Addison Clark Vulcan is a terrible name for a boy. Its a girl's name! It has no sense of respectability or authority about it and hes just bound to become a target for bullies.
You win, this is hilarious.OlasDAlmighty said:You do not owe me $500, you cannot, should not, and will not deposit $500 into my paypal account. OlasDAlmighty@gmail.com
[sub][sub]kidding of course[/sub][/sub]
While your other counter arguements have seemed pretty well done, I must say this counter arguement hardly seems countering, only saying others could have also been as influential as him to do the same job. Hardly a refute, more of a qualify.Saladfork said:Hitler was largely a figurehead of the nazi party. He had a great many people in his party that shared his beliefs and were arguably more sensible. If it wasn't for him, one of them would have likely done the same things Hitler did.
Aww... And here I was ready to jump in with "You started a thread on the Escapist forums in which you argue with people."Saladfork said:Well, okay, one ground rule:
No paradoxes. Seriously, you guys will make my brain explode.
Fair enough, except that the small playerbase of any region other than Japan, which has about the same prices as EU but is naturally locked by language anyway, practically breaks the multiplayer. Armoured Core V has a persistent online territory system that works well in Japan, but basically gives way to boosting and grinding everywhere else due to a predictable lack of players. Furthermore, you can import the game and play on that region's server, and Australia (part of EU) is not region locked within itself, allowing me to import a copy for even my own region at about half the price.Saladfork said:Now I'll admit I don't know what Armoured Core V even is, but I do know that different markets can have vastly different buying power. Your average American is in a much better financial position to buy a new video game that, say, your average South African. A company will probably want to grab as many markets as it can, but if they charge the South Africans what they charge the Americans, few will be able to afford it, and if they charge Americans the same as South Africans, they will lose a substantial aount of profit.MeChaNiZ3D said:Armored Core V would be improved by the removal of region locking.
(You don't have to answer this one if you value your time)
The logical thing to do is to charge different prices at the two markets based on the buying power of your customers, but then you create the proble of Aericans simply importing South African copies for still quite a bit less than what it would cost in America. At that point you have two choice; Either raise the price in South Africa to the point of losing customers, or region lock. I therefore posit that region locking keeps games affordable to people who would otherwise never be able to afford them.
Why, no, of corse not. Today was a training day at work, so I got to sleep in later than usual and I ended up doing far less work.Busfull said:You're day has been terrible. Just goddamn awful.
Most private settings expect at least some degree of 'decency' from the employees and customers that go there. If, for example, you were to go to a restaurant and proceed to bellow out your conversations at ten times normal volume, you would likely be thrown out for the impoliteness you are showing everyone else there. There are several different expressions of disrespect that won't be tolerated in the interests of keeping a pleasant place.mjcabooseblu said:It is impossible to argue for the censorship of profanity without some sort of logical fallacy (most common of which are the slippery slope fallacy and appeal to emotion.)
That arguement implies that being a politician is largely a genetic factor. Since there have been no attempts to find a 'politician gene' (a _______ gene is kind of a misnomer but I'll go with it anyway) so I will have to go with the null hypothesis on that.Madbomber said:(laughs like grunt in ME3) He..he.he
Evolution was a horrible thing if the ancestors we evolved from knew that politicians would come out of the bloodline they would have stayed in the trees and played pranks on the other animals
also shrodingers cat principle is a very vital part of the thinking processes of quantum mechanics and the cat is simultaneously alive and dead and we are only capable of perceiving one set of localized quantum states, although i wonder what would happen if you filter into the equation the expansion of multiple dimensions from quantum theory would that mean that its simply one set of states in each dimension hence why were unable to perceive more than one?
late night sorry if i dont make sense
You, sir, are a cruel man.Akytalusia said:you have not equipped your browser with any ad blocking programs, and you have not illegally downloaded any copyrighted digital media in your life. you love the escapist website and wish to avoid getting any warnings or bans.
I mentioned before that I believe that anything that can be done could technically be considered art. It would hardly be reasonable to decry Inception, or Planescape: Torment, or Nightwish's Last of the Wilds as pretentious garbage.trty00 said:All modern art is pretentious garbage made by talentless hacks.
(I actually strongly disagree with this one. I just want to see you argue it.)
Greatness is, as is so many other things, subjective. If you wanted to be really technical about it, it could be expressed as a function, f(x)= x - z, where x is the number of cool things about you and z is the number of uncool things about you. Now, many of those traditionally considered 'great' (Napoleon, Bismark, Caesar, etc.) have had their lives studied rigorously by historians, which means that while x was indeed very large, we also find a lot of other things that didn't come up in public very much, like perhaps how somebody kicked puppies or was extremely racist or was a sadist or something, which increases z quite a bit as well.ThePS1Fan said:I am not the single greatest person alive.
Well, I would first say that the correlation so far seems based off of anecdotal evidence. I've never met them, of course, but I've never heard any reports of Leonardo di Vinci, Michealangelo, Shakespeare or Hitchcock being tormented in any great capacity. That's not to say that you don't get people like that at all, like for example Poe or Van Gogh, but to say that they were all in intense emotional pain seems like a bit of a hyperbole.glchicks said:The thing is, nobody is completely satisfied all the time. Taken to that infinite extreme, the person would be incapable of art. However since this person doesnt exist, everyone is capable of creating art in some capacity. If the majority of artists are well adjusted happy people like you say, how do you explain the fact that the most lauded artists of all time were tortured souls? If not causation, you must at least admit that there is a positive correlation between the depth of an artists pain and the quality of his work?
I'm sitting here doing a job that can easily be done while arguing with people on the internets at the same time, while trying to find an exercise schedule that I won't just stop doing two days in so I can lose the Freshman 15 I put on... two years ago.WanderingFool said:YOu are one of the coolest guys on this site...
But people like to winpoiumty said:For the record, lots of people in this thread confuse "discussion topic" with "random facts".