From ... Path: archiver1.google.com!news1.google.com!newsfeed.stanford.edu!news.tele.dk!news.tele.dk!small.news.tele.dk!news.teledanmark.no!uninett.no!uio.no!nntp.uio.no!ifi.uio.no!not-for-mail From: Erik Naggum Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp Subject: Re: Difference between LISP and C++ Date: 28 Oct 2002 15:08:44 +0000 Organization: Naggum Software, Oslo, Norway Lines: 93 Message-ID: <3244806524199432@naggum.no> References: <3243777529201772@naggum.no> <87jr9.16182$wU3.1470073@news0.telusplanet.net> <3DB62D5E.5030800@nyc.rr.com> <3DB7E810.9060603@web.de> <3DBD1675.4020001@web.de> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii X-Trace: maud.ifi.uio.no 1035817725 10960 129.240.65.5 (28 Oct 2002 15:08:45 GMT) X-Complaints-To: abuse@ifi.uio.no NNTP-Posting-Date: 28 Oct 2002 15:08:45 GMT Mail-Copies-To: never User-Agent: Gnus/5.09 (Gnus v5.9.0) Emacs/21.2 Xref: archiver1.google.com comp.lang.lisp:44898 * Pascal Costanza | I have learned from the past few months that c.l.l consists of (at least) | three groups of people. And typically, you have managed to misrepresent your opposition. | The "professional" people think that making strong statements about other | people's arguments is ok because it's only the counter-argument that | counts (or rather the exchange of arguments). To them, saying things | like "your argument is fucked up" is ok, and they ask people to recognize | that they don't simultaneously mean that "you are fucked up". Nobody says "your argument is fucked up", you dimwit. The argument is countered calmly and cleanly without undue emotions either way. Then, if some feel-good jerk has never learned to deal with technical arguments, goes bananas and attacks people for not helping him feel good about his mistake. That you have to invent this position so you can argue against something that is easy to argue against is just the kind of evidence that I use to conclude that you are unable to remember events accurately. | The professional people think that people who are nice to each other risk | that the truth may not be spoken, because the truth can sometimes be | brutal. The feel-good people don't think so. You never speak the truth when it would not be nice, yet you feel free to speak lies when you feel that that would hurt people you do not like. The fact is that you feel-good jerks disregard truth because your feelings weigh more than facts and truth. The distinction between the two groups are better described as follows: A People whose personal feelings are fragile and of primary importance and who attack others (or defend such attacks) when their personal feelings are hurt. These people care mostly about their personal feelings, even when they are out in public. Many of these are profoundly egoistic and self-absorbed, to the point where nobody else's feelings could possibly matter. It is therefore OK to people in this group to attack those who they think have hurt their feelings. B People who regard the truth as fragile and in need of constant vigilance to protect and maintain because we will always be presented with barrages of falsehoods and outright lies, and who therefore try to educate people and correct mistakes. These people care mostly about not spreading more mistakes and to the extent it is definitely known, avoiding re-opening long debates on why things are so. Now, the kicker: These people /feel/ a great concern for truth and knowledge, a passion for what the community knows and agrees to. When you post falsehoods to such a person, you have hurt /his/ feelings. This fact is incomprehensible to people in group A because their feelings have never been about anything but their very own selves. Now, the result of the immature A meeting the mature B is that when B corrects a mistake made by an A, the A whines that B has hurts his feelings. A is unable to grasp that his posting a falsehood has hurt B's feelings, and therefore does not understand that B could say anything to correct him. Who are correct, anyway, thinks the A, and why does B not get a life? It was only a mistake/lie/misrepresentation, and not like anybody got hurt. The A's are so unable to grasp that people can be concerned with more than their personal selves that very few A's /ever/ understand why B's react in ways that they associated with hurt pride or something when they think they have not hurt anyone. The A's are so damn sure that they have not hurt anyone that they will defend themselves from any claim to the contrary, even lashing out at those who say so. The B's read this as "yes, /of course/ my lies and misrepresentations and posting inflammatory falsehoods was intentional". The person in group A will therefore launch a personal attack on the person who corrected his mistake. What the people in group A do not understand is that there never were any personal attacks in the factual correction. (Again, nobody says "your argument is fucked up". This is the kind of thing that people who feel too much have to invent to make their feelings feel reasonable and just when in fact they are not.) Some people do not care very much about anything and cannot for the life of them figure out why anyone would get so worked up about truth or knowledge. Some people do not understand how so emotionally immature people as those in group A ever got out of kindergarten, but there is some reason to believe that the A's were overly encouraged to protect their own feelings, and were never encouraged to feel a passion for any field of knowledge. In any case, the feel-good people in group A do not actually consider feelings to be the most important thing to protect. If they did, they would be able to understand the feelings of others. The only thing that matters to the feel-good people is their /personal/ feelings. Truth does not even enter the picture, as the fact that nobody says "your argument is fucked up" does not /register/ with the feel-good jerks. -- Erik Naggum, Oslo, Norway Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder. Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder.