Petroleum is what makes cars move, obviously. That's it!
All those engineers and mechanics who waffle on about physics, laws of motion, and engines and stuff are all a bunch of idiots. I have no respect for them. I don't need to know about that stuff to talk about how cars work!
You just put petrol in it, it burns and it moves. Burning petrol is what makes cars move. That's all we're talking about here! The extent of our debate is whether or not petrol makes cars move. Not how it makes cars go, that's a wider debate for non-idiots.
(Electric cars? Nonsense. Where's the gas tank?)
(Boats? No, they're completely different. I mean yes you put the same fuel in them, but they're clearly not cars, so it's not the same.)
My comment just touched the tip of an iceberg that is an entire realm of philosophical and scientific debate that has occupied some of the brightest minds, across multiple disciplines, for decades. But sure, it's just stupid ridiculous garbage 🙄
You probably think you sounded really clever.
No it hasn't, and if you don't see why, and why your explanation is incredibly simplistic and insufficient as an explanation of consciousness, you may not fully realise or understand the problem.
I don't believe in life after death etc. and I believe consciousness is indeed manifested somewhere in the brain (and tied to those electrical impulses in some way), yet find your explanation utterly insufficient to address the "hard problem" of consciousness. It doesn't explain qualia, or subjective experience.
Now obviously we do seem to have proved that consciousness is somehow related to such electrical impulses and other processes in the brain... but to say that we even begin to understand how actual subjective conscious experience arises from this is simply not true.
For starters: your logical steps from brain uses electricity -> consciousness is in the brain -> therefore consciousness is in the electrical impulses is a non-sequitur.
To illustrate: CPUs are made up of logic gates that utilise electricity to perform many operations. We know mathematical calculations are done in the CPU. Therefore mathematics is in the logic gates. Does that sound right to you? Is that in any way a satisfactory explanation of what maths is, or where mathemarical concepts exists or how marhs came to be? Does maths only exist in electrical logic gates?
Doesn't seem at all right does it? Yet that's precisely the same leap of logic you just used.
Now before you reply with "ah, but that's totally different" carefully examine why you think it's different for consciousness...
In addition, there are more than just electrical impulses going on in the brain. Why do you choose electrical or only electrical? Do you think all electrical systems are conscious? What about a computer? What about your house electrical system? Do you draw a distinction? If so, where is the distinction? Can you accurately describe what exactly about certain electrical systems and not others gives rise to direct subjective experience and qualia? What is the precise mechanism that leads to electrons providing a conscious subjective experience? Would a thinking simulation of a brain experience the same qualia?
If you really can't see what I'm getting at with any of this, perhaps you might be a philosophical zombie.. not actually conscious yourself. Just a chemical computer firing some impulses that perfectly simulates a conscious entity, just like an AI but in meat form. Carefully consider: how do you personally know if this is or isn't true?
One of the first things I did when I started experimenting with SD was a series of "the Muppets attack paris" images, with explosions, crumbling buildings, police and military response, fleeing citizens... The cheeky gleeful looks on those muppets as they flee scenes of devastation are hilarious and some of my favourite images I've produced!
Then it just felt… awful. Unwelcome, not a good place to be, the mental image of “get out”
A "feeling of dread" is a known symptom of exposure to carbon monoxide.
Sorry, but this is completely wrong.
Windows has ACLs and they are an important part of Windows administration, and used extensively for managing file permissions.
Windows has supported ACLs on NTFS since Windows NT & NTFS were released in 1993 (possibly partly influenced by AIX ACLs in the late 80s influenced by VMS ACLs introduced the early 80s).
ACLs were not introduced to standard POSIX until c.1998, and NFS and Linux filesystems didn't get them until 2003. In fact, the design of the NFSv4 ACL standard was heavily influenced by the design of NTFS/Windows ACL model -- a specific decision by the designers to model it more like NTFS rather than AIX/POSIX.
Technically, at the filesystem level, exFAT also provides support for ACLs, but I am not sure if any implementation actually makes use of this feature (not even Windows AFAIK, certainly not any desktop version).
And I didn't assert otherwise. Perhaps improve your own reading comprehension before wading into a discussion of the English language.
Nobody said it was of American origin
I know. Go back and read what I wrote. The only argument here was started by you. The only person putting words in others' mouths is you.
Idk man, I think it might have some reliability issues... I tried restoring my data and all I got back was a badly-typed copy of the complete works of Shakespeare.
@zero_iq
@lemm.ee