Whitneyed

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Whitneyed

Whitneyed

@Whitneyed2

Retired epidemiologist

Albany, Oregon انضم Ağustos 2021
444 يتبع212 المتابعون
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
The domain of relatable human psychological experience is vast and deep. The domain of standard psychiatric discourse is not commensurate with the territory which it attempts to navigate. That is a problem insofar as it leads to needless suffering on the part of patients.
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Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@KenGardner11 Who will blink first? The ruthless hardliners who have little need to worry about the pain felt by their people, or the guy with a five minute attention span who sees his ratings falling to record lows? Have you done an analysis comparing the pain tolerances of US vs. Iran?
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Ken Gardner
Ken Gardner@KenGardner11·
If you break their economy, then you have a real chance to break their regime. Iran is not immune from principles of political philosophy that have been with us since we walked out of caves.
Mark Dubowitz@mdubowitz

The rial is at its weakest ever: 1.6M to the dollar — on track for 2M, faster than expected. Hyperinflation. Mass unemployment. War damage above 40% of GDP. $13B lost every month under blockade (see @FDD @miadmaleki @ElaineDezenski Dan Swift). The regime is staring at economic collapse as U.S. and Gulf pressure intensifies. Deal — or downfall?

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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@NoisyTroublemkr @CarsonWeitnauer Not a conservative but a traditionalist. No one gets certified as a highly educated member of society without ever having read a single book of the Bible, the Iliad and the Odyssey, and other pillars of Western civilization, mostly dead white European males.
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Carson Weitnauer
Carson Weitnauer@CarsonWeitnauer·
Trump's defenders often imitate his approach: * Name-calling and insults * Dismissive one-liners * Denying facts * Making it us-vs-them * Deflection Underneath it all... Contempt > curiosity Loyalty > logic Dominance > persuasion Think about who you're becoming....
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@NoisyTroublemkr @CarsonWeitnauer in Plutarch and Thucydides and other authors. It gave them gravitas. Trump sneers at the advice of experts and trusts his own instincts instead. Proverbs 12:15 tells you what that means in terms of who he is.
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@NoisyTroublemkr @CarsonWeitnauer needed to do this kind of thing. It was called gravitas. Internet trolling is not gravitas. Never-Trump was at its beginning in 2016 a conservative thing. It still is. Wanting to bring back classics like Aristotle and Plato is also a conservative thing. The Founders were steeped
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@TwoRulesOfWar Essential advice for people when a loved one is transitioning: repeat to yourself "This is not about me." They have met the Biblical requirement to run the course; they do not need to run extra laps. Their guardian angel is there to help them (my belief). It's all good.
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7% NaCl (Salty)
7% NaCl (Salty)@TwoRulesOfWar·
I sometimes tell families: ‘They wouldn’t have asked you to make this decision if they didn’t love you and trust you and your judgement. No one knows them better than you- and you’re doing the right thing’. I hope it helps them make difficult decisions.
Unfiltered@quotesdaily100

WHAT ICU NURSES KNOW ABOUT THE LAST HOURS OF LIFE THAT FAMILIES ARE NEVER PREPARED FOR: 1. Hearing is the last sense to go. Many patients can hear everything being said in the room long after they appear unconscious. Nurses know this. Most families do not act like it. 2. The body does not shut down all at once. It withdraws blood and oxygen from the extremities first, working inward toward the heart. The cold hands and feet you notice are the body making a final decision about what to protect. 3. A sudden, unexpected improvement in energy and alertness hours before death is not a good sign. Nurses recognize it immediately. Families almost always mistake it for recovery. 4. The sound called the death rattle is not pain. It is simply the throat relaxing and losing muscle control. But no amount of medical explanation prepares a family for hearing it for the first time. 5. Most people do not die during the night. The body has a biological rhythm and many deaths occur in the early hours of morning, between 3am and 5am, when the nervous system is at its lowest. 6. Patients often wait. Nurses have watched people hold on for days until a specific person arrives, or a specific word is spoken, or permission is quietly given to let go. It happens too consistently to be coincidence. 7. The words "we did everything we could" are sometimes true and sometimes the most painful half-truth a family will ever receive without knowing it. 8. Families who are not present at the moment of death carry guilt that no counselor fully resolves. Nurses see this guilt begin forming in real time and cannot always stop it. 9. The face relaxes completely at the moment of death in a way that is impossible to describe until you have seen it. Nurses say it looks like the person finally put something down they had been carrying for a very long time. 10. Many ICU nurses privately believe that the most painful deaths are not the ones with the most physical suffering. They are the ones where the patient dies surrounded by family members who are fighting with each other. 11. The thing families almost never say, but almost always should, is simply this: it is okay to go. Those four words, spoken out loud, do something that medicine cannot explain and nurses have witnessed more times than they can count. 12. Nurses grieve too. They learn the names, the histories, the family dynamics, and the small personal details of every patient. They cry in break rooms, in parking lots, and on drives home. Then they walk back in the next morning and do it all over again, because someone has to, and they chose to be that person.

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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@NoisyTroublemkr @CarsonWeitnauer It explains why there are Trump supporters I would trust with my life and Trump opponents I would not trust with my lunch. Trump lacks self-discipline. He is rage-posting in the wee hours of the morning. He also hates tens of millions of his fellow Americans. Not a good thing.
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@NoisyTroublemkr @CarsonWeitnauer So says Aristotle. Nicomachean Ethics 1111b-1112a. No wonder he is often called the greatest philosopher of all time. If his distinctions were embedded in our thinking, we would have much less needless strife and animosity in our public discourse.
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@NoisyTroublemkr @CarsonWeitnauer depending on the choices and actions people make. Opinion is measured in terms of true and false. It is a different dimension, and Aristotle basically says (my interpretation) that the correlation coefficient between the two is not significantly different from zero.
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@NoisyTroublemkr @CarsonWeitnauer search of homeless people to take them food and blankets, worried that they might not be able to meet someone's needs. They are virtuous men with wrong opinions about Trump. Book III of Aristotle's Ethics covers this phenomenon. Character is measured in terms of good and bad,
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@paul_jkrause The kind of thing I need help with includes IV,192: So since into his Church lewd hirelings climb. This certainly means something, but I don’t know what it is. The book I am looking for will tell me what it is about.
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Paul Krause
Paul Krause@paul_jkrause·
@Whitneyed2 Lewis is the best. Harold Bloom is good. And even Stanley Fish (Surprised by Sin) has some illuminating moments. I'd be remiss not to mention an essay/chapter of mine in one of my books, but if you'd read Lewis just get back into Milton's work. Lewis is a great guide.
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Paul Krause
Paul Krause@paul_jkrause·
Satan gets all the great and passionate lines in Paradise Lost as a warning to readers not to get seduced by the power of the negative passions. But his lines, especially in Book 4, are glorious... "Sight hateful, sight tormenting..."
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@NoisyTroublemkr @CarsonWeitnauer The dust up over this image is distracting from sounding the alarm that the nation is being governed by a man who cannot govern himself. That is the current crisis.
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@Girardism “God is dead” actually means that God is no longer an operating system, but an optional piece of downloadable utility and entertainment software, modifiable as desired by the end user.
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Girardism
Girardism@Girardism·
“For two or three centuries, this has been the underlying principle of every ‘new’ Western doctrine: God is dead, man must take his place. Pride has always been a temptation but, in modern times, it has become irresistible because it is organized and amplified in an unheard-of way. Th[ese] modern ‘glad tidings’ are heard by everyone. The more deeply [this pride] is engraved in our hearts, the more violent is the contrast between this marvelous promise and the brutal disappointment inflicted by experience.” — René Girard
Girardism tweet media
Girardism@Girardism

“The false prophets proclaim that in tomorrow's world, ‘men will be gods for each other.’ This ambiguous message is always carried by the most blind of Dostoevsky's characters. The wretched creatures rejoice in the thought of a great fraternity. They do not perceive the irony of their own formula; they think they are heralding paradise but they are talking about hell, a hell into which [always these Dostoevskian characters] are already sinking. ... The earth's surface where Others live becomes [for them] an inaccessible paradise.” — René Girard

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Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@BigBrainPhiloso Love of wisdom—prizing it above the structures we use to think to the point that we are willing to be disrupted by a divine madness if it will make us wise.
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Big Brain Philosophy
Big Brain Philosophy@BigBrainPhiloso·
Iris Murdoch on what philosophy actually is: Philosophy is notoriously difficult to define even for those who practise it. Speaking with Bryan Magee in 1977, Murdoch doesn't sidestep the question. She leans into it. "It's notoriously difficult to find philosophy… it's very difficult to say what it is." Her first move is to locate philosophy in the territory of structure and depth. It is "to do with conceptual structures," she says with "very deep structures of belief and knowledge," with meaning, with significance, with the question of how language relates to the world. But definition by content isn't enough. So she defines it by exclusion. Philosophy is not science. That much feels familiar. Yet Murdoch adds a subtler distinction: even when philosophy adopts a scientific style, "the actual what you're doing is certainly not science." The manner may borrow from the lab, but the activity is something else entirely. And philosophy is not art either. Her sharpest line is reserved for this boundary: "It's very important it's not sounds… as soon as you start doing sounds you're falling right out of philosophy." Sound aesthetic sensation, the seductive surface of language pulls the mind away from what philosophy actually is. The moment writing becomes music, it stops being thought. So if it is not science and not art, what is philosophy? Murdoch's answer is quiet but precise: "a kind of reflection on concepts." Not experiment. Not expression. Reflection. A sustained, disciplined turning of attention onto the structures we use to think — and asking whether they hold.
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@annielcrawford Lachman also wrote Politics and the Occult. This is a centuries old phenomenon. Knights Templar, French Revolution, etc. I don’t feel safe studying it too closely. Charles Williams could do it. But I’m no Charles Williams.
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Annie Crawford
Annie Crawford@annielcrawford·
"Man with the possible perversity of his warped imagination is far more dangerous than the devil and his legions. For man is not bound by the convention concluded between heaven and hell; "He can go beyond the limits of the law and engender arbitrarily malicious forces whose nature and action are beyond the framework of the law… such being the Molochs and other “gods” of Canaa, Phoenecia, Carthage, ancient Mexico and other lands, which exacted human sacrifice... "These are egregores, engendered by collective perversity, just as there exist the “demons” or “evil spirits” engendered by individuals." Anonymous. Meditations on the Tarot: A Journey into Christian Hermeticism.
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@annielcrawford Office. That’s what the Evangelical Christians are missing, as are their critics. All the current talk about his blasphemy overlooks the dark influences behind Trump and MAGA.
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Whitneyed
Whitneyed@Whitneyed2·
@annielcrawford influences on his character. The idea that thoughts are causative (think Norman Vincent Peale and The Power of Positive Thinking) is central to New Thought, and explains why Trump expects events in the Middle East to be shaped by his own mind. An occultist sits in the Oval
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