The value of Marx's work is that he identified problems with capitalism and wrote about them in-depth, not necessarily any proposed solutions. Much of his theory is of value even to capitalists, at least the ones that don't want it to be a completely unregulated free-for-all.the silence said:Marx is stupid, maybe we'll find a new kind of alternative to capitalism. A good one, y'know.
JohnZ117 said:snip
Alright. My main issue with Marx is that he promoted, and tried to, bring on a violent revolution. Which people took at face value, as you can see in soviet history, for example.DizzyChuggernaut said:snip
Oooh I see where you thought I was going with that. Very clever! That would have been better in retrospect. Less is more.Creator002 said:I swear, if you come back in 50 years and edit this post, I'm will find you, and I will edit my post too. I might be dead by 2065 though (I'll be 73 at this time in 50 years).Frezzato said:I imagine the year 2065 is going to look something like ...damn, brb
EDIT - Ha ha. I guess I misunderstood your vague post.
I think we'll have civilian trips to the moon as well as some lunar base(s). Maybe even a Mars base. Other technology (computers, mobiles, TVs, games) will probably advance as much as it has in the last 50 years
At first I was wondering what the guy was going on about, but then about half way through I saw the channel was one of the PBS Idea Channels and realized the problem was he has no idea what he's talking about (the PBS Idea Channels are probably the strongest argument for cutting public funding to PBS I've ever seen).JohnZ117 said:is that humans will have visited Mars and may be Venus, and possibly set up a base on one of them,
He was just comparing the plausibility of colonising one planet over the other. While I still believe that the colonisation of Mars would be easier, he does raise some good points about Venus. Our technology would have to be super advanced to even consider colonising another world, and by that time maybe we'd develop technology that can withstand Venus' hazards better than Mars'. Maybe not. Maybe we'll colonise the moon first. It's just a fun pop science video, man. It's an interesting possibility to entertain.Zontar said:The guy completely ignores the fact that Venus has acid rain and no magnetic field and doesn't even make mention of the economic value of colonization, which is the only thing which can make it happen long term beyond a few tiny research stations. You'll never see cities built in a place with no economic value.
When it comes to places to live colonizing space itself is the most practical in the form of building stations with artificial gravity. Moon colonization would most likely be in the form of short term deployment of people on a mostly automated mining facility. Really the moon only has value in its Helium 3 deposits and the fact that it's a safe place to build things that have danger involved in the production proses.DizzyChuggernaut said:He was just comparing the plausibility of colonising one planet over the other. While I still believe that the colonisation of Mars would be easier, he does raise some good points about Venus. Our technology would have to be super advanced to even consider colonising another world, and by that time maybe we'd develop technology that can withstand Venus' hazards better than Mars'. Maybe not. Maybe we'll colonise the moon first. It's just a fun pop science video, man. It's an interesting possibility to entertain.Zontar said:The guy completely ignores the fact that Venus has acid rain and no magnetic field and doesn't even make mention of the economic value of colonization, which is the only thing which can make it happen long term beyond a few tiny research stations. You'll never see cities built in a place with no economic value.
I think Japan probably stands as a testament to the fact that even without much focus on Social Science or Liberal Arts you can still have a thriving culture of ideas for the arts. In terms of comics, for example, Japan is in a league of its own compared to North America or Europe in terms of diversity and creativity within the medium, to say nothing of animation which has them produce 60% of the worlds total output, and unlike in the West animation has all ages targeted instead of falling into "only meant for children" or "vulgar comedies meant for adults that aren't really mature" as seems to unfortunately be the standard for the Western world.IamLEAM1983 said:Some thinkers are already rethinking the value of Social Sciences and Liberal Arts, thinking we need to invest on productivity and performance, instead. I've seen examples made of Japan, which is a country with a lazer-sharp focus on I.T. and Applied Sciences, but I wonder how healthy this would be for Literature or Art History if it was applied on a worldwide basis. You don't need to be able to land a critique of Shakespeare's works to be competitive in the job market, but ignoring culture as a whole can't possibly be good for any civilization.
Sure, it's off by 100 years, but given how much shit changes in retrospect while also shit doesn't change in retrospect, it's neither right or wrong and it only gets better/worse when you start adding in multiple parallel universes in the mix...FPLOON post="18.877421.22089041" said:June 23, 1865 (150 Years Ago): The American Civil War has finally ended... Holy fucking shit! I though this would never end...
OT: In 150 years, many things will happen... Some good, some bad, some we will never speak of again unless you're really are into that subject at large... There will be more twist than any novel series you've ever read, there will be more miracles than the ones recorded in the record books, and there will be more improbable feats than our 2015 minds can comprehend without thinking that it came straight out of a science fantasy TV series off Sci-fi... And yet, some things never change... Generations keep debating about which generation's the best generation of all time... Debates over things that seem trivial to some, but monumental to others, continue to exist like cancer and AIDs, but at a level that's more desensitized than how it is now... Babies can now go through puberty as young as 1-2 years old... And, the best part, people are even less attached to their physical counterpart than ever before, thus leading to the birth of "The Internet 3.1"... Okay, so maybe that last two seem to be more in the realm of pure fantasy, but given what has happened in 150 years already, I say there's no such thing as a bad idea... In fact, maybe we should build a park, fill it with genetically modified dinosaurs, call it a theme park based on just one time period in particular, and spare no expense in the process... We'll call it... Cretaceous Jungle!http://media.giphy.com/media/1PFKJexfdpO7u/giphy.gif
The singularity is massively overrated in my opinion. Computing Forever made a great video on the matter.CrimsonBlaze said:Well, given that Singularity is set to take place in 2030, by 2065, we'd probably all have an android or two as best buds, the internet would have mega evolved into an interesting complexity, while, nonetheless, a powerful beast, people might be cryogenically freezing themselves or loved ones for a future present, and we might actually have people preparing to download their conscious into a machine or robot body.
Also flying cars and light sabers; can't forget about those.