Formless wrote:You know, Sam, you seem to be a pretty good debater most of the time, but it seems you missed one of the finer, but important, aspects of debating: learning when to step back, analyze your position, and concede to the stronger argument. You seem to be hell bent on finding any small weakness in Patrick's arguments that might prove you right when there is none, and it looks bad on you. There is no shame in defeat here. But there
is much humiliation to be had if you go down fighting like this.
Just some friendly advice.

I'm good at debating? This is news to me. Also, for the love of the Emperor GIVE EXAMPLES. Seriously I think friendly advice without explanation is being for... stupid cinematic- how hard are you to find?
Sorry, but there is no morality to deliberately engineering the deaths of millions. I don't know how to make that simpler for your comprehension.
Except that is what formulating insterstellar war is- nothing more than formulating the deaths of billions. It isn't considered immoral because the alternatives are considered worst. Having large numbers of dead doesn't make something evil.
Oh, I'm sorry, I didn't know there was a "secrecy" exemption to the commission of war crimes and mass murder.
Only to being caught. Who is going to testify against Section 31, which doesn't officially exist?
No, you're hiding your crimes, which is worse, and is still you covering your sorry ass for engineering the deaths of millions.
I'm only doing that because the actions are illegal. If they weren't illegal, I'd have postings for job openings in the main intelligence agency and supporting personal requirements to Starfleet. I am dealing with an extremely limited and well defined situation to prove my point.
It is worth noting that covering your ass has jack to do with the morality of a given action.
We have to deal with global warming now because we ourselves are about to be fucked by it. We've got plenty of valid motivation for dealing with the problem without bringing projections of possible futures into the consideration.
Except people were complaining about it when Al Gore was in college. In the
70s. Or are you telling me people shouldn't deal with problems until after they occured?
By engineering the deaths of millions in the here and now. Speaking of some rosier future which might happen doesn't erase the crime of what you're proposing to do NOW.
So? The ends justify the means in this case. You might disagree, but I am using means they would normally use and putting it to a productive purpose. Instead of fighting over the same piece of land again and again, there will be actual change.
In a word, bullshit. Your proposed action is both illegal and immoral. Mass death is not justifiable because you think it will bring about a successful conclusion to your experiment. And you're still facilitating the act, which still makes you guilty.
You are asserting it is wrong to kill large numbers of people for a goal. You haven't justified that- killing large numbers of people is as wrong as killing them individually, but added up. There isn't anything special about it. The same exceptions to murder still apply.
The record of the last four pages of this thread say otherwise. That you choose not to recognise them is irrelevant to anything, but then we've already seen what a dishonest little shit you have become in the course of this discussion.
Patrick,
nothing in that statement has anything to do with anything I have said.
Except you need for Earth history to somehow be the universal pattern for the history of any world with humanoids to make that argument fly.
So going by the only sample we have is invalid because... aliens will magically be immune to the same selective pressure humans are subject to? Bull.
A False Premise is not the use of a belief as consequence of not doing a particular action or believing a particular thing —which is what you've pinned your defence on. False premise is simply a hasty conclusion used as the foundation for a syllogism which renders the reasoning flowing from it defective.
Patrick, you are arguing that the idea that
personal belief about a future he can't reliable predict is the same thing as fact,
Which would be... the premise. If you are unwilling to remember what you typed yourself, I am more than willing to refresh you. It must be hard... having it right there in my rebuttal so you don't mix it up.
Except the canon facts do not point to the Mintakans being just one particular tribe. Kindly give the evidence of other Overseer-worshipping or superstition-ridden tribes on the planet to back your so-called rebuttal, please.
You mean that the entire planet is a
single culture. Even though they are in the bronze age an communication must be done on foot at
5 miles per hour? And the "entire culture" they are observing is done by
one outpost?
From what we see, the Prophets rarely interact with the Bajorans, and the example is not invalidated in any case. Their history proceeded upon a far more peaceful path than Earth's did.
Except for the prophocies. How do you think Earths history would have proceded if one of the religions was emperically true? AND let you fortell the future? And has locations on the planet was those weird spirit thingees.
Finally, there is the fun part that the planet is unified. Which I repeatedly argued would prevent warfare.
http://memory-alpha.org/en/wiki/Bajoran_history
Your contention was that war won't "magically disappear". The Vulcans realised what their course of action was leading to and put an end to it, by themselves. They didn't need the Space Brothers coming down to them or using proxies to establish a ruthelss world-conquering regime to do it.
Except by that point Vulcan was unified AND spacefaring. In fact it is possible the war CAUSED them to become unified.
By demonstrating that their history turned out not at all like Earth's, which puts another hole in your argument that the history of any given world can be likened to Earth's own pattern.
Which is shown by the fact they all killed each other... that doesn't really rebut my point. Especially considering they were spacefaring by that time- they had
already developed.
Really, now you're down to Moving the Goalposts to keep your shambling argument going. Pathetic.
When a person makes that claim they need to show how.
We were talking about other worlds, liar, not a comparison between large empires and small states on Earth. Now you try to lift only part of that exchange to alter the meaning of the argument. Your dishonesty knows no bounds.
So more of your bull "it could be entirely different". Because they are aliens. Which exempts them from evolutionary pressures.
On the contrary, I have. Your goalpost-moving does not invalidate the examples already presented, liar.
Lets see- we have a tribe of rationalists... which we also have occur on Earth.
We have a planet influenced by space aliens/Gods.
We have a world united by a bloody war
We have a world united by a bloody war
We have a world destoryed by a bloody war AFTER they get spaceflight.
Really. You have to do better than that.
Warfare is not an inherited characteristic, moron. You really are getting desperate now.
Ants anyone? For human populations, war is a cultural trait, which is selected for.
Your contention is that, without outside help, a species is not going to find the means to end warfare amongst itself to successfully reach space. The existence of every spacefaring species, including humanity, contradicts this. Your contention is that disparate worlds will end up following the same historical pattern and the examples given of several worlds in Star Trek contradicts this. Keep thinking that your goalpost moving will salvage your argument. It won't.
The smell of straw. It tastes... like victory.
I have argued not that they won't be able to (which would beg the question of how we did it), but that it would be obsenely bloody. Given that the worlds in Trek followed the pattern of warfare and violence before unification, yeah it is a constant pattern.
As you wish. Then you can prove that Earth "leaned" on the other member worlds of the Federation to "change their ways", I presume.
Nope. However, it leans on states that wish to join up- they have to fullfill a set of criteria, remember? And they still get entrants. It is probably along the lines "it would be too bad if slaves or another empire can and hit your world..."
When the people you've forced your beneficence on after piling up a mountain of corpses decide they don't want you on their planet anymore.
We were never there. More to the point, you seem to think that the populance will be pissed with the situation. Which is weird becuse you seem to think it will be a totalitarian dystopia.
At what? How does that little Red Herring point to a universal law of humanoid historical behaviour which can be applied to any world and from which predictions can be based?
It points out that the people who get technological advances first use their tech to crush everyone else. It is about why Europe managed to conquer the globe, but it uses other cultures to show the same thing- the evolution of states inevitably leads to it.
How am I "moving the goal posts", liar? I have not changed any standard of proof, but you just keep handwaving with the morality protestations and the "it'll lead to a better future" mantra and "what happened on Earth will happen elsewhere" bullshit. Tossing out fallacy names willy-nilly will not lend your position any appearance of legitimacy, no matter how desperately you think it will.
Because now it is "you're a bloody murder!", when previous it was "you can't predict the future". You keep on changing the objections and the phrasology, recycling new buzz words for each round. And when I rebut it you hop to something else and claim that I never answered the previous one.