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15:01
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't believe such effort would be put into a joke. I don't believe Jesus had magical powers, but I believe those people did, and that they believed it about the same entity. To them, what he did was very much real and very much divine.
hello world
posted on July 20, 2015 by Eric Battalio

Today Soma announced the availability of Visual Studio 2015 RTM and invited Brian Harry and others to talk about new features and experiences. You can watch the VS 2015 keynote or catch the recording on Channel 9 later. Additionally, we have over 60 on...(read more)

posted on July 20, 2015 by Andrew B Hall - MSFT

We previously announced that we’d be releasing the source code for our debug engine that works with GDB and LLDB for C++ on Android and on iOS . Today, we’re pleased to announce that the source is now available on GitHub as the “MIEngine”...(read more)

¬_¬ fucking feeds
also even if Jesus did not exist I probably wouldn't want the undeniable proof to be exposed - the world would collapse in no time
What would be undeniable proof?
15:02
@AndyProwl writing was a real skill back then, word of mouth only spreads so far/fast/powerfully.
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes proof
@R.MartinhoFernandes no idea - assuming ad absurdum there were one, I wouldn't want it to be exposed
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes time machines :P
not the existence of them
@R.MartinhoFernandes A second gospel by one of them just saying it was all a joke :P
Ell
Ell
using one to go back and see for yourself
user1804599
15:02
@AndyProwl CENSORSHIP
@Ell How do you know that's exactly how it happened?
For all you know that's only exactly what is happening to you right now.
@Ell Yes Doc but I'm back... From the future
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes you could check it with some known past events
@rightfold yeah, doesn't sound good but just consider the alternative
Ell
Ell
15:04
Why not?
@Ell The only way you could check it would be if, before you did the trip, you already had evidence of your own presence back there.
time travel is... complex
billions of people losing their certainties and being desperate about the absence of an afterlife
@R.MartinhoFernandes just remember to but the keys behind this sign
would be quite a chaotic scenario to live in
15:04
@thecoshman Exactly. Bill & Ted style.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't understand why this is the case
@AndyProwl vOv Satanism is the way
Otherwise, it's not evidence.
@R.MartinhoFernandes bingo XD
Ell
Ell
How about if I can go back in time as a ghost
15:05
@AndyProwl Then again you'd have to defend such a proof for the rest of your life, because 1/3rd of the world would be poking holes in it.
Ell
Ell
ie, I don't affect the past
I just get to observe it
@Ell Because otherwise, what you are experiencing is, already, by definition, different from what actually happened (i.e. you are there).
@R.MartinhoFernandes but that only works if Bill Ted style time travel works, if it's Back to the Future, you can't do that.
@Griwes Sure. Notice "undeniable", "ad absurdum", etc.
And hence we'd have the same exact situation as now, only the other way around.
15:05
@Ell That's not "going back". And how is that reliable?
@AndyProwl "Undeniable" is not boolean. :P
user1804599
Bjarne is Jesus.
Ell
Ell
I mean, if I can observe the past without affecting it, why couldn't I just find jesus and see him?
At least not when there's a human somewhere in the equation. :D
and God is real. Unless declared integer.
Ell
Ell
15:06
I would believe my own eyes
@thecoshman My point, exactly.
Ell
Ell
It's undeniable proof to me
@MarcoA. God is long double.
@Ell it's like quantum mechanics, by observing it, you change it
@Ell You are too trusting.
15:06
@Ell How can you assure that it's the past as it happened?
@Griwes You're not playing my what-if game :P I'm supposing evidence strong enough to make people lose their faith would be exposed. I wouldn't want that to happen. Even if such evidence can't be found.
everything has already been calculated
theres no such thing as free choice
@MarcoA. inb4 no, God is imaginary
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes Because I can check against something like earthquakes or some geological or natural phenomenon
we are all slaves to the whims of physics
user1804599
15:07
#Queen veers onto a grass verge to avoid a family strolling through Windsor Great Park as she headed church Sunday. http://t.co/VNxXxXcOc6
Ell
Ell
and because I don't alter anything I don't need proof of me being there before
right?
user1804599
Are non-queens allowed to do this?
@AndyProwl Even if your evidence was strong enough to make people lose their faith over it, they wouldn't. (We are discussing ad absurdum, right? :D)
@Ell Er, actual real events are mentioned in the biblical texts. Doesn't make the rest of it more reliable.
@rightfold she drove on the grass wasting taxpayer money u wot
15:08
@Ell You need proof that you are actually seeing the past as it happened.
@Ell if you could, you can't prove that the past you have gone back to is the the past of the present that you came from and when you come back to your present, it's now a new present in which you have actually been in the past.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right, I still don't understand why I can't just use past events to know that that is what I am observing?
@Ell Because those events are not the one you want to prove happened.
@Griwes what? :D The "if" in my what-if game is that people would lose their faith because of that evidence. You're trying to pinpoint the premise is false, but that's not the game I'm playing
Earthquake, no Jesus.
Earthquake, Jesus.
How do you tell those two apart?
Which one is the true one?
Ell
Ell
15:09
@R.MartinhoFernandes There would only be one
I wouldn't have two to tell apart
@Ell How do you know that one is the true one?
what if there was a tsunami though
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't see how there could be another one :S
If my time machine doesn't go back in time, then it's not a time machine
@R.MartinhoFernandes to a point, it wouldn't matter, when he comes back to his new present, he simple lives in which ever it is
@Ell How can you show that your machine is reliable, then?
Ell
Ell
15:11
Well it was kind of in the premise
@wilx This is mostly incorrect. The Catholic church mostly didn't care one way or the other about heliocentrism. Galileo had made some enemies, and that was what he talked about, so they used it as a...lever against him--but the Catholic church did precisely nothing to (for one example) Keppler, even though he was publishing even more accurate models of the solar system at around the same time.
4
Ell
Ell
I don't think I could show that my time machine is reliable I guess
If we consider Terminator time travel, if you did show up back then, you must go back else this train of thought would not match up.
@Ell You could if you had a Bill-&-Ted-style thing where you find the keys you will have put there.
Though I think the Terminator model is the same as B&T.. except IIRC Terminator is only backwards
15:12
@AndyProwl Still. Ad absurdum... :P
Otherwise, no.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes I presume that is a film? I haven't seen it
@Ell :O
/kick
Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure is a 1989 American science fiction comedy buddy film and the first film in the Bill & Ted franchise in which two slackers travel through time to assemble a menagerie of historical figures for their high school history presentation. The film was written by Chris Matheson and Ed Solomon and directed by Stephen Herek. It stars Keanu Reeves as Ted "Theodore" Logan, Alex Winter as Bill S. Preston, Esquire, and George Carlin as Rufus. Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure received reviews which were mostly positive upon release and was commercially successful. It is no...
@thecoshman The Terminator model makes no sense.
Ell
Ell
@thecoshman it's before my time :P
15:13
Which is funny because B&T is the one of the two that doesn't take itself seriously.
@nick yeah, tsunamis never indicate earthquakes
@JerryCoffin s/pp/p/
The more psychiatrists we have, the more mental ill people we have. Coincidence? I think not :p
Kepppplerp.
Also, geocentrism FTW
15:15
@R.MartinhoFernandes it sort or does... seems to just pop new realities into existence that live in isolation... it's not good
@R.MartinhoFernandes You Bartek self-centered dude you.
@rightfold only if they are non-queen as in non-queer
@Ell that matters not, watch them!
Oooh. I'll wear my geocentrism T-shirt tomorrow.
Everyone loves it.
@wilx We know about pretty much ancient views that were deemed heretical, so that argument feels moot.
15:16
Shit, it's at my friend's place.
@sehe ah ya got me
my attempts to troll are always so shallow, gotta work on that
If you want to become a geocentre, your best bet is to become a blackhole
then you get to suck everything around you in
Ugh.
$ curl <url> | sudo bash installs :<
@R.MartinhoFernandes yay for terrible security!
@JerryCoffin This contrasts quite a bit with what I thought I've known so far. Where did you get this from?
15:19
@thecoshman It's not much different from using the package manager when it comes to that.
@AndyProwl It's the historical record vOv
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, it's level of trust I guess
I apt-get shit all the time, never really worry about it installing other shit
I've always read that the Church opposed heliocentrism very strongly
but I'm not paranoid enough to read all the source code for every project I want I want to use and compile it myself
@AndyProwl vOv You're Italian
@thecoshman If anything, that should make me more biased towards the Church
15:23
@AndyProwl oh wait, I fail at reading :\
@AndyProwl "very strongly" is very wrong, I think.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Doesn't banning books qualify as very strong opposition?
When compared to what happened to Galileo? No.
did they burn everything, or just a copy?
When compared to pretty much everything else during the Inquisition? No.
15:25
you know ... books are reprintable
When considering that the Gregorian calendar, devised from the heliocentric model, was introduced by Pope Gregory XIII in 1582? No.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oops.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Then why banning those publications?
I wonder what are the initial reactions for the rest of the religion groups.
I mean, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists ... most religions indicate that the earth is pretty much everything we got while alive. Sun & other planets are beyond reach of ordinary people.
In particular I'm asking for sources showing evidence that the reasons behind the Galileo affair were motivated by things other than his scientific views
15:30
@AndyProwl Even then they had to maintain some illusion of consistency--but they still did nothing to Kepler himself, and as far as I've ever been able to tell, there was never much attempt to enforce the order about his publications either.
@AndyProwl They conflicted with Scripture. They banned a ton of things.
@AndyProwl Also note that nothing really happened until Galileo.
They even amended Copernicus' work so they could keep it around and only banned the original.
Am I the only ignorant person here to have just found out that Russians have performed a cruel procedure and made two dogs into one?
@nick tsunamis always happen in shallow waters anyways
Was it a hoax?
@AndyProwl A lot of it is timing. He published his (quite broken) idea of a model of the solar system, and nothing happened (anywhere close to) immediately. Then he published a book with (lots of) direct quotes from the pope of the time, all being said by a character named "simplicio", and suddenly he had to be silenced.
15:34
fuck... missed the bus :\
now I'm stuck for another hour
@AndyProwl Anti-Christian propaganda.
Also, the "Dark Ages" were not that dark.
@JerryCoffin Of course such an order would have no effect. The Reformation was a century prior.
@thecoshman Take the robot option: take a different bus going somewhere else entirely.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'd find more reasonable to believe that Galileo was fighting harder than others before him and/or providing more pressing evidence that things weren't working like the Church was saying, unless I'm pointed to references that can provide more information
@AndyProwl Er.
Fighting makes enemies.
Galileo was dumb.
He wanted to prove the Church wrong.
Anti-geocentrism is stupid and untenable.
15:36
@JerryCoffin there's only one :\
There was no fight to be had.
@R.MartinhoFernandes What?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, but you don't need to fight if there isn't a strongly opposing part
@AndyProwl There wasn't. See Copernicus.
Galileo picked the fight.
15:37
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, I'm not taking that seriously
@AndyProwl It is only half-joking.
Newton got it right with his relativity.
No wait, it was actually Galileo's relativity.
lol
hahaha
@AndyProwl His big problem was that he insisted on some things that were just plain wrong, but he was utterly inflexible about them. If you read through the transcript of his trial (not easy, but possible to find/read) he was utterly insistent that the earth (and all planets) followed perfectly circular orbits, not elliptical. So they were asking if his model improved predictions of their positions and such, and the answer was an unequivocal "no".
Ha, Galileo figured it out years later, so.
@AndyProwl Copernicus had his work published for sixty years before the Church took action. That action was merely to amend it (well, and ban the unamended copies), and it was only after Galileo stirred everything.
That doesn't sound like "strong opposition" by any measure to me.
@R.MartinhoFernandes The fight was there to be picked because the Church was spreading false information due to their need to make the Bible correspond to the truth. Galileo was fighting that and the Church fought back. That's strong opposition IMO. Galileo was punished harder just because he shouted his ideas louder
Interestingly, he insisted on this precisely because of his own religious beliefs--the earth was "fallen" so it was acceptable (in his mind) that things here weren't perfect. Up there was heaven, so in his mind everything had to be perfect, and that meant perfect circles, not ellipses.
15:42
@AndyProwl The geocentric model is not false information. Stop spreading this false information.
4 mins ago, by Andy Prowl
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, I'm not taking that seriously
@AndyProwl The Church took Copernicus' ideas.
@AndyProwl You should. I do.
I don't :)
I mean it when I say it.
15:43
So do I
Fucking propaganda convinced everyone that Ptolemy was a nutjob.
@AndyProwl Seriously, this is just classical mechanics.
I don't think he was a nutjob. I think the heliocentric model is a way more reasonable one, and that the Church defended the geocentric one for non-scientific reasons
Galilean invariance or Galilean relativity states that the laws of motion are the same in all inertial frames. Galileo Galilei first described this principle in 1632 in his Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems using the example of a ship travelling at constant velocity, without rocking, on a smooth sea; any observer doing experiments below the deck would not be able to tell whether the ship was moving or stationary. The fact that the Earth orbits around the sun at approximately 30 km/s offers a somewhat more dramatic example. == Formulation == Specifically, the term Galilean invariance...
@AndyProwl Yes, they did, when Galileo decided to be a dick about it.
Not sixty years prior.
@AndyProwl Not really--the church took no position one way or the other about heliocentrism. The Bible contained a passage (or maybe a few, if you looked hard) that implied a geocentric model, and Galileo was demanding that they rewrite it--to reflect his own theory, which was also quite incorrect (though, arguably, less incorrect) just in different ways. They quite reasonably asked whether his model was really correct, and found that no it wasn't (but he insisted anyway).
2
There's a reason it's known as the Copernican model, and that's because Copernicus came up with it. Instead of poking his eyes out, they took it and make a calendar from it.
@JerryCoffin A bit like Newton with the big difference being that Newton learned from Galileo's mistakes (I guess living in an Anglican kingdom also helps).
Ven
Ven
15:50
@sehe sorry, what?
So, Gallileo was a bit of a douche?
@JerryCoffin Wait, Gallileo demanded a Bible rewrite?!
I'm sorry guys I don't understand
The Church banned books that were defending heliocentrism, threatened people who were trying to prove them wrong, and adapted other works that couldn't be taken as-is because they were conflicting with their beliefs. How does this count as "mostly not caring one way or the other"? How is this not strong opposition?
huh... does shift+home normally swap between displaying graphics during boot in linux?
@AndyProwl Er, taking sixty years to oppose something doesn't count as "mostly not caring"?
15:55
what you mean displaying graphic?
(And during that time, actually making use of it)
@R.MartinhoFernandes It depends how popular those ideas were, and how visible it was that their beliefs were wrong
@khajvah seems to swap between splash screen and actual text saying what's going on
@thecoshman Which linux (distro)?
it's easy to claim "A" and 'accept' "not A" as long as nobody starts claiming the two aren't compatible and you shouldn't do that, and you have to pick one or the other
Ell
Ell
15:57
@thecoshman not IME
inb4 awkward branches of mathematics
@nabijaczleweli could be that I'm running it through virtual box
Warning: content deemed too philosophical. Brain overload. Shutdown
(Srsly, I'm gone, see you tomorrow guys :) )

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