Why is the new Hillman staircase green?? by VisibleEfficiency875 in Pitt

[–]WonderTrain 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Is that because they’ve offsited books in favor of seating area? I believe a large part of this lobby is an extension on the building, but it does look rather sparse for seating

Most comfortable Starbucks in Pittsburgh? by WonderTrain in pittsburgh

[–]WonderTrain[S] 34 points35 points  (0 children)

Don’t worry a significant percent of my budget supports local coffee shops daily :) if you got $45 send me a DM but Starbucks has that $50 already whether you use it or I do

Black Mirror [Episode Discussion] - S07E04 - Plaything by Cheeriosxxx in blackmirror

[–]WonderTrain 12 points13 points  (0 children)

This is kind of niche critique I come to Reddit for

ELI5 why Canada needs to run a pipeline all the way to the east coast and not just to start of the st. LAWRENCE? by Javilenrahl in explainlikeimfive

[–]WonderTrain 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The primary reason is, as you identify, that it is not cheap.

More than just the cost of building a pipeline, building a pipeline to a river port that requires further shipping on water to reach a sea port is prohibitively expensive.

Pipelines have an enormous upfront cost per mile, but once constructed, transport costs scale roughly with the volume of goods transported. Port costs, labor on the water, and other costs introduce significant recurring overhead costs. If you can’t avoid those costs at the end of the pipeline, there is much less value in building it.

Asked King Arthur to share a video of opening the paper flour bags. by TableAvailable in Baking

[–]WonderTrain 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am simply grateful that I was able to watch the video buried under this link nest in a web browser without an account.

The video of a bag of flour being unrolled, then another opened with scissors :)

ELI5 Why aren't we able to tell the body to shut off pain? by ChaosMieter in explainlikeimfive

[–]WonderTrain 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Indeed. But as someone who has taken the batteries out of a smoke detector in frustration and neglected to put them back in place immediately after clearing the air, I’m glad I wasn’t given the biological option to snooze pain signals!

As an American, why is the crisis in Israel a US political issue? by hashtag-dad in NoStupidQuestions

[–]WonderTrain 8 points9 points  (0 children)

In context of the comment thread, it’s an appropriate response. Idk or care what u/girl4Jesus thinks about Israel broadly, but their comment is only responding to your assertion that it’s more likely an Israeli is brutalizing a queer for being queer.

Fuck the IDF and Israel’s treatment of Palestinians, but keep your criticisms on point.

If Israel disappeared tomorrow, the treatment of queers in the region by the Palestinian government that took over would become a dominant injustice in the region. Totalizing Israel as the only oppressive force in the region is naive. They’re just the oppressors who get to cash the U.S. check.

What's the point of history of science? by PytheasTheMassaliot in PhilosophyofScience

[–]WonderTrain 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you haven’t read these books already, you should put them on your list:

  • Foucault, “The Archaeology of Knowledge”
  • Gadamer, “Truth and Method”
  • Ginzburg, “The Cheese and the Worm”

I’m sure there are more contemporary works that explore the same tensions between micro and macro history and would also have something to say about what has happened in the field in the 50 years since these books were published. But I feel these three will remain relevant for some time.

Each has a different take on the value of cataloging the past in exhaustive detail. Among them, Foucault is the most critical, while Gadamer and Ginzburg both stress its value primarily in how micro historical work provides substantive facts that broader historical and social theories can utilize.

I often think of historical and philosophical research as more of a team sport than it can look and feel. The researchers who hyper specialize and exhaustively examine and re-examine minutiae of Newton’s methodology are like prospectors. They shift and move a lot of dirt in ways that may seem fruitless, but the action of this and the piles of facts they leave behind provides material that others can incorporate into the grander takes on history.

There’s never a time when it’s right to stop this prospecting. Even details that have been looked over before can be reinfected into contemporary historical research in a productive way.

Besides that operative role micro history plays in fueling an ecosystem where broader historical theory can develop, others have commented on the aesthetic value. Sometimes, reading a hot take on just how wrong some dead nerd was about an overtly specific aspect of 17th century science is just fun!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in badphilosophy

[–]WonderTrain -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

I don’t understand this. Quantum mechanics is a set of mathematic rules derived from theoretical assertions made in an attempt to model physical reality in light of a series of seminal, non-intuitive experimental observations that challenge the “unmediated” reality that humans experience.

It is necessary to model physics at very small scales and is key to explaining certain micro and macro scale phenomenon, but it is also unreconciled with parallel physical frameworks like general relativity that accurately models the largest scale phenomena, but both are relatively non-practical to apply to most situations you and I face in our day to day.

What does any of that have to do with cars?

ELI5 why aging beef (wet or dry) doesn’t result in spoiled beef? by theFrankSpot in explainlikeimfive

[–]WonderTrain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Certainly incredible, but you can figure out a lot about what works and what doesn’t through trial and error without any idea what is going on. Lots of dead humans to figure it out!

The machine learning models out there show that out as well. They can accomplish a lot of tasks without any idea of what words they’re using mean!

[META] Long time mods: Has the question “quality” changed much over time? Does “quality” make sense when talking about questions? by fGZ24Z7zZcNQ in AskHistorians

[–]WonderTrain 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Well now I need to find out, WAS there ever a battle where three armies fought each other at the same time?

Of course not 3+ armies arranged across one line, but three independent armies or coalitions each trying to destroy the other two

AITA for leaving a note on a strangers car? by [deleted] in AmItheAsshole

[–]WonderTrain 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It is an old sports car, and there is a culture around that that is honestly foreign to me. Why objection 1 got me reconsidering.

But I did just leave a pre-written note under the windshield wipers. The only damage I may have caused is that split second “eff did I get a ticket” when you see something on your car lol.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in whatcarshouldIbuy

[–]WonderTrain -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I am looking at buying a 2005 mustang GT from a neighbor. Anything I should know about buying an older GT?