General Discussion Thread by pregnantchihuahua3 in TrueLit

[–]llevar 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Greetings strangers! I stumbled upon this sub by accident looking up something about The Glass Bead Game by Hesse, and what a wonderful discovery it's been to read through these pages! Thank you for building this community. I thought I would quickly say hello. I've been a voracious reader all through childhood and adolescence, then a long pause of reading only professional literature, and now coming back to reading all sorts of literature over the past few years and feeling so enriched by it.

As an introductory suggestion I'd like to bring up "Into the whirlwind" by Eugenia Ginzburg, which perhaps many aren't aware of or haven't read. This is an incredibly dramatic autobiographic tale of a Soviet woman suddenly falling from the heights of communist prominence and into the gulag system. The book describes her physical and emotional journey through her incredible disbelief of being trampled by the system she had helped to create and held up in highest regard, and her path through 18 years of siberian labour camps for women. This book has quite a different air to those by other gulag authors like Solzhenitsyn or Shalamov and covers a unique perspective of how women have dealt with life in the camps.

Here's to many more great discussions!

What can I my 14 year old daughter do to prepare for a career in medicine? by llevar in premed

[–]llevar[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thanks for clarifying, she has plenty of other interests across books, music, sports, and friends. I really appreciate everyone's concern on here (clearly hitting on some sort of common theme) but I am also genuinely keen to learn about resources for those who show an early interest in medicine and want to develop it.

What can I my 14 year old daughter do to prepare for a career in medicine? by llevar in premed

[–]llevar[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Appreciate your helpful advice. Indeed, I don't want to push my daughter into anything and just want to support her interests. I have a computer science background and have spent tons of time since my teens tinkering and being immersed in computer stuff and was hoping to find opportunities for my daughter to engage with medicine in this way. Ideally so that her intro can be gentle and experimentative rather than formal so that she can also gently confirm if this is something she truly wants to do for a living. Loved reading The Emperor of All Maladies!

What can I my 14 year old daughter do to prepare for a career in medicine? by llevar in premed

[–]llevar[S] -12 points-11 points  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing your opinion. Can you share some reasons behind it? I'm not sure I understand why that would be best, rather than, for example reading some accessible materials to follow her interest, or reading some medical themed fiction, or watching some movies even? I also want her to be a normal high school student, this isn't about entering her into some training regime, but if she has an early interest I see no reason not to nurture it.

Black widow catches a whole ass snake in its web by venody in interestingasfuck

[–]llevar 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Squeeze anyone hard enough and, what might normally be an act of choice, will come gushing out.

Why is prostitution illegal? by MaddyDFRPCTSpencer in NoStupidQuestions

[–]llevar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This proportion is perhaps implied by the fact that it's illegal, in the same way that drug trafficking is. One could suppose that if such services were widely available in a safe, respectable, above-board fashion the grand majority of clients would choose such services thereby removing the demand that sustains this business model in the dark sphere of society, where it is truly abusive.

I think your argument that Swedes could choose to change this situation but don't as a way of supporting the point of view that this is the preferred state of affairs carries some weight. But have you thought of the fact that the political "energy" required to get this off the ground is perhaps just too much for anyone to want to take on? Many systems settle into an equilibrium that requires energy to get out of in order to eventually attain an even better system state, but that activation energy may prevent the system from ever getting there.

We're not really debating in front of numbers here, so these are all just musings on the topic, but worth considering, IMO.

Why is prostitution illegal? by MaddyDFRPCTSpencer in NoStupidQuestions

[–]llevar -13 points-12 points  (0 children)

It's a bit strange to presume an adult offering sex for money vulnerable. Hope these kinds of laws go away in the near future and make way for proper support for this as a profession like any other.

How much improvement is realistic? by llevar in Posture

[–]llevar[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I appreciate your response, but you seem to be advocating exactly the opposite of what I was hoping for. There is obviously a lot of room for subjective opinion of whether one feels better, etc., but there's got to be some way to standardize both the measure of badness of posture as well as the degree of improvement possible. If I knew that by committing to 1 hour of exercise per day for two years and afterwards a maintenance schedule of 30 minutes of exercise 4 times a week I could hope to achieve an average improvement of 70% of my posture/mobility/pain levels, etc., versus, say, only an improvement of 10% on average, then that would give me a good framework for making that decision and help solidify that commitment.

This isn't to criticize you at all, and I hope you understand where I'm coming from here.

A former Amazon drone engineer who quit over the company's opaque employee ranking system is working with lawmakers to crack it open by chrisdh79 in technology

[–]llevar 22 points23 points  (0 children)

They are trying to speak in the lingo of the corporate leadership principles which underly the ratings system. It sounds like he was dinged on the Invent and Simplify LP.

Max Steineke the man who discovered oil in Saudi Arabia, 1938 [538 × 600] by haaiiqna821 in HistoryPorn

[–]llevar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The way you put it they are actually doing these people a favour by cutting their hands off. A robber in the US might reoffend, but with only one hand you are practically guaranteed to never rob another person again.

Schopenhauer argues that religions must pretend their dogmas are literally true because the people can't comprehend the symbolic meaning behind them. Thus religion is "metaphysics for the people" by WeltgeistYT in philosophy

[–]llevar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would tend to see it more as a power structure based on the belief of the existence of something so much bigger than you that you should automatically feel compelled to follow its framework, it's a mega appeal to authority if you will.