tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post856024734389061310..comments2024-03-29T20:21:24.821+11:00Comments on The Social Pathologist: Phenotyped.The Social Pathologisthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12927698533626086780noreply@blogger.comBlogger14125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-50266988859616235602014-10-28T21:31:11.156+11:002014-10-28T21:31:11.156+11:00Dịch vụ Check domain miễn phí. check domain nhanh ...Dịch vụ <a href="http://inet.vn/kiem-tra-ten-mien.html" title="Check domain" rel="nofollow">Check domain</a> miễn phí. check domain nhanh chóng chính xác<br />Dịch vụ <a href="http://web.tin.vn/web-ban-hang.html" title="Tạo web miễn phí" rel="nofollow">Tao web mien phi</a> từ inet cho phép bạn tạo web bán hàng hoàn toàn miễn phí<br />Tin tức <a href="http://reddevilsgallery.blogspot.com/" title="Bóng đá" rel="nofollow">Bóng đá</a> cập nhật 24/7. Nhận định trận đấu, tổng hợp kết quả các trận đấu bóng đá<br />CHuyên trang <a href="http://kenhtintuctructuyen.blogspot.com/" title="Tin tức" rel="nofollow">Tin tức</a> cập nhật nhanh nhất chính xác nhất các tin tức nóng hổi<br />Cổng <a href="http://xalotructuyen.blogspot.com/" title="Tin tức online" rel="nofollow">Tin tức online</a> cập nhật tin tức trong và ngoài nước nhanh nhất, chính xác nhất<br />Cổng <a href="http://xalotintuconline.wordpress.com/" title="Tin tức trực tuyến" rel="nofollow">Tin tức trực tuyến</a> cung cấp thông tin đời sống xã hội, tin tức tổng hợp<br />Blog <a href="http://kienthucngheseo.blogspot.com/" title="kiến thức seo" rel="nofollow">Kiến thức seo</a> cung cấp kiến thức seo căn bản cho người mới học seo<br />Blog <a href="http://inet-huongdanseo.blogspot.com/" title="hướng dẫn seo" rel="nofollow">Hướng dẫn SEO</a> hướng dẫn học và làm seo<br />Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10904520734759035875noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-15920460158180645552014-04-21T01:37:59.552+10:002014-04-21T01:37:59.552+10:00And a good morning to you, too!And a good morning to you, too!Tomhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04894012303210613148noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-82733692546746151182014-04-07T12:28:06.346+10:002014-04-07T12:28:06.346+10:00"Blogger Tom said...
Consider that the concep..."Blogger Tom said...<br />Consider that the concept of beauty and attractiveness changes significantly between cultures"<br /><br />Please kill yourself.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-58523957604538788422014-04-03T23:05:53.469+11:002014-04-03T23:05:53.469+11:00@GK
Nice to have you back. Some regulars here tod...@GK<br /><br />Nice to have you back. Some regulars here today!<br /><br /><i> We shouldn't bore housewives but we also should expect that they have responsibilities equivalent to the male draft.</i><br /><br />The problem is that <i>men and women are different</i> therefore the same standards do not apply. It's not about me walling women in rather, the one size fits all approach for women is wrong. There is a fair amount of heterogeneity with regard to the maternal instinct, and keeping some women at home literally drives them mad.<br /><br /><i>You should write more about architecture.</i><br /><br />Hope to soon.<br /><br /> The Social Pathologisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12927698533626086780noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-24434633588866720952014-04-03T01:35:31.683+11:002014-04-03T01:35:31.683+11:00You should write more about architecture. This bl...You should write more about architecture. This blog isn't for everyone and some good architecture posts would be fun to read. I actually find Wright mostly ugly though I've learned to offer muffle praise in certain company. That doesn't mean he didn't have good ideas, but "Falling Water" has to be one of the most ridiculous houses ever built. The Hotel in Japan, the name of which escapes me, is far more interesting.<br /><br />Actually let me Google that:<br />http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Hotel,_Tokyo<br />While I agree with the article as a whole you go come to an odd conclusion. Why can't we legislate female behavior if we can legislate male behavior? You seem to have an odd hang up here going back to earlier comments about the work force. I commented a while back on that, can't seem to find it though and wouldn't be surprised if you deleted it since it was short and done from a phone and therefore pretty bad.<br /><br />You seem to fear walling women in whereas I'm far more worried about "walling them out" by not expecting from them social norms determined by their sex. We shouldn't bore housewives but we also should expect that they have responsibilities equivalent to the male draft.<br /><br />Minus that ongoing quibble it is good to see these two posts which are better constructed than your earlier tries at the idea.GK Chestertonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11412564496846777444noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-31394578325401651132014-04-01T07:37:08.087+11:002014-04-01T07:37:08.087+11:00@Tom
There is a degree of variation between cultu...@Tom<br /><br />There is a degree of variation between cultures but there is also a remarkable amount of similarity. Pretty much all cultures prefer fairer to darker and healthy looking to sick, younger compared to old.<br /><br />I'm not arguing for "one standard" of beauty, rather, that beauty has standards and there is a fair amount of variation once that standard has been achieved. <br /><br />I'm not arguing for a "Nordic" standard of beauty either. There are plenty of African, Asian, Indian, etc women who are beautiful but within their racial type, they still need to possess features such as symmetry, youth, clear skin etc.<br /><br />The argument, that a fat Asian woman is just as beautiful as an Asian woman with a BMI of 21 is false. <br /><br />@Marcus D<br /><br />Enjoy the link.<br /><br />http://bossip.com/913656/elsewhere-in-the-world-nearly-77-of-nigerian-women-use-skin-lightening-products/<br /><br />The Social Pathologisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12927698533626086780noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-18212740192143737102014-04-01T04:38:34.041+11:002014-04-01T04:38:34.041+11:00Dr. Peter Frost has done a lot of research on that...Dr. Peter Frost has done a lot of research on that topic, actually:<br /><br />Frost, Peter. "Fair women, dark men: the forgotten roots of colour prejudice." History of European Ideas 12.5 (1990): 669-679.<br /><br />http://evoandproud.blogspot.co.uk/MarcusDhttp://simulacral-legendarium.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-2780050761467982892014-03-31T18:26:07.163+11:002014-03-31T18:26:07.163+11:00@ Tom
Most Pacific Islander rap videos will pretty...@ Tom<br />Most Pacific Islander rap videos will pretty much have all white women, some African American (esp if appealing to international audiences) and very little actual Pacific Island women.<br /><br />Sure, Islanders still love each other, but their ideal are white women. From experience, Islander women are some of the most disgusting, mostly because they eat themselves to ugliness and completely unfeminine.<br />All 'cultures' prefer pale women, even in the deepest depths of Africa pretty women often are called white because they have a pale glow. European women by virtue are the palest of the pale, hence some of the most desired.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-14812439352371490152014-03-26T14:49:10.532+11:002014-03-26T14:49:10.532+11:00Consider that the concept of beauty and attractive...Consider that the concept of beauty and attractiveness changes significantly between cultures, as well as heavily over time, I think pretending that God's definition of femininity is pretty much the statistical average preference of white, North American young men between 18-34 in the year 2014 is pretty iffy.<br /><br />This would also seems to imply that those who do not find favour with the fairer sex are somehow defective in God's eyes, something I suspect much of your readership might not find appealing.Tomhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04894012303210613148noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-2027550746973615272014-03-20T12:24:03.522+11:002014-03-20T12:24:03.522+11:00Source:
http://www.tektonics.org/af/baptismneed.p...Source:<br /><br />http://www.tektonics.org/af/baptismneed.phpAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-44775631659368944392014-03-20T12:23:31.891+11:002014-03-20T12:23:31.891+11:00@The Social Pathologist
I think you may find the ...@The Social Pathologist<br /><br />I think you may find the semitic totality concept interesting.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Behind much of the thought in the Bible lies a "peculiarly Semitic" idea of a "unitive notion of human personality." [Dahl, Resurrection of the Body, 59] This notion combined aspects of the human person that we, in modern times, often speak of as separate entities: Nausea is thought of as a condition of the soul and not the stomach (Num. 21:5); companionship is said to be refreshing to the bowels (Philemon 7); and the fear of God is health to the navel (Prov. 3:8). <br /><br />This line of thinking can be traced through the Old Testament and into the New Testament (in particular, the concept of the "body of Christ") and rabbinic literature.<br /><br />Applied to the individual, the Semitic Totality Concept means that "a man's thoughts form one totality, with their results in action, so that 'thoughts' that result in no action are 'vain'." [ibid, 60] To put it another way, man does not have a body; man is a body, and what we regard as constituent elements of spirit and body were looked upon by the Hebrews as a fundamental unity. Man was not made from dust, but is dust that has, "by the in-breathing of God, acquired the characteristics of self-conscious being." <br /><br />Thus, Paul regards being an un-bodied spirit as a form of nakedness (2 Cor. 5). Man is not whole without a body. A man is a totality which embraces "all that a man is and ever shall be."<br /><br />Applied to the role of works following faith, this means that there can be no decision without corresponding action, for the total person will inevitably reflect a choice that is made. Thought and action are so linked under the Semitic Totality paradigm that Clark warns us [An Approach to the Theology of the Sacraments, 10]: <br /><br />The Hebraic view of man as an animated body and its refusal to make any clear-cut division into soul and body militates against the making of so radical a distinction between material and spiritual, ceremonial and ethical effects.<br />Thus, what we would consider separate actions of conversion, confession and obedience in the form of works would be considered by the Hebrews to be an act in totality. "Both the act and the meaning of the act mattered -- the two formed for the first Christians an indivisible unity." [Flemington, New Testament Doctrine of Baptism, 111]Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-66076553727068321832014-03-14T22:10:22.130+11:002014-03-14T22:10:22.130+11:00@Jack
Modern architecture is a particular bugbear...@Jack<br /><br />Modern architecture is a particular bugbear of mine. I don't write about it much simply because most people find the subject boring.<br /><br />Lloyd Wright, at least to me, is an architect who typifies the triumph of the aesthetic over the practical. In many ways his architecture is analogous to the modern young woman. Optimised for visual appreciation and not much of a woman by any other measure.<br /><br />@Marcus.<br /><br />I think the law of large numbers does tell us something real.The Social Pathologisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12927698533626086780noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-61558841928364241102014-03-14T05:06:55.688+11:002014-03-14T05:06:55.688+11:00"A house is an arrangement of building materi..."A house is an arrangement of building materials according to a plan. It's hylomorphic in the sense that the plan determines the arrangement of the material. Now, assuming that the plan is good, the goodness or the badness of the house is dependent upon how faithfully the material is arranged to the plan."<br /><br />I thought to add: "unless your architect is a loon" only to read on and find your FLR reference.<br /><br />Interesting structures, impractical designs. I visited 'Falling Water' in PA years ago. The docent remarked several times that the home was 'in tune with nature'. Well, it takes a small army to keep the thing from being engulfed by the forest, three barrels of oil a day (!) to heat it in winter (poured concrete with no insulation) and it has a creek running through the living room. Otherwise its perfect.<br /><br />Jack's digressive comment for the day.Jackhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12654032764386427929noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29137904.post-46790930331864629022014-03-12T13:15:39.493+11:002014-03-12T13:15:39.493+11:00Your post reminds me of:
http://www.amazon.com/Th...Your post reminds me of:<br /><br />http://www.amazon.com/The-Wisdom-Crowds-James-Surowiecki/dp/0385721706<br /><br />http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_large_numbersMarcusDhttp://simulacral-legendarium.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.com