

Sure, that’s fair enough.
Check my reviews out at !mediareviews@lemm.ee or !mediareviews@lemmy.world.
I’m slowly starting to post on the .ee one…
Also @gon@lemmy.world and @gon@lemmy.pt.
Sure, that’s fair enough.
This post is so thoroughly confusing to me.
Charge your car at home, of course! That’s what makes them so good! You can charge them on regular outlets, but you can also get a thing installed that makes it faster. No credit card required.
I’m not sure. I’m definitely concerned…
Oh, cool! Yeah, I’ve seen that before, I think, it’s awesome.
Firefox.
I can personalize it as much as I want and it respects my privacy, or at least any part that doesn’t can be easily turned off.
This seems like a very weird way to look at the issue.
For one, not being able to understand minute, uncountable connections and interactions doesn’t mean we can’t realize a broader relationship of causality between them and our own actions. There are many things we don’t know - that’s right and undeniable - but there are also many things we do know, or at least that we think we know. Sure, you can go around saying “we understand so little about [virtually any scientific discipline], might as well assume that whatever soothes my psyche is true,” but just because the first part of that statement is true doesn’t mean the whole thing is reasonable. In my opinion, by the way, it isn’t reasonable.
Assume free will exists; if you are wrong, it will made no difference;
Here’s a question for you: if you assume free will doesn’t exist, what difference does it make? I mean, you still feel like it exists, you live your life as if experiencing it, and regardless of whether you, as an individual, believe it or not, the world continues on as if it does exist. I really see no difference, in practical terms, between believing free will exists or not.
A little off-topic, but this reminds me of those people that say that morality can’t exist outside of religion. You say you’re an atheist, and then they ask you why you don’t go around killing people. Hopefully you understand what I’m talking about here.
Nope, I don’t.
Doesn’t really matter, though. We certainly have the illusion of free will, we behave as if it exists, so it doesn’t actually matter in a practical sense.
It is fun to think about!
It might be best to start with some basic grammar, phonetics, and vocab, especially with some languages, but comprehensible input is really the only right answer here.
This hurt to read
This killed me
Houkago Tea Time!
Could it? I assume so, yes. Will it? Unlikely.
There’s closed-toe sandals, no? Maybe those aren’t called sandals…
My first thought exactly. There’s platform sandals and such.
I wonder if that’s genetic; there’s people that say celery tastes like soap, for example. I thought it might be something similar.
Hmmm yeah, I guess I just don’t get it - or don’t see it, more accurately.
I’m rather colourblind, so I’m really not sure what the really green stuff is. Are peas not really green? I thought they were orange for a very long time, but I’m pretty sure I’ve been told they’re green, actually.
Black eyed peas freaking rock. I love black eyed pea salad with onion and tuna. A shame you don’t vibe with broccoli… I love roasted broccoli, especially. Oh well!
Well, to each their own :D
Well, that’s a complicated question.
On one hand, I do already hang-out with myself basically all the time. I talk to myself a lot and I’m my own wall to throw stuff at.
On the other hand, I’m also very antisocial. I would definitely not enjoy spending this time that I spend with myself with another, physical person.
So, that.