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> There seems to be little doubt that religion, faith, spirituality or rite can have benefits.

Doubt among who? Religious congregations?


Mass rape of little kids?


We've banned this account for repeatedly posting flamebait and unsubstantive comments, including religious flamewar comments, which we specifically asked you to stop: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28378449.

If you would please not create accounts to break HN's guidelines with, we'd be grateful. We're trying for something a bit different than internet default here.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html


> However, the black, spherical bomb, wick slowly burning away to a boom, has remained the understood image for an explosive.

According to who? Citation needed.


I can't resolve with either 8.8.8.8 or 1.1.1.1.


I switched Chrome to use secure DNS with neither Croogle or CloudBlare (used OpenDNS) and now it works fine. Fuck the megacorps.


OpenDNS is owned by Cisco; it's not exactly a mom-and-pop operation.


Well those same media companies pushed to get paid by Facebook for their own posts (they they post) on Facebook's platform -- so it seems right they should take responsibility for them.


> In a network game, if player 1 opens a door, you want player 2 to see the door opening IFF they are within the "network relevancy" radius of the door.

This is all kind of wrong. You want players to see the door opening IFF they can see the door at all. If incompetent developers can't achieve that and come up with some other solution and a lame excuse to go with it, that does not change the desire from a player perspective.


> IFF they can see the door at all

That is typically one of the conditions encompassed by "network relevancy".


Depends on how important such events are in the game. Lazy, or just being smart with your limited resources as culling like this isn't cheap.


What about hearing the door? What about any effects the door interaction might have?

I think narrowing it to “seeing” the door might produce a limited result that closes a lot of doors on proper multiplayer handling of other game mechanics.


Thanks God the beaches are running out of sand!


We are making more. Lots more. But we are buying even more than that.

Its called demand > supply.


That's too simple. E.g. why aren't the prices increasing such that the buying stops?


With enough time I assume they will. People will get upset if they suddenly see stores selling the same product for double the price. So the stores take the loss (or really just not taking the potential profit) and then let scalpers resell them at market value while offloading all of the hate on to faceless ebay sellers.


Maybe the buyers don't have suddenly more money to spend.


Then they do what they always do and pass the bill to the consumer. Its 2021, what are you not going to buy a computer and cell phone? Technology like this is a utility now.


I think most phone purchases might not be people purchasing a phone because they need one, but people purchasing a newer phone because it's cool. And while people certainly pour crazy amount of money in those gadgets, I'm sure there is a price limit when they are not buying a new one.


Ask any of your peers why they upgrade phones. 9/10 will tell you their old one was too old and slow to run modern software or the battery was toast, and that happens in just a few years for some phones. My roomate will probably be upgrading their iphone X soon, not because they want a new iphone, but because its starting to do weird things like not be able to take screenshots and is overall far slower than when he first got the device. Same story with the 6s the X replaced years ago. New phones haven't been cool for a long time, we've been buying the exact same slab of glass for like a decade.


AFAICT they are. You can't find a GTX 3060, 3070, or 3080 for less than 4x MSRP right now.


I don't think strict beliefs and Rome were really a thing until a certain Eastern religion took over.


Historically false. Christians were persecuted in Rome because they refused to sacrifice to Divine Ceasar.

Rome was very serious about worshiping Ceasar; the rest was optional.

(Rome didn't have a "civil society" or "social contract" in any sense we'd recognize. Their laws were supposed to be divinely ordained, and refusing to acknowledge this was grounds for the death penalty. If you're imagining Rome as some sort of freedom of religion place like America with the First Amendment then you're sorely mistaken; think Soviet communism or China instead.)


How do you reconcile that claim with the polytheistic nature of religion in Rome, and it's practice of folding other religions into it, as it absorbed conquered cultures?

Your parallels to 20th century governments miss the mark as much as the claims you are criticizing.


Christianity wasn't granted legal protection until ~300AD. Prior to that, you could say that it was a strict belief that Christianity was verboten and its members subject to persecution (lions, crosses, etc). It would be another half-century before the empire started to codify what "Christianity" was in a "strict" sense (Nicaean creed, right?).

The time period of Secundio's tomb is around AD 60 or so. As the article at pompeiisites.org says, "During the Roman period at Pompeii, funeral rites usually involved cremation, while only small children were buried." This burial of a 60 year old man stands out for a few reasons, but one of which is that it even exists at all given that it's contrary to custom of the pre-Christian age.


> It would be another half-century before the empire started to codify what "Christianity" was in a "strict" sense (Nicaean creed, right?).

The Roman Empire didn't codify anything. The Nicene Creed was composed by the Church in response to the Arian crisis. That the empire (through Constantine) had an interest in peace does not mean the empire performed the clarification.


That’s not quite true. It’s really hard to draw a line between these two instituons at Nicaea, because that was an explicitly symbiotic process.

First of all, the council was summoned by the emperor, organized by him, paid for by him, facilitated using public infrastructure, and personally attended by him. He might have “deferred” to the decisions of the bishops, but only happens when everyone recognizes his power to just declare things. He also banished some of the losing bishops into exile using his personal power. Whether or not it’s the “empire” or the dictatorial emperor declaring a thing is a fuzzy line, but a lot of state power was involved.

Secondly it wasn’t “the church” who declared anything, because no such singular institution actually existed to speak with one voice. Rather, the council was a self-conscious effort by Constantine to actually create a unified church, since he worried that the existing discord threatened spiritual safety of the church. Remember that Christianity had been legal for only a decade or so and it would take a while before the more underground organization could organize and finish settling old scores. Whether or not the Bishop of Rome was recognized as the leader of the church is still a hotly debated subject; he however did not actually chair the council of Nicaea. At Nicaea we’re still a century or two out from the first papal bull, 400 years or so from the first cardinals, and 700 years from the first recognizably modern papal conclave. In any case, only 300 or so of the 1,800 bishops of the empire attended.

In many ways the church became The Church by taking over the mantle of imperial authority as the Roman Empire receded from Western Europe. This is the process that gives it the power, organization, and bureaucracy to set religious policy and speak in one voice, and none of that is in place by Nicaea.


[flagged]


Please don't take HN threads into religious flamewar. We're trying to avoid that hell here.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html


That opinion itself is quite a shockingly revisionist statement, to simply wave a broad brush like that at a rather complex time period and then apply modern political coloring to ancient history.

I see no attempt at nuance here, so taking this at face value, are we then to simply dismiss Pliny the Younger's writings to Trajan about persecution? Should we ignore Hadrian's note of slanderous attacks on Christians? Was Tacitus writing also 'myth' in saying that Nero blamed Christians for the fire in Rome?

  ...To get rid of the report, Nero fastened the guilt and inflicted the most exquisite tortures on a class hated for their abominations, called Chrestians by the populace. Christus, from whom the name had its origin, suffered the extreme penalty during the reign of Tiberius at the hands of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilatus, and a most mischievous superstition, thus checked for the moment, again broke out not only in Judæa, the first source of the evil, but even in Rome, where all things hideous and shameful from every part of the world find their centre and become popular.
— Tacitus' Annals 15.44

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persecution_of_Christians_in_t...

This was a complex period in history, I would be wary of anyone making sweeping judgements or applying modern political coloring which acts to cloud issues rather than to illuminate history.


This wikipedia article is based on 20th century sources. Will be very nice when such an article will be based on original sources rather than biased interpretations and extrapolations 2000 years later. As Frank Herbert said: History is written by historians.


I must say, "20th century sources" isn't exactly a phrase that comes to mind when discussing Tacitus. But pray tell, what's your translation of the original Latin? It's not particularly difficult to find the original text here:

https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/tacitus/tac.ann15.shtml


Rome was remarkably flexible; until you say you don't want a statue of Jupiter or the deified Augustus in your Temple...and of course, nobody named Julian the Apostate would ever have an axe to grind against Christians.


If the writings of Porphyry, Emperor Julian, et al are to be believed, early Christianity was indeed the ISIS of the time. They were reported to systematically destroy temples, kill priests and at regular gatherings they would report their exploits to encourage each other in doing so.


If we look at 20th century newspapers we can see that a lot of political enemies are categorised as terrorists.


what does the word proactive mean to you?


You arrest people before they can commit the offence.

I think there was a documentary about this a few years ago called Minority Report.


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