Artificial Evolution: A Dissenting Term?

 
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I actually don't think "artificial" evolution is as phony as some nay sayers think it is. Look at the logic behind it.

Take a supposedly "intelligent" species, and shoot them up to the point where we are now. No doubt, don't you think said intelligent species would develop technology as well? What I'm basically saying here is what if "artificial evolution" is actually just the natural step as a species grows and reaches certain points?
That's why I proposed that the term has been radicalized by interest groups.

Which is why I may have hinted that such interest groups are being silly by radicalizing the term. I guess we went in a circle on that one.
I guess so. There's no sense in denying that the next step in human evolution will be man-made. But just like other things that have even the potential to improve our daily lives, minority interest groups continue to stand in the way.

Actually I wouldn't say that minority interest groups stand in the way.

It's the way our current system operates. Scientific discovery is good and all. But in the system we currently operate in the prime motivator for development of anything is,

"Will it make money?"

If you want a good example in-theory, take pharmacy companies. Let's say they really get their act together and remove such minor side effects in their products like the bothersome and inconvenient death, and make medication that completely fixes up their clients into top shape again.

Where would they get their income after that? They wouldn't. They'd take nosedives in profits.

It's not the splinter groups that are doing major setbacks to progress. The real big issue is, as always, money. With a sense of humor, I'd put it like this.

Money comes first. Human or scientific improvement is just a side effect.
Last Edit: August 21, 2015, 12:53:57 PM by 


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His eyebrows sparkling, his white beard hangs down to his chest. The thatched mats, spread outside his chise, spread softly, his splendid attos. He polishes, cross-legged, his makiri, with his eyes completely absorbed.

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The god of Ainu Mosir, Ae-Oine Kamuy, descendant of Okiku-Rumi, He perishes, a living corpse. The summers day, the white sunlight, unabrushed, ends simply through his breath alone.
If you want a good example in-theory, take pharmacy companies. Let's say they really get their act together and remove such minor side effects in their products like the bothersome and inconvenient death, and make medication that completely fixes up their clients into top shape again.
Dying isn't a side-effect of the drug; dying is the side-effect of the drug being used in combination of different dispositions and/or combination with other drugs. Every side-effect listed on a product is the result of dozens of clinical trials involving hundreds upon hundreds of subjects. If three out of every hundred persons say they get a headache after taking Zyprexa, "headache" is listed as a potential side-effect.

If you stay awake for forty hours and then fall asleep after reading a book, you didn't fall asleep because you read a book. Reading a book put you in a relaxed state that, combined with pre-existing sleep deprivation, made you fall asleep.

That's not to say there aren't drugs with overwhelmingly negative side-effects that occur in large populations, like that one drug that made boys grow breasts. But that's why you don't just take a pill just because your doctor said so, because he has a quota to fill. Learn for yourself on important issues.
Last Edit: August 21, 2015, 12:58:20 PM by Prime Quinx


 
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"Three out of every hundred" is still too many, in my book. It's like saying "one out of thirty-three."

Hell--one in a thousand is still too frequent to be acceptable. For any side-effect.


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His eyebrows sparkling, his white beard hangs down to his chest. The thatched mats, spread outside his chise, spread softly, his splendid attos. He polishes, cross-legged, his makiri, with his eyes completely absorbed.

He is Ainu.

The god of Ainu Mosir, Ae-Oine Kamuy, descendant of Okiku-Rumi, He perishes, a living corpse. The summers day, the white sunlight, unabrushed, ends simply through his breath alone.
"Three out of every hundred" is still too many, in my book. It's like saying "one out of thirty-three."

Hell--one in a thousand is still too frequent to be acceptable. For any side-effect.
What I'm saying is that the side-effect could either be imaginary (for some; obviously, death isn't imaginary), misattributed, or caused by the drug in combination with something else, not necessarily the fault of the drug. Another problem is taking too high or too small of a dose; both can lead to unintended side-effects that occur in no fault to the prescription.

One in a thousand might even be an overstatement. Like I said, hundreds upon hundreds of subjects over the course of many, many years. The pharmaceutical company is required by law to list any and every side effect given during the course of the trials. That number might not even be as large as three in a thousand (which, like you said, is in itself a large number), it could be as low as a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of a decimal. It doesn't matter; if it happened, it's listed. That's why the list is so long, and also why they proceed certain items with "serious risk". Serious risk means that there is a greater likeliness that you may have the side-effect than being struck by lightning.

Even despite all this, that doesn't mean drugs these drugs are maleficial. Vaccines, for example, prevent an enumerable amount of illnesses every year. Say the McCarthy camp is right, and there is the potential that vaccines cause autism. So fucking what? It'd be a very small chance of it happening, and it'd be better to have autism than polio. The benefit outweighs the negative aspects.


 
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If you want a good example in-theory, take pharmacy companies. Let's say they really get their act together and remove such minor side effects in their products like the bothersome and inconvenient death, and make medication that completely fixes up their clients into top shape again.
Dying isn't a side-effect of the drug; dying is the side-effect of the drug being used in combination of different dispositions and/or combination with other drugs. Every side-effect listed on a product is the result of dozens of clinical trials involving hundreds upon hundreds of subjects. If three out of every hundred persons say they get a headache after taking Zyprexa, "headache" is listed as a potential side-effect.

If you stay awake for forty hours and then fall asleep after reading a book, you didn't fall asleep because you read a book. Reading a book put you in a relaxed state that, combined with pre-existing sleep deprivation, made you fall asleep.

I'm aware of the work that goes into making prescriptions. Of course messing around with chemical compounds and shooting them out among a general population that fluctuates in terms of genetic diversity and reactivity is going to have side effects.

But, what I'm stating is, if somebody where to make something that was truly beneficial with almost no downsides? It'd be shut down, totally. For example.

Nanomachines seem to have everybody's undies in a bundle because of thier possibilities. Let's say for a moment, that somebody or a team of scientists creates long-term, efficient machines that are capable of maintaining themselves indefinitely, and actively act as augments to our own anti-bodies, keeping a data-base of diseseas they encounter, making them incredibly efficient.

It'd never sell on an open market. That, or it would sell for immensly high prices. I mean, naturally, something like that would sell like hotcakes.

But if you're a business, you don't sell shit that sells like hotcakes mainly because it's good. You sell shit like hotcakes because it breaks. Or a better version comes out the following year, and so on and so forth. Maximum profit for minimal cost.

Right now, scientific advancements aren't moving at the top of their game, unhindered. They're moving based on paychecks. And they're regulated by markets.


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His eyebrows sparkling, his white beard hangs down to his chest. The thatched mats, spread outside his chise, spread softly, his splendid attos. He polishes, cross-legged, his makiri, with his eyes completely absorbed.

He is Ainu.

The god of Ainu Mosir, Ae-Oine Kamuy, descendant of Okiku-Rumi, He perishes, a living corpse. The summers day, the white sunlight, unabrushed, ends simply through his breath alone.
If you want a good example in-theory, take pharmacy companies. Let's say they really get their act together and remove such minor side effects in their products like the bothersome and inconvenient death, and make medication that completely fixes up their clients into top shape again.
Dying isn't a side-effect of the drug; dying is the side-effect of the drug being used in combination of different dispositions and/or combination with other drugs. Every side-effect listed on a product is the result of dozens of clinical trials involving hundreds upon hundreds of subjects. If three out of every hundred persons say they get a headache after taking Zyprexa, "headache" is listed as a potential side-effect.

If you stay awake for forty hours and then fall asleep after reading a book, you didn't fall asleep because you read a book. Reading a book put you in a relaxed state that, combined with pre-existing sleep deprivation, made you fall asleep.

I'm aware of the work that goes into making prescriptions. Of course messing around with chemical compounds and shooting them out among a general population that fluctuates in terms of genetic diversity and reactivity is going to have side effects.

But, what I'm stating is, if somebody where to make something that was truly beneficial with almost no downsides? It'd be shut down, totally. For example.

Nanomachines seem to have everybody's undies in a bundle because of thier possibilities. Let's say for a moment, that somebody or a team of scientists creates long-term, efficient machines that are capable of maintaining themselves indefinitely, and actively act as augments to our own anti-bodies, keeping a data-base of diseseas they encounter, making them incredibly efficient.

It'd never sell on an open market. That, or it would sell for immensly high prices. I mean, naturally, something like that would sell like hotcakes.

But if you're a business, you don't sell shit that sells like hotcakes mainly because it's good. You sell shit like hotcakes because it breaks. Or a better version comes out the following year, and so on and so forth. Maximum profit for minimal cost.

Right now, scientific advancements aren't moving at the top of their game, unhindered. They're moving based on paychecks. And they're regulated by markets.
Nah, businesses would love nanomachines. Due to the information they would receive from them (average weight, height, pulse, sodium/sugar intake, heart rate in response to stimuli, etc) it'd be the most accurate way imaginable of knowing what the average person wants. The medical industry would shift away from vaccines and medications to other (at that point) profitable sectors, like genetic testing.


 
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Even despite all this, that doesn't mean drugs these drugs are maleficial. Vaccines, for example, prevent an enumerable amount of illnesses every year. Say the McCarthy camp is right, and there is the potential that vaccines cause autism. So fucking what? It'd be a very small chance of it happening, and it'd be better to have autism than polio. The benefit outweighs the negative aspects.
For me, it's not a matter of the outweighing the negative--it's about taking the negative out in the back and shooting it in the skull, never to be heard from again. Obviously it would be preferable to have autism than polio (to use your example; of course vaccines don't cause autism)--that's a given, and I'm not trying to say otherwise.

But it would be even better if you didn't have polio OR autism.

So I'm just saying--while it's "good" to have these drugs around, they still have potential side-effects.

And until they are all eradicated, I'll never be happy.


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His eyebrows sparkling, his white beard hangs down to his chest. The thatched mats, spread outside his chise, spread softly, his splendid attos. He polishes, cross-legged, his makiri, with his eyes completely absorbed.

He is Ainu.

The god of Ainu Mosir, Ae-Oine Kamuy, descendant of Okiku-Rumi, He perishes, a living corpse. The summers day, the white sunlight, unabrushed, ends simply through his breath alone.
And until they are all eradicated, I'll never be happy.
Then prepare for an unhappy existence. All things have unintended consequences.


 
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Then prepare for an unhappy existence.
I've had one for almost twenty years. I'm very aware of the notion that life is just pure shit.


 
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If you want a good example in-theory, take pharmacy companies. Let's say they really get their act together and remove such minor side effects in their products like the bothersome and inconvenient death, and make medication that completely fixes up their clients into top shape again.
Dying isn't a side-effect of the drug; dying is the side-effect of the drug being used in combination of different dispositions and/or combination with other drugs. Every side-effect listed on a product is the result of dozens of clinical trials involving hundreds upon hundreds of subjects. If three out of every hundred persons say they get a headache after taking Zyprexa, "headache" is listed as a potential side-effect.

If you stay awake for forty hours and then fall asleep after reading a book, you didn't fall asleep because you read a book. Reading a book put you in a relaxed state that, combined with pre-existing sleep deprivation, made you fall asleep.

I'm aware of the work that goes into making prescriptions. Of course messing around with chemical compounds and shooting them out among a general population that fluctuates in terms of genetic diversity and reactivity is going to have side effects.

But, what I'm stating is, if somebody where to make something that was truly beneficial with almost no downsides? It'd be shut down, totally. For example.

Nanomachines seem to have everybody's undies in a bundle because of thier possibilities. Let's say for a moment, that somebody or a team of scientists creates long-term, efficient machines that are capable of maintaining themselves indefinitely, and actively act as augments to our own anti-bodies, keeping a data-base of diseseas they encounter, making them incredibly efficient.

It'd never sell on an open market. That, or it would sell for immensly high prices. I mean, naturally, something like that would sell like hotcakes.

But if you're a business, you don't sell shit that sells like hotcakes mainly because it's good. You sell shit like hotcakes because it breaks. Or a better version comes out the following year, and so on and so forth. Maximum profit for minimal cost.

Right now, scientific advancements aren't moving at the top of their game, unhindered. They're moving based on paychecks. And they're regulated by markets.
Nah, businesses would love nanomachines. Due to the information they would receive from them (average weight, height, pulse, sodium/sugar intake, heart rate in response to stimuli, etc) it'd be the most accurate way imaginable of knowing what the average person wants. The medical industry would shift away from vaccines and medications to other (at that point) profitable sectors, like genetic testing.

Again. See what I mean? Medical industry following along in the wake of profits. I used a poor example there. But the general rule when you're a business is, profit. It always comes first. And it's that mindset that leads current progress along.

Which is what I say is a hinderance to advancement, more than splinter groups. You shouldn't be in the scientific game to make money and follow along after it. You shouldn't regulate advances based on profits.

If you want a real world example of this, take my province. I'd like my home to be solar powered and wind powered. I've all the math and neccessary calculations done for everything. Now, there's a province a few doors over to me, Ontario.

They pay people who hook themselves up to the grid and feed excess power into it from their solar farms or when they're not actively using any power. My province?

If I were to hook myself up to the grid and feed power into it I'd be arrested. And I've looked up the reasons why.

I'll give you one guess what it all comes down to.


 
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All things have unintended consequences.
And, this is just patently false, of course. And even if it were the case, that doesn't mean we shouldn't strive for perfection. Or strive to mitigate the consequences.

You know, instead of saying, "Oh well--these anti-suicide pills might end up making you more suicidal. Oh well--All things have unintended consequences. No use fixing it." That's garbage, and you know it.

I was brought here without my consent--it isn't unreasonable for me to expect anything short of perfection.
Why should I be happy with imperfection?
Last Edit: August 21, 2015, 02:01:48 PM by Verbatim


 
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All things have unintended consequences.
And, this is just patently false, of course. And even if it were the case, that doesn't mean we shouldn't do to strive for perfection. To strive to mitigate the consequences.

You know, instead of saying, "Oh well--these anti-suicide pills might end up making you more suicidal. Oh well--All things have unintended consequences. No use fixing it."

To be the tin-foil-hattist of the bunch in this discussion.

I, personally, wouldn't put it past companies to purposely blow off side effects for the sake of profits. There's counter meds for side effects, as well. You take medication, sometimes rather than take you off one that gives you side effects, they also hit you with a counter prescription to counterarct the side effects.

Which of course, comes right out of your pocket. It's capitalizing on the fact that a percentage of the population aren't cured, but also made actively sick.

And I wouldn't be surprised if some forms of medication have the slack loosened on them and put up on the markets, as is, with those side effects in-mind to make an extra buck.

Verb's not wrong either. A lot of people go "Eh the good stuff outweighs the bad stuff so it's good to go."

I'm just bolstering his point here. There's a hell of a lot of various sides to consider here when we talk about stuff like this.
Last Edit: August 21, 2015, 02:06:04 PM by 


 
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Exactly. There is no rational reason anyone should be "happy", or even content, with the state of psychiatry today.


 
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Exactly. There is no rational reason anyone should be "happy", or even content, with the state of psychiatry today.

You know how a fair number of parents usher their kids to be doctors not because they want to help people, but because "you get well paid as a doctor?"

Yeah, see, I don't really trust somebody who's doing their job because they're getting paid well. I'd trust them if they were doing their job because they loved doing their job.


 
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Couldn't possibly agree more.


 
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Couldn't possibly agree more.

Sorry to derail Prime's thread here. But Verb. Just imagine it. Because it puts me into a fit. I'm a strong young lad with an able body. But unlike most people my age, I haven't fucked off from the area off to the city or wherever. And I take small time short jobs here and there as I need them.

But get this.

I get suggestions from people.

"Oh you should go work up north on the rigs. There's a lot of money in it."

I can't even. I have to fight not to laugh. I'm going to sign up for arguably one of the shittiest, backbreaking jobs of all fucking time, because "the pay is good!?"

Risk fucking up my entire body, because I see 30-40 year olds who have worked on the rigs and fucked their bodies up so much that they can no longer work, because "the pay is good."

How fucking insane is that. It's ludicrous. It's absolute insanity.

And the best part is, we founded a system on it.

Last Edit: August 21, 2015, 02:28:07 PM by 


 
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Back on topic here though Prime, there's always opposition. And I'd dare say it, there's always gonna be opposition. To this date in time, there has never been a single ideal, movement, or trend in the history of our species that's had everybody giving thumbs up of agreement.

That's just what comes with existing as separate entities with varying levels of intelligence and perception. I'd agree that in most part, nay-sayers and adamant supporters in the belief that technological progress is somehow "un-natural" are silly.

Everything we've ever physically built came out of natural concepts in some form.


 
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It's unfortunate that most of the naysayers are just subscribers of shitty Gaia philosophy.

Because they're ignoring the fucking minefield of real issues there are with drugs. Like minimizing their side effects.

But no, pretending as though drugs are the way to go is just as shitty and stupid as being against them because "muh nature" .
If not shittier and stupider.
Last Edit: August 21, 2015, 03:00:21 PM by Verbatim


 
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It's unfortunate that most of the naysayers are just subscribers of shitty Gaia philosophy.

Because they're ignoring the fucking minefield of real issues there are with drugs. Like minimizing their side effects.

As well as direction. There's a good way for technology to go, and there's a bad way. I'm just gonna jump into my firesuit here before I say it as an example.

Internet.

The internet has some fantastic upsides, like being a database of information. And, in most cases, giving better means of communication.

But there's the downsides too, that come with social media and trends and such. And, you'll notice that a lot of tech these days is geared towards the trends, which, essentially directs the advancement of the tech.

The bulk of our population is stupid. And without even knowing it they're the ones directing things. Because it's also the stupid people on top, capitalizing off the stupid people on the bottom.

Have you ever noticed that? It's never really been the great minds and inventors that have lead. They've done their work because they had a passion for their work or they wanted to. But it was people that took their creations and adapted them.

In most cases, adapting them for the wrong reasons. Which gets me thinking.

I wonder why it's like that.

Perhaps they should make a vaccine for stupid. Wouldn't that be something?

Side effects not including death, of course.


 
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Perhaps they should make a vaccine for stupid. Wouldn't that be something?

Side effects not including death, of course.
I would be okay if every stupid person died, to be honest.

so, everyone


 
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Perhaps they should make a vaccine for stupid. Wouldn't that be something?

Side effects not including death, of course.
I would be okay if every stupid person died, to be honest.

so, everyone

Woah there partner. Don't you go all anti-natalist on me now.

Look on the bright side! Technically every stupid person is going to die anyway!

There's just a bit of a time delay is all.

Don't make me think about the subject of death as being a cure-all Verb. Cause I reckon it's not. I'd not like to derail Prime's pretty thread now.


 
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the main reason i don't agree with her, though, is because i think anti-natalism is so much better

and it's not even that I disagree with her--it's just that, I don't see any compelling reason to be like, "wow, drugs are so awesome! drugs are the future!"

No. Fuck that.

drugs are awful--period
and they shouldn't be the future until they're 100% safe to fucking use
Last Edit: August 21, 2015, 03:13:19 PM by Verbatim


 
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I recognize the potential of drugs--but there's no reason to be content with where they're at now. that's all i'm saying


 
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the main reason i don't agree with her, though, is because i think anti-natalism is so much better

But it's a fundamentally flawed concept in terms of time and our own evolutionary traits. As I told Prime. Nowhere in our history have we ever had 100% agreement in anything, be it philosophy, ideals, morals, or perception. Even intelligence.

It's a concept that can never be realized or reached. And, taking into account the expire time on our star, and the supposed expire time of our universe, it'll all end anyway. On the scale of the universe, we could exist for another few thousand years. Maybe a million. And it would be an eye-blink.

It'd be almost nothing. Your own lifespan is basically less than dust. I worded it wrong though. The concept itself? Decent on paper.

But like communisim, if applied to real world scenarios?

It's a failure. And if you're going to say that one day there's a possibility that we can reach 100% agreement on something?

Then we're not flawed human beings anymore.

Annnnnd I just pitched the ball into the court of anti-natilism conversation.
Last Edit: August 21, 2015, 03:22:50 PM by 


 
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I recognize the potential of drugs--but there's no reason to be content with where they're at now. that's all i'm saying

I hear ya on that.


 
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It's a concept that can never be realized or reached.
says you

we freed the slaves and we legalized gay marriage

pretty sure we can convince people to stop giving birth
it's... not really asking for a whole lot
Quote
It's a failure. And if you're going to say that one day there's a possibility that we can reach 100% agreement on something?
we wouldn't need 100%


 
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the main reason i don't agree with her, though, is because i think anti-natalism is so much better

and it's not even that I disagree with her--it's just that, I don't see any compelling reason to be like, "wow, drugs are so awesome! drugs are the future!"

No. Fuck that.

drugs are awful--period
and they shouldn't be the future until they're 100% safe to fucking use

I also wouldn't bet the future is a solid avenue of approach either since there's other forms of science out there. I wouldn't say drugs are the future solely. They may play a role in things but not the entirety of them.


 
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It's a concept that can never be realized or reached.
says you

we freed the slaves and we legalized gay marriage

pretty sure we can convince people to stop giving birth
it's... not really asking for a whole lot
Quote
It's a failure. And if you're going to say that one day there's a possibility that we can reach 100% agreement on something?
we wouldn't need 100%

Convince people to stop giving birth? Not asking for a whole lot? Okay. Flip the table.

Is a Christain asking you to put your faith in God asking for a whole lot? I'd wager to you it would be.

And 100%? Yeah, we would. Because if you don't have 100% concensus there's holdouts. There's opposition. There's active resistance. For example.

This very fucking discussion about people being opposed to certain forms of technology as "un-natural."


 
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I also wouldn't bet the future is a solid avenue of approach either since there's other forms of science out there. I wouldn't say drugs are the future solely. They may play a role in things but not the entirety of them.
that was just meant to be a mock of the stereotypical idealist's zeal over dumb bullshit--not meant to be taken literally


 
Sandtrap
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Rockets on my X
I also wouldn't bet the future is a solid avenue of approach either since there's other forms of science out there. I wouldn't say drugs are the future solely. They may play a role in things but not the entirety of them.
that was just meant to be a mock of the stereotypical idealist's zeal over dumb bullshit--not meant to be taken literally

I TOOK IT LITERALLY VERB.

I LITERALLY TOOK IT LITERALLY.