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Topics - đ Aria đŽ
61
« on: August 11, 2016, 10:44:00 PM »
tfw nobody will actually ever getting around to adapting Conviction
This arc is basically the Industrial Revolution of manga
62
« on: August 06, 2016, 09:24:20 PM »
Officially a Christmas Cake
63
« on: August 05, 2016, 06:35:00 PM »
There's a silver lining to not having a car anymore, I guess.
64
« on: June 27, 2016, 09:16:44 PM »
I think my ribs are bruised and I have a mild concussion. ama
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« on: June 04, 2016, 02:43:29 PM »
But the Mod list is NOT current. Explain your laziness.
66
« on: May 18, 2016, 07:09:45 PM »
I don't mean the good dank either. Half the lights were off and the glass was filled with shitty proxies. They didn't have anything worth buying either. One star, but only because it wasn't a long drive.
67
« on: May 13, 2016, 02:41:30 PM »
The print button isn't showing up. You should fix that, it's really messing up my browsing experience.
68
« on: May 11, 2016, 08:56:34 PM »
Chally x Azumarill Das x Lemmy Psy x Tru
69
« on: April 30, 2016, 12:48:06 AM »
I don't want to drop $100 on permission spells, but the alternative is to clutter with Snags, Leaks, and Anticipates.
Why can't things just be cheaper?
70
« on: April 22, 2016, 09:00:41 PM »
What should the post say?
71
« on: April 22, 2016, 08:55:07 PM »
So two years ago, there were dozens of complete Shadow Tower copies floating around ebay and amazon. Now everything is either low_quality trash with missing cover art and disc only, or it's $150 minimum.
I should have grabbed it way back when for $10 complete you feel me? Have you ever missed an opportunity and it really came back to bite you?
72
« on: April 21, 2016, 01:33:52 PM »
I am doing a statistics project for a class, and I need more data. Sep7agon seems like a large enough community to get results from.
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« on: April 15, 2016, 05:45:46 PM »
Any answer besides Chinese Mecha Batman is probably wrong
75
« on: April 11, 2016, 10:53:32 PM »
So I decided to read half of The Road in pitch black darkness (via Kindle app) while maintaining a cluster headache and now I'm having to calm myself down because fucking post apocalyptica had me entranced and now my head hurts even more because I thought too hard about it
How're your nights going?
76
« on: March 24, 2016, 01:44:01 PM »
Type 1 Diabeetus is a bitch. The tribe lost a great member.
77
« on: February 19, 2016, 10:12:53 PM »
Awkward.
78
« on: February 12, 2016, 04:26:37 PM »
I've been thinking lately on Descartes' Meditations and attempting to formulate my own response to his arguments, primary of these being the Dream Argument and the Evil Demon Scenario. The Dream Argument 1. I often have perceptions very much like the ones I usually have in sensation while I am dreaming.
2. There are no definite signs to distinguish dream experience from waking experience.
therefore,
3. It is possible that I am dreaming right now and that all of my perceptions are false. Evil Demon Scenario 1. We believe that there is an all powerful Demon who has created us and who is all powerful.
2. He has it in his power to make us be deceived even about matters of mathematical knowledge which we seem to see clearly.
therefore, 3. It is possible that we are deceived even in our mathematical knowledge of the basic structure of the world. Descartes refutes the latter argument himself by attempting to prove the ontological existence of God. For obvious reasons, I don't hold much favor for it. He again refutes both arguments with his infamous Cogito Ergo Sum: Cogito Ergo Sum 1. Even if we assume that there is a deceiver, from the very fact that I am deceived it follows that I exist.
2. In general it will follow from any state of thinking (e.g., imagining, sensing, feeling, reasoning) that I exist. While I can be deceived about the objective content of any thought, I cannot be deceived about the fact that I exist and that I seem to perceive objects with certain characteristics.
3. Since I only can be certain of the existence of myself insofar as I am thinking, I have knowledge of my existence only as a thinking thing (res cogitans). Disregarding the assumption of an I, appears to be sound. This, however, holds that the only means through which we can know are through base rationality, such as "some being experiences something, therefore some being exists." I still harbor my own doubts toward the assumption that nothing, besides the knowledge that something exists which can experience things, so I started searching for alternative arguments besides Cogito. My favorite of which is Gilbert Ryle's Counterfeit Coinage Argument against Skepticism. Counterfeit Coinage Argument In a country where there is a coinage, false coins can be manufactured and passed⌠An ordinary citizen⌠might become suspicious of the genuineness of any particular coin that he received. But however general his suspicions might be, there remains one proposition which he cannot entertain⌠that all coins are counterfeits. For there must be an answer to the question "Counterfeits of what?" Essentially, a false experience presupposes the existence of true experiences; we can state with certainty that some experience is definitely true. Therefore, since we have knowledge that some of our experiences are true (regardless of the number of experiences, or knowledge of our knowledge), we can state that we can be certain of knowledge besides that of existence. Definitions and terminology aside, are there any other substantial arguments to be made against Universal Doubt?
79
« on: February 01, 2016, 10:37:32 PM »
Why doesn't posting come naturally? Learn me how to be the single worst poster on sep7.
80
« on: January 08, 2016, 08:47:44 PM »
He's the boxer in your briefs
81
« on: December 13, 2015, 11:00:03 PM »
The new Alvin and the Chipmunks movie is going to be fire fam
Who else is seeing the midnight release?
82
« on: November 18, 2015, 11:45:04 AM »
After reading through Turkey's thread, I realized just how fractured the definition of "hate speech" really is between the Libertarian and Commutarian perspectives. So I went digging and found this article on the ABA website. I've chopped it down slightly for easier reading: Debating Hate Speech
Hate speech is speech that offends, threatens, or insults groups, based on race, color, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, disability, or other traits. Should hate speech be discouraged? The answer is easyâof course! However, developing such policies runs the risk of limiting an individualâs ability to exercise free speech. When a conflict arises about which is more importantâprotecting community interests or safeguarding the rights of the individualâa balance must be found that protects the civil rights of all without limiting the civil liberties of the speaker.
In this country there is no right to speak fighting wordsâthose words without social value, directed to a specific individual, that would provoke a reasonable member of the group about whom the words are spoken. For example, a person cannot utter a racial or ethnic epithet to another if those words are likely to cause the listener to react violently. However, under the First Amendment, individuals do have a right to speech that the listener disagrees with and to speech that is offensive and hateful.
Acts Speak Louder than Words One way to deal effectively with hate speech is to create laws and policies that discourage bad behavior but do not punish bad beliefs. Another way of saying this is to create laws and policies that do not attempt to define hate speech as hate crimes, or âacts.â In two recent hate crime cases, the U.S. Supreme Court concluded that acts, but not speech, may be regulated by law.
R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, 505 U.S. 377 (1992), involved the juvenile court proceeding of a white 14-year-old who burned a cross on the front lawn of the only black family in a St. Paul, Minn., neighborhood. Burning a cross is a very hateful thing to do: it is one of the symbols of the Ku Klux Klan, an organization that has spread hatred and harm throughout this country. The burning cross clearly demonstrated to this family that at least this youth did not welcome them in the neighborhood. The family brought charges, and the boy was prosecuted under a Minnesota criminal law that made it illegal to place, on public or private property, a burning cross, swastika, or other symbol likely to arouse âanger, alarm, or resentment in others on the basis of race, color, creed, religion, or gender.â The case went all the way to the Supreme Court, which ruled that the Minnesota law was unconstitutional because it violated the youthâs First Amendment free speech rights.
Note that the Court did not rule that the act itselfâburning a cross on the familyâs front lawnâwas legal. In fact, the youth could have been held criminally responsible for damaging property or for threatening or intimidating the family. Instead, the law was defective because it improperly focused on the motivation forâthe thinking that results inâcriminal behavior rather than on criminal behavior itself. It attempted to punish the youth for the content of his message, not for his actions.
In the second case, Wisconsin v. Mitchell, 508 U.S. 476 (1993), Mitchell and several black youth were outside a movie theater after viewing Mississippi Burning, in which several blacks are beaten. A white youth happened to walk by, and Mitchell yelled, âThere goes a white boy; go get him!â Mitchell and the others attacked and beat the boy.
In criminal law, penalties are usually based on factors such as the seriousness of the act, whether it was accidental or intentional, and the harm it caused to the victim. It is also not unusual to have crimes treated more harshly depending upon who the victim is. For example, in most states battery (beating someone) is punished more harshly if the victim is a senior citizen, a young child, a police officer, or a teacher.
Under Wisconsin law, the penalty for battery is increased if the offender intentionally selects the victim âbecause of the race, religion, color, disability, sexual orientation and national origin or ancestry of that person.â The Supreme Court ruled in Wisconsin v. Mitchell that this increased penalty did not violate the free speech rights of the accused. The Court reasoned that the penalty was increased because the act itself was directed at a particular victim, not because of Mitchellâs thoughts.
Success on Campus Hereâs how one community recently approached an incidence of hate speech by calling attention to it rather than attempting to suppress itâby encouraging speech that pointed out how out of place the hate speech was in a community that values the dignity of all.
Matt Hale, a notorious racist, was recently asked to speak at the University of Illinois at Springfield. Hale is the leader of the World of the Creator, a white supremacist group. His presence on campus was controversial. Several students, faculty, and community members thought that the university should cancel his appearance. Instead, he was allowed to speak. Haleâs audience was not impressed. He came across as having a confusing set of beliefs that were out of place in a democratic, multicultural society. Several faculty and students spoke out against his message of hatred.
By allowing Hale to speak, the university recognized free speech rights but also provided a means for community members to respond. Communitarian and libertarian goals were both met. How do the members of this community define hate speech? Under what circumstances is it right to limit speech?
83
« on: November 12, 2015, 03:42:55 PM »
Look at this ruggedly handsome man and tell me you wouldn't awkwardly fumble through a non-conversation with him.
84
« on: November 08, 2015, 07:20:34 PM »
AMA me anything
85
« on: November 01, 2015, 10:27:53 PM »
Absolutely everybody despises them. Why the fuck would any right-minded professor fuck with this horseshit? That or mandatory peer review; as I'm making this thread, I have a paper due in 24 hours and not a single fucking member of my group has shown me their paper nor has anyone reviewed mine. I'm going to be real fuckin' pissed if I get docked points because these assbags didn't give enough of a god damn to post a rough draft.
86
« on: October 24, 2015, 11:51:51 PM »
Now that I've grabbed your attention, I demand that my alt unlock the Bungle thread so that Psy's alt can lock it
87
« on: October 21, 2015, 11:25:09 AM »
88
« on: October 15, 2015, 07:32:14 PM »
89
« on: October 11, 2015, 12:59:25 PM »
What game would you like to own that just costs too much to be a practical purchase?
To start with an obvious example, Earthbound; the game isn't actually rare whatsoever, but cart-only copies sell for $195. Buying it CIB runs at an average of $573 (in comparison, CIB copies of Metal Gear for NES run at about $70).
90
« on: October 07, 2015, 10:19:04 AM »
The article is a little too long to quote, but the bulk of the piece is below: Ben Carson, the retired neurosurgeon who is a leading Republican presidential contender, has intensified his defense of gun rights in response to last weekâs Oregon campus massacre, arguing that the Second Amendment is more sacred than spilled blood.
He also suggested that the victims should have had the courage to attack their assailant and accused President Obama of politicizing the tragedy by embracing the families of the dead.
In a Facebook question-and-answer session Monday night, Mr. Carson tried to show empathy with victims by recalling that two of his cousins were killed in the streets and that, as a doctor, he had removed many bullets from the bodies of gunshot victims. But he said the right to bear arms was paramount.
âI never saw a body with bullet holes that was more devastating than taking the right to arm ourselves away,â Mr. Carson wrote.
And on Tuesday, Mr. Carsonâs suggestion that he would have fought back in the face of an attack like the one in Roseburg, Ore., went viral, drawing widespread rebuke from his critics and reviving questions about his candidacy.
âI would not just stand there and let him shoot me,â Mr. Carson, who has been surging in recent polls, said on Fox News. âI would say: âHey, guys, everybody attack him! He may shoot me, but he canât get us all.â â
Offering a prescription that echoed the National Rifle Associationâs view that arming âgood guysâ is the answer, Mr. Carson also suggested to USA Today that kindergarten instructors should have weapons training. âIf the teacher was trained in the use of that weapon and had access to it, I would be much more comfortable if they had one than if they didnât,â Mr. Carson said.
Like many Republican presidential candidates who have sought to express sympathy for victims while maintaining support for gun rights, Mr. Carson has struggled to address the issue with sensitivity. Belief in limited government is central to the Republican Party, and those running for office have found it challenging to offer solutions to an epidemic of violence that do not involve more federal oversight. http://www.nytimes.com/politics/first-draft/2015/10/06/ben-carson-says-he-would-have-been-more-aggressive-against-oregon-gunman/Thoughts?
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