Plato was a man of the people; he wrote for the masses. Phaedo is one of the most beautifully written pieces in history. His philosophy is art in itself. That's very different from Kant writing intentionally dense prose to fit in amongst a small niche of academic elite.

I'm saying, study these guys for history and appreciation of their works as art, not for efficiency of understanding up to the current limit of knowledge. I will concede that you're right about some areas of math like calculus being very well-developed (if unfinished) since newton, and that enables us to look at modern treatises without the need to look at the comparatively unpolished originals. But the ancient greeks understood triangles better than anyone alive today, so maybe popping open Euclid's elements would be necessary for acquiring that level of understanding.

In elementary school I was 't reading Locke or Hume, I was getting all my lessons on morality from Pokemon and WWF Smackdown. Which I think is just as good. In 200 years, people will boast to their friends about understanding the moral lessons contained in One Piece and WAP. Some scholars might even write a dissertation on it, and it'll give them the same clarity you got when reading Hume and Locke. This isn't to downplay your own enlightenment, it's just to say that meaning is everywhere, not just in dusty tomes. Looking to one particular snippet of history and a narrow range of thinkers for one's morality (which you never said you did) could be classified as a religion which, no hate, but there's so much more to appreciate.

Also I never got into Feynman, he's great for physicists but I need my epsilons and deltas or I am an unhappy boy.

Now excuse me while I go eat some food. Epicurus told me to do so and he is NOT one to disobey.


I don't know about these judgments :)

Phaedo is great, i churned through all of Platos dialogues a few years ago as audiobooks while operating on mice (so i mightve been a little distracted at times) i don't see how it would ever become anything like "the most beautiful" - but such is aesthetics i guess.

I also disagree with your relativism, which i find becomes extreme here. To some extent i think you're being funny, but i also think you have a sort of anger/frustration there, which maybe needs that nihilistic relativism on top somehow. Maybe i'm wrong.

I never did read much moral philosophy. I kind of always used to read "around" it. I'm just not as interested in the normative, even if hugely interested in the neurobiological underpinnings of the normative. I know of pokemon but not the other things you mentioned, i imagine they are also popular culture. It's not bad to watch good entertainment that you enjoy, but it isn't moral philosophy either. It certainly has moral messages, and indeed, do with them as you like, but they don't constitute attempts at rational inquiry into these subjects. Perhaps this is what you objected to in my appreciation of the classics of philosophy/math/physics, but i stand by that opinion - not only do i believe some of it to be on par with the views of modern science. It's often rediscovered and reused by modern scientists, and when that happens sometimes creates the biggest advances, i think there are many examples of this. This only increases in occurance as our "common knowledge" as scientists wanes. I've always wanted the real humboldtian "Studium Generale" back in full!

Will i watch disney movies with my son? obviously yes, plus whatever other exciting thing he gets into. But will i *force* him to watch a particular show like a disney movie or pokemon movie? no.

Will i force him to learn mathematics though? Yeah, just like our societies one the whole has decided that a minimum of mathematical and reading ability should be lovingly forced onto every child, so i have some basics that i see it as my responsibility to foist onto my poor offspring. Mathematics is certainly in there, but so is some "philosophy" (which for me, is simply a broader more term standing behind mathematics, physics, biology, etc.)

Come to think of it, my girlfriend may have a few disney flicks that make "curriculum" status.

Do you play the Cello? My neighbor is practicing bach like mad.

This post was edited by emiq on Apr 15 2026 06:28pm
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Apr 15 2026 06:43pm
I do subscribe to moral relativism. In a society where all the apples have a disease which instantly kills any human who eats it, it is morally good for the ruling class to ban eating apples. But in a society with healthy apples, such a law would be morally bad. I'm a complete layman regarding philosophy though, I just kinda wing it, so maybe that isn't what normative ethics is about, idk. To your point about nihilism, that's a mischaracterization- I said that meaning is everywhere, not that life is meaningless.

I think a lot of people, and in particular academic types, gatekeep philosophy behind abstruse texts to appear more learned-- I see that as elitism. I want to open the floodgates. There is moral philosophy being conveyed when Ash doesn't evolve Pikachu even though Raichu is stronger in theory. The maxim is friendship over personal gain. It's not deep but it's there. This frustration I have with elitism and gatekeeping is anger, yeah.

To the point of raising kids a certain way, you do you fam, I support you king. I will teach my son math too when he pops out in a few months. Not force per se, but... sneakily encourage ๐Ÿ˜ˆ.

I play the cello yeah. Not as much nowadays but still got it.

This post was edited by celloboy126 on Apr 15 2026 06:47pm
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Apr 15 2026 06:45pm
Some of these posts would do numbers on LinkedIn
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Apr 15 2026 06:55pm
this is what i did, started this season with 0 fg i leveled warlock to 99, sold everything i didn't need

then i spent like 15k on gear for my char and still profited 37k this ladder


You canโ€™t fool me, I know a lotto winner when I see one ๐Ÿ‘€
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Apr 15 2026 07:00pm
You canโ€™t fool me, I know a lotto winner when I see one ๐Ÿ‘€


I have won the lottery twice on jsp but that was in like 2022
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Apr 15 2026 07:13pm
I do subscribe to moral relativism. In a society where all the apples have a disease which instantly kills any human who eats it, it is morally good for the ruling class to ban eating apples. But in a society with healthy apples, such a law would be morally bad. I'm a complete layman regarding philosophy though, I just kinda wing it, so maybe that isn't what normative ethics is about, idk. To your point about nihilism, that's a mischaracterization- I said that meaning is everywhere, not that life is meaningless.

I think a lot of people, and in particular academic types, gatekeep philosophy behind abstruse texts to appear more learned-- I see that as elitism. I want to open the floodgates. There is moral philosophy being conveyed when Ash doesn't evolve Pikachu even though Raichu is stronger in theory. The maxim is friendship over personal gain. It's not deep but it's there. This frustration I have with elitism and gatekeeping is anger, yeah.

To the point of raising kids a certain way, you do you fam, I support you king. I will teach my son math too when he pops out in a few months. Not force per se, but... sneakily encourage ๐Ÿ˜ˆ.


I didn't mean moral relativisim.

Your were giving an interesting critique of my interest in anachronistic philosophy and scientific theory, and (it seemed to me) said "why not just watch pokemon". I think that comment descended into a kind of hyperrelativism where intaking any kind of "information" equals "knowledge" equals "learning" and in the end those words thin out until they vanish. I don't believe reading, say Hume, is "as good as" studying history or watching cartoons, for the purposes of learning/forming theory, about the topics he treats. Outside of the aim of learning/discovery - sure, anything is as good as anything. That's where the moral relativism would sit.

I think there are very concrete examples of modern scientific breakthroughs that have that exact trajectory. And so as an avenue of scientific inquiry i think it is meaningful.

Whether you'd force your son (CONGRATULATIONS!) to do math or not - the school system presumably would. I just agree with the worlds school systems in that basic premise, that it would constitute neglect not to teach them that. Just like it would not teaching them to wipe after taking a dump :)

I cannot see how anything i've said could be described as elitism or gatekeeping of philosophy.

I think what you reacted to was what you saw as verbosity and unnecessary mentioning of my own interests, in the initial post (which i did warn you not to read :))

I don't blame you, i think it's personality type. There's this lady in my larger research centre (not near my lab) she's an excellent engineer. Helps us with a lot of math and programming. The first 2-3 times i spoke to her at meetings/conferences i would come up to her almost beaming and jumping and mention the latest mathematical area i was excited about. I remember the first itme it was about frequency domain analysis and fourier transforms. I think she had the same feeling you may have had. She said rather deflationarily: "yeah well, it's a nice tool, but that's what it is" - and i must have GUSHED something like: Yes, sure tool, but iSnT IT AlSo ThE DeEpest TRUTH EVER!? she eventually got over her worries. Perhaps she found out i was so dumb i couldn't possibly be truly arrogant or conceited.

But like her ... i might argue that you're the elitist there :) YOU are thinking somthing like "he doesn't know ENOUGH about fourier transforms (or whatever it was you reacted to) to speak it's name!" when really, i never purported to be any kind of expert on it.

'm a medical doctor by original training, with a focus on neuro, so yeah, i can be boring at length about that. But is it really so bad that i love *your* field too? Who's standing watch at the gate, really? :D

This post was edited by emiq on Apr 15 2026 07:23pm
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Apr 15 2026 07:19pm
If I have enough time (which is almost never), I sometimes spend a day buying stuff on PC and then sell it on PS, XBox or Switch to make profit. Thats almost always profitable since the player base there is smaller and stuff is more expensive.


Even though all you have to do is get up and move to the other side of the living room lmao isn't this how private equity fucked over entire generations on the housing market?

And why we don't get any new dedicated players on d2.
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Apr 15 2026 08:19pm
I didn't mean moral relativisim.

Your were giving an interesting critique of my interest in anachronistic philosophy and scientific theory, and (it seemed to me) said "why not just watch pokemon". I think that comment descended into a kind of hyperrelativism where intaking any kind of "information" equals "knowledge" equals "learning" and in the end those words thin out until they vanish. I don't believe reading, say Hume, is "as good as" studying history or watching cartoons, for the purposes of learning/forming theory, about the topics he treats. Outside of the aim of learning/discovery - sure, anything is as good as anything. That's where the moral relativism would sit.

I think there are very concrete examples of modern scientific breakthroughs that have that exact trajectory. And so as an avenue of scientific inquiry i think it is meaningful.

Whether you'd force your son (CONGRATULATIONS!) to do math or not - the school system presumably would. I just agree with the worlds school systems in that basic premise, that it would constitute neglect not to teach them that. Just like it would not teaching them to wipe after taking a dump :)

I cannot see how anything i've said could be described as elitism or gatekeeping of philosophy.

I think what you reacted to was what you saw as verbosity and unnecessary mentioning of my own interests, in the initial post (which i did warn you not to read :))

I don't blame you, i think it's personality type. There's this lady in my larger research centre (not near my lab) she's an excellent engineer. Helps us with a lot of math and programming. The first 2-3 times i spoke to her at meetings/conferences i would come up to her almost beaming and jumping and mention the latest mathematical area i was excited about. I remember the first itme it was about frequency domain analysis and fourier transforms. I think she had the same feeling you may have had. She said rather deflationarily: "yeah well, it's a nice tool, but that's what it is" - and i must have GUSHED something like: Yes, sure tool, but iSnT IT AlSo ThE DeEpest TRUTH EVER!? she eventually got over her worries. Perhaps she found out i was so dumb i couldn't possibly be truly arrogant or conceited.

But like her ... i might argue that you're the elitist there :) YOU are thinking somthing like "he doesn't know ENOUGH about fourier transforms (or whatever it was you reacted to) to speak it's name!" when really, i never purported to be any kind of expert on it.

'm a medical doctor by original training, with a focus on neuro, so yeah, i can be boring at length about that. But is it really so bad that i love *your* field too? Who's standing watch at the gate, really? :D


You said that Pokemon wasn't philosophy, I claimed it was- that is what I mean by gatekeeping, like someone can only delve into philosophy if they read a subset of like 5 European men from 200 years ago. I think if you tell anyone that as a child you read Hume and Locke and your mind exploded, they would come to the conclusion that you're trying to show off, which is the impression I got. It's the "as a child" part. I've read them too and don't see how any child could like that but if you are that 1% then I'll eat my words. There were other flags too, such as the excessive verbosity beyond the point of reason. But if you just speak that way because you love to, and not to show off or sound erudite, I'll eat my words. Happy to be wrong, this has just been my impression.
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Apr 15 2026 09:35pm
I bought a "shako" that was a gemmed helm last ladder, so that still works if anyone wants to remind me again
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