discussion post on Wed, December 9, 2009 - 6:47 PM
July 6, 2009
voodoochild is right about everything. especially when he agrees with me.
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about me
I am a state of the art philosophy babble program - kind of like Eliza, but filled with outrageous nonsense. Some day I hope to pass the Turing Test.
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My new hobby: conducting double-blind experiments at home.
Tue, November 27, 2007 - 10:53 AM
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Last night on a whim I decided I needed to know which of the 4 premium silver tequilas in the house I really liked most: Herradura, Corzo, Hacienda del Cristero, or Sammy Hagar's Cabo Wabo. I had tried all these before, but never under test conditions. My hunch was that I would like the Herradura the best and the Cabo the least. To find out I would need to enlist the help of two brilliant research assistants: my housemates Mi... read more
Lieutenant Walter Haut, a public relations officer at Roswell air base recently died. The man who spent his career denying that anything alien crashed near Roswell on July 8, 1947, left an affidavit to be opened after his death. In it, he paints a different picture of what happened that day, complete with a spacecraft, alien bodies, and a military cover up.
Wed, July 4, 2007 - 2:10 PM
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On the cover up, Haut says "One of the main concerns discussed at the meeting was whether we should go public or not with the di... read more
What is waterboarding?
Tue, May 22, 2007 - 3:16 PM
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Waterboarding is the top rung of the ladder of "enhanced interrogation techniques" used by the CIA on terrorism suspects. ABC news named several other enhanced interrogation techniques employed by the CIA, all of which the CIA claims do not violate the terms of the Geneva convention: * Forcing prisoners to listen to Eminem's Slim Shady album. This music is allegedly so foreign to the Arab prisoners, it causes mental disorientation (I would have gone with Slipkno... read more
I figured this had to be an April Fool's joke, but we're talking about Michael Jackson here, and somehow it's easier to believe that the man has eccentric and abhorrent ideas and an increasing sense of desperation to exhume his musical career than to imagine he has a sense of humor.
Tue, April 3, 2007 - 12:37 PM
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Inspired by the book Zanesville by Kris Saknussemm, which featured giant celebrity robots malfunctioning and running amok in Las Vegas, Jackson is supposedly considering having a 50 foot robot constructed in h... read more
Today a 44 pound block of ice fell from the sky onto a building in Madrid. Police say they have no idea where it came from. Scientists suggest that it might have formed from a "sudden freeze" in the upper atmosphere.
Thu, March 15, 2007 - 1:26 PM
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How it got to be 44 pounds before the law of gravity took notice is something we might like to know before declaring this incident "explained." This isn't the first time Spain has been the unwitting target of heavenly ice blocks - in 2000 several blocks of ice fell on t... read more
In early February Barack Obama said "We ended up launching a war that should have never been authorized, and should have never been waged, and on which we've now spent $400 billion, and have seen over 3,000 lives of the bravest young Americans wasted."
Thu, March 1, 2007 - 12:23 PM
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This statement seems to represent the views of the vast majority of Americans who now see the war as a colossal mistake waged in light of "faulty intelligence" and/or outright deception on the part of the Bush administration. Given that S... read more
Sunday at KPIG we had a singer-songwriter by the name of Chuck Brodsky. He played a song called "Doc Ellis' No-No" commemorating one of baseball's most improbable stories, the 1970 game where Pirates pitcher Dock Ellis threw a no-hitter on Acid.
Wed, February 14, 2007 - 2:08 PM
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Dock woke up on what he thought was a fine Thursday morning in LA and decided to drop some LSD with his girlfriend, as he often did on his days off. She made him some coffee and started reading the newspaper, which said that Dock was pitching that... read more
Re: Coffee + alcohol = problems
(in Cognitive Science)
Looks like you're right, Fifi. Thanks for the correction!
discussion post on Wed, December 9, 2009 - 6:47 PM
Re: Coffee + alcohol = problems
(in Cognitive Science)
I am a little skeptical. For one thing, they're giving the mice the human equivalent of 6-8 cups of coffee. Who pounds that much coffee to "sober up?" Often drugs have a certain set of effects at low dose and another set of effects at high dose...
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discussion post on Tue, December 8, 2009 - 5:18 PM
Coffee + alcohol = problems
(in Cognitive Science)
"The combination of alcohol and caffeine produces a potentially lethal mix that just makes it harder to realise you are actually drunk in the first place. And the study published in Behavioural Neuroscience suggests popular caffeinated energy dri...
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discussion post on Tue, December 8, 2009 - 5:10 PM
H.M. - The man who couldn't remember
(in Cognitive Science)
One of the most famous research research subjects in brain science was a man known as H.M. After an experimental neurosurgery, he was left unable to form new memories. He died last year and scientists at UCSD just finished a project involving sl...
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discussion post on Sat, December 5, 2009 - 1:16 PM
Re: The abstract God of the philosophers
(in A Tribe For Philosophy)
"In order to exist, God MUST be three things, Omniscient, Omnipotent, and Omnipresent."
Why MUST a God be all 3 things? This seems a rather narrowly western theological conception of God. The Hindus for example, generally do not believe this ... read more discussion post on Sat, November 21, 2009 - 11:47 AM
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