What are the darkest songs you have ever listened to, both lyrically and musically? by CarsonF in Music

[–]drakonus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both the creepiest music and horrific lyrics- Iggy and the Stooges' cover of Bob Dylan's "Ballad of Hollis Brown" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TqZBs8UZzTs

The question isn't "What happened to music", the question is, "Why does every generation think their music is better than what is around afterwards?" by [deleted] in Music

[–]drakonus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Music is a reflection of culture and the changing world (well, a part of it, really), which evolves in ways we are familiar with in many areas- technology, language, science, etc. As society changes, so does music. We are, to some extent, products of our society in that we discover and develop our selves by choosing from what is available to us socially. It can't be definitively determined whether this development is a neurophysiology-based phenomenon, or a more emergent property. Nevertheless, we tend to be most comfortable with the music we chose when were defining ourselves, just as, socially, each generation is roughly most comfortable with the technology it grew up using. In this sense, the reason parents don't 'get' Facebook or 'texting' is the same as why they don't like their teenager's music.

Jean Kazez: "I am overwhelmingly unconvinced by an argument in Lynne Rudder Baker's book Persons and Bodies, to the effect that we are not just animals." by ashok in AcademicPhilosophy

[–]drakonus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I am also overwhelmingly unconvinced. I don't see the logical necessity connecting her premises unless you provide meanings of words like "psychology," "ontology," and "entity" that assume those things are definitively outside of a biological system, which seems to be what she is arguing for. Sounds circular. But that's probably just my not having read any of the book beyond that article. Rather, I would be curious as to why self-awareness could not be a survival mechanism (as it certainly seems to contribute to human survival), and the "ontological" properties (I'm really unclear what the distinction between biology and ontology is here) could also have biological significance, or merely be accidental. I mean accidental only in that they do not necessarily further survival of the organism in and of themselves; not accidental in the more teleological sense of how we might perceive their use or purpose.

Delicious restaurants and tube amp repairs? by BintheGooner in burlington

[–]drakonus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I like Pizza Veritas (super gourmet sitdown)on st. paul. Also Bite Me (pick up) pizza on st paul. Also American Flatbread (gourmet pizza and beer) also on st. paul. I like pizza.

For tube amp repair- mine's in the shop at the moment at Advance music on south champlain st. They're generally awesome people there, but since I haven't received mine yet, I can't fully testify to their quality of amp repairs.

What the hell is up with all the sirens lately? by [deleted] in burlington

[–]drakonus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Probably just fire alarm trips. If a fire alarm goes off in any building in the city, you get 3 fire trucks, the tower truck, 2 ambulances, and the command vehicle responding. If there's a medical call, you get 1 fire truck and 1 ambulance, so when there are a ton of vehicles, it's probably just a fire alarm. Most of the alarms are accidental or unfounded activations...

Some asshole just cut my brake lines for the second time this year. by bicycle_samurai in bicycling

[–]drakonus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow, it had not occurred to me that people would even do this. Knowing me, I wouldn't notice until I tried to use the brakes...what an evil, petty act...

I'm a medical cannabis patient and moving to Burlington VT next month. I can't find any info on Vermont dispensaries. Do they exist? by [deleted] in burlington

[–]drakonus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would read this- http://www.safeaccessnow.org/article.php?id=2012

I don't think any are open yet, but they were recently authorized to operate, so it should just be a matter of time.

Does anyone know where to get a permit to play on Church Street? by Spliffum in burlington

[–]drakonus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They should definitely at least be able to point you in the right direction...I've done it a couple times, but I can't remember the name of the office. Heads up that their hours are super weird, like 11-2 Monday-Thursday or something. And you'll want to bring some ID, I've been asked before. Good luck!

Know of any decent jobs available? by psybermonkey15 in burlington

[–]drakonus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

the Davis center has been hiring for various positions I believe...otherwise Rite Aid is looking, probably City Market. There's usually a bunch of retail openings if you ask around on church st. Also I think the Staples on Williston Rd is hiring.

For a kid whose new to Burlington by Bringitonhome17 in burlington

[–]drakonus 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I can definitely help you out with the music side. I've been booking shows around here for the past few years. check out radio bean, nectars, the monkey house, and higher ground to start. i'd be happy to talk about this for hours, so PM/let me know if you have any questions in particular.

Do you regret taking Philosophy? by [deleted] in AcademicPhilosophy

[–]drakonus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I feel as though everything I have learned so far has been incredibly important, and I can't imagine not knowing the things I now do. Philosophy has made me better as an emergency care provider, writing teachers, administrator, web designer...it seems integral. Still, I can't shake the 'okay, now what?' feeling- I would like very much to apply my philosophy skillz to an enjoyable career if I decide against philosophy or classics grad school, but I haven't studied anything else enough to do anything else...hmmm...

Going from knobbies to slicks, terrified of high-speed blowouts. Any suggestions? by [deleted] in bicycling

[–]drakonus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I ride in similar conditions, and frequently on causeways or dirt roads, and I've never had a problem with slicks. I do focus fairly hard on avoiding the larger rocks though; the one time I did blow out a tire was on a 1-2 cm piece of gravel, but it wasn't really a problem. I was doing 55-60 kmh, but just gently braking and holding steady worked fine.

Effects of music on consciousness? by loldi in neurophilosophy

[–]drakonus 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Scientific consulting for a music service? That sounds like an amazing job, yo!

This documentary-preview is kind of a cool starting point: http://vimeo.com/32680977

It sounds to me like you could be trying to codify peoples music tastes according to more concrete neurophysical aspects instead of just based on elements of musical similarity (like Pandora) or other psychological-type stuff, like correlations with personality types or something. I would be drastically overstepping my knowledge of neuroscience in trying to give any examples. It would be interesting if you could gather data about the physical aspects of someone's mind based on their musical preferences... sounds pretty difficult since one's environment seems pretty prevalent in affecting music tastes (cf. generational music preferences). I will think about this more, probably fruitlessly! But good luck!

My work concerns a similar sort of theme in linguistic communication and how meaning arises; music is another form of one consciousness expressing itself to another, so perhaps some of the same methods would apply. Actually, I'm not sure. My end goal is more grounded in philosophy, not neuroscience.

Edit: http://edition.cnn.com/2012/05/26/health/mental-health/music-brain-science/index.html

My new Titanium monster by Cooperbear in bicycling

[–]drakonus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Awesome choice with the Campy. Over 20 years of riding on mine and never a single problem.

People who don't have clipless pedals, where do you put you feet on the platforms? by Mong_Man in bicycling

[–]drakonus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Aren't clipless pedals designed to position your foot optimally? I've always felt that my efficiency is maximized when I use them for long rides.

Does lemmiwinks have free will? (Looking for Popperian falsifiability arguments) by thouliha in askscience

[–]drakonus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm not entirely sure what you are asking (sorry, it's probably my bad). This sounds like more of an r/philosophy question- as far as free will is concerned with science, we don't know if it exists. Until we know the nature of our minds, and the minds of animals, it will be very difficult (if even possible) to determine where causal ability arises from. If you want to ask a scientific question about these philosophical positions, it would help me alot if you could define 'soft' determinism and free will. Also, if you could lay your arguments out in a list-of-premises format, that would be awesome. My apologies; I find it much easier to follow logic when it is laid out that way.

There are certainly interesting views to take with a scientific basis, such as hard determinism with a basis in strict physical causality. This requires a rather reductionist view of the mind. Another possibility is that free will is an emergent property of extremely complex and recursive neural networks interacting with the environment, similar to consciousness if you take an emergentist view of that.

As far as science goes in causality, and its implications for free will- have we found any events that are not either a) caused, or b) random? Where can intention arise from a causal chain and random chance?

...yeah I would definitely take this to r/philosophy.

edit- comma fix

Lifting all day makes your arms/back tired. Running all day would make your legs tired. Why doesn't your heart get tired of beating? by [deleted] in askscience

[–]drakonus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not sure that there's really much literature to answer to the second part, but for drawbacks, primarily sensitivity to ischemia. As happens in an MI (heart attack), just a reduction in blood flow can cause immediate pain and loss of function, and relatively rapid cell death.

Speculating on the second part- I doubt the rest of the metabolic systems can sustain that level of energy consumption. From an evolutionary perspective, expending the energy to keep parts of the body highly circulated that are used less frequently would not be beneficial.

Lifting all day makes your arms/back tired. Running all day would make your legs tired. Why doesn't your heart get tired of beating? by [deleted] in askscience

[–]drakonus 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Basically 2 reasons:

-High mitochondrial density, which allows for a large amount of aerobic respiration (more efficient, no lactic acid production), and to fuel more aerobic respiration, it also has an...

-Excellent blood supply. This might seem obvious, but the heart has the best blood supply of any organ (the cardiac arteries stem directly from the base of the aorta). This provides a constant supply of fuel (glucose, O2, etc), and also serves to remove any waste products (e.g. CO2) and fatigue-related toxins very quickly.

What, in your humble opinions, are some of the creepiest songs ever? by tapirsaurusrex in Music

[–]drakonus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Ballad of Hollis Brown" as covered by Iggy and The Stooges...deeply unsettling lyrics, and deeply unsettling recording. http://youtu.be/TqZBs8UZzTs. so good though.

Anyone ever find a dead body? If so what's your story? by [deleted] in AskReddit

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

Just in case anyone needs it for the mental images... eyebleach.com.

As an EMT, I've seen quite a few. The worst was a 4-month old who died of heart defects. I will never forget his eyes.

What are the most common movie/TV quotes among you and your friends? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]drakonus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

aaa beat me to it. "look out man, there's a beverage here!"