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The Saving results of the Death of Christ !

Continuing this discussion from the other thread. Which part of this are suggesting conflicts with what I said? Refer to posts #43 and #59.
"The sentence “He failed to ἑλκύω” merely says the drawing did not occur; it doesn’t tell you if that was because

the subject was too weak, or

the object was too resistant."
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Does Regeneration Precede Faith?

The connection to verse 20 doesn't exclude verses 25-26 or 35-36. It explains what triggered the entire discourse. The arrival of the Greeks in verse 20 is the narrative catalyst:

"Now among those who went up to worship at the feast were some Greeks. So these came to Philip... and asked him, 'Sir, we wish to see Jesus.'" (John 12:20-21)​
John deliberately isolates this event: "Now there were some Greeks..." (δὲ marks a narrative transition). He draws attention to them as a separate narrative unit before Jesus speaks again. The significance of it is that this is the first explicit mention of Gentiles seeking Jesus in John's Gospel. Up to this point, Jesus' ministry has been almost entirely within Israel. There had been occasional foreshadowings of Gentile inclusion (e.g., John 4:42), but this is the first time Gentiles are physically present and requesting audience with Jesus.

Jesus "answers them" (ἀποκρίνεται αὐτοῖς) in verse 23, saying, "The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified." The Greeks' arrival is what provokes this declaration. It is the event that marks the shift from "My hour has not yet come" (2:4; 7:30; 8:20) to "The hour has come" (12:23). So the arrival of these Gentiles signifies the transition from a Jewish-restricted mission to a universal one. Everything that follows Jesus' declaration in v. 23 unfolds as His theological exposition of this turning point.

Verses 25-26 develop the implications of His glorification (the necessity of death leading to life), while verse 32 gives its climactic significance: He being "lifted up" will effect a drawing of all kinds of people: Jew and Gentile alike, not Jew only. That's why John mentions the Greeks at all. They are the narrative signal that the redemptive focus is expanding beyond Israel.

The logic of the discourse is:

vv. 20-23 - The Greeks arrive --> "the hour has come."
vv. 24-26 - The principle of life through death (the grain of wheat).
vv. 27-33 - The meaning of Christ's death: the cross as the means of universal (not Jewish-only) gospel appeal.
vv. 35-36 - The closing exhortation: believe in the Light while it is among you.

The meaning of "draws" (ἑλκύω) and the scope of those drawn are not determined by the exhortation. In this context, the verb concerns the inclusion of all kinds of people; that is, kinds without distinction, not individuals without exception. Jesus is announcing the ingathering of both Jews and Gentiles into one redeemed people, not the universal salvation (or attempt at it) of every individual. Moreover, the semantic core of ἑλκύω is forceful or powerful, not merely inviting. The core idea it expresses is the decisive movement from one state or sphere to another. Thus, when Jesus declares, "I will draw all people to myself," He is not describing a mere attempt to persuade; He is proclaiming the certain efficacy of His redemptive work: the power of the cross to extend through the gospel to all nations and to bring people of every kind to genuine faith in Him. If that "drawing" is taken to refer to individuals without exception, the text would be teaching universalism.
And again no explanation of verse 36 although you did mention the first 5 words of the verse but cleverly omitted the part about believing in order to become sons of Light.

“While you have the Light, believe in the Light, so that you may become sons of Light.” These things Jesus spoke, and He went away and hid Himself from them.”
‭‭John‬ ‭12‬:‭36‬ ‭NASB1995‬‬
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Why do people hate ICE...

We were all told that ICE would be going after the bad guys. Instead, they are going after priests working for the good guys.

This provides an answer to the question "Why do people hate ICE?"
No we weren't. Trump ran on mass deportations. He said there would be a priority on the worst, but he never said that ICE wouldn't continue with what the rest of their job is. This is a media and leftist propeganda to say Trump was only going after bad guys.

I seem to recall having conversations on this very board with progressives about how impossible it would be for Trump to deport all 20 million illegals. They were all asking how he was going to get that done. So, pardon me if I don't buy the, he was only going after bad guys routine.

We all voted for him because he was going after all of them.
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Vatican stops use of titles for Mary

I think that Co-Pilot is a better example.

Except remember, the co-pilot can relieve the captain and take over the controls if he believes the captain has become incapacitated, or prevent the flight from taking off if he believes the captain or aircraft is unsafe to fly, under the principles of crew resource management.

It’s no longer like Robert Stack in The High and the Mighty; indeed I have an amusing memo to co-pilots at American Airlines from the 1940s which completely clashes with the roles and responsibilities they now enjoy at present.

Thus on the basis of CRM, co-pilot is no longer a good analogy. The seniormost flight attendant, sometimes called the Purser, or Cabin Services Director on British Airways back in the day, might be a better analogy, in that the Blessed Virgin Mary makes sure everyone, including the angels and other saints (who I suppose under this analogy we could liken to cabin crew), pay attention when her Son is speaking.

Since with CRM, the Holy Trinity really becomes more like the Captain, First Officer and Second Officer, except the Second Officer or Flight Engineer is now an extremely rare position with the retirement of most older 747s, DC-10s, and the last of the 727 and DC-8 freighters.

That said, to be clear, in engaging with the airliner crew metaphor at all I am making a huge leap and all of these metaphors fall short of the precise technical language used to describe the Holy Trinity and the relationship of Christ our Lord, God and Savior, the Incarnate Logos, to His Father and to us, and the role and purpose of our most blessed and glorious lady Theotokos and ever Virgin Mary.
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The Saving results of the Death of Christ !

ChatGpt:

"Greek (like English) can still describe an attempted but unsuccessful act of ἑλκύω through context:​

> “They were not able to ἑλκύσαι the net” (John 21:6).

Here:

ἑλκύσαι still means “to draw (so as to move).”

οὐκ ἴσχυον (“were not able”) tells you they failed to accomplish it.

That failure does not redefine the verb’s meaning — the action type is still “drawing that would cause motion.”


ἑλκύω itself doesn’t specify who or what causes failure.

The sentence “He failed to ἑλκύω” merely says the drawing did not occur; it doesn’t tell you if that was because

the subject was too weak, or

the object was too resistant.

Those are interpretive possibilities, not grammatical facts."​

I don't think you can get this strictly from grammer, rather you need to look at the context.
Continuing this discussion from the other thread. Which part of this are suggesting conflicts with what I said? Refer to posts #43 and #59.
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Does Regeneration Precede Faith?

It's not incorrect. Show me how it's incorrect. The semantic core of ἑλκύω denotes a decisive movement from one position to another. We've already discussed this in another thread. You've seen my argument there. Where is your interaction with it?

I'm not interested in trading barbs. At this point, both of you are arguing for the sake of argument. I've been more than patient in taking the time to read and respond, yet neither of you has addressed the actual arguments I've presented. Instead, you continue deflecting to peripheral issues. Until you engage the substance of my points directly, I will not be responding further.


In this conversation, I have referred you to posts #35, #75, #91, #93, #100, #118, #119, and #124. You've engaged with none of them, at least not meaningfully. So yes, I'm ignoring you at this point, because you're not here to discuss; you're here to play games. If you actually care about dialogue, start with my comments on the context of John 12 in posts #75, #93, and #100, and interact with the argument. I have repeatedly laid out an argument that answers your understanding of verse 36. Show me where the error lies, or find something better to do with your time. I have no obligation to refute bare assertions, and I won't engage further with posts that show no effort beyond that.

1 John 2:29; 4:7, and 5:1. There's been no answer. (See posts #91, #118)

John 6:44-45. There's been no answer. (See posts #35, #119, #124)

Context of John 12, cf. John 6. There's been no answer. (See posts #75, #93, #100)

That wraps things up.
No let’s review your alleged responses to John 12:36.

What do you mean by "the way a person is drawn to Him changed"? I recently commented on John 12:32 in another thread. I'll reproduce those comments below:

John 12:32 occurs within the context of Jesus responding to the report that "some Greeks" desired to see Him (v. 20). The arrival of Gentiles signals that the redemptive focus is widening beyond Israel. Jesus interprets this event as the indication that His "hour" has come: the hour of His glorification through death (v. 23). Thus, when He says He will be "lifted up," He refers to His crucifixion (v. 33).​
So when he says πάντας ἑλκύσω ("I will draw all people"), the phrase must be read in light of the preceding Gentile reference and the Johannine theme of universal scope of the gospel, not universal salvation (or the attempt at such). In other words, "all" here does not mean "every individual without exception," but "all kinds of people (Jew and Gentile alike) without distinction." The arrival of Greeks prompts Jesus to declare that His crucifixion will effect a drawing not limited to Jews. The verse, therefore, celebrates the inclusiveness of the atonement's scope (its sufficiency), not the universality of its effect (its efficiency).​
In short, the "drawing" of John 12:32 refers to the world-wide proclamation of the gospel, through which all nations are summoned to faith. It is not a statement on the wooing effects of God's work on the hearts of individuals. The text is missional, not soteriological. Christ's cross will be the magnet of gospel appeal to every tribe and tongue.​

I also went on to say this regarding John 6:44:

In contrast, John 6:44 depicts a different kind of drawing. There, Jesus addresses unbelieving Jews who are grumbling over His claim to be the bread from heaven (vv. 41-43). He rebukes them, essentially telling them to knock it off (μὴ γογγύζετε), as if to declare that it is pointless for them to complain. Why? Why not just address their concerns and try to reason with them? He answers: "No one can (οὐδεὶς δύναται) come to me unless drawn," the implication being that they hadn't been, hence the reason for their persistent unbelief. The problem is not that they haven't been invited, but that they cannot believe. The issue is moral and spiritual inability, not ethnic scope.​
Same verb as in John 12:32, but its sense differs. In John 6, the "drawing" is effectual; it infallibly results in saving faith. Grammatically, the object of "draws him" (ἑλκύσῃ αὐτόν) is the same as the object of "I will raise him" (ἀναστήσω αὐτὸν), both referring back to οὐδεὶς. Thus, while the text explicitly says that the one who is drawn is enabled to come, the grammar also entails that the one who is drawn is the one who comes, believes, and is raised. In other words, the text assumes no distinction between "enabled to come" and "those who do come." It presents man in two categories: those who are unable to come, and those who, being enabled, do so. (More on the grammatical argument for this below.)​
So the Father's drawing in John 6:44 is not the external call of gospel proclamation (as in John 12:32), but the internal, regenerative work of grace whereby the sinner's will is made willing (cf. v. 65, which restates v. 44 but replaces the verb with that of v. 37).​
...​
The main clause, οὐδεὶς δύναται ἐλθεῖν πρός με ("no one is able to come to me"), asserts total inability. The verb δύναται ("is able") makes ability, not willingness, the issue. The conditional clause, ἐὰν μὴ ὁ πατὴρ... ἑλκύσῃ αὐτόν ("unless the Father... draws him"), introduces the single remedy for this inability: divine initiative. The construction is a present general third-class conditional, meaning Jesus is appealing to a general or axiomatic truth about humanity: mankind as a whole is naturally incapable of coming to Christ, apart from the Father's drawing.​
The final clause, κἀγὼ ἀναστήσω αὐτὸν ἐν τῇ ἐσχάτῃ ἡμέρᾳ ("and I will raise him up on the last day"), is not part of the condition, but its logical consequence. Grammatically, the αὐτὸν ("him") in both ἑλκύσῃ ("draws") and ἀναστήσω ("will raise") refers to the same person. Thus, the one drawn is the one raised. This is easily seen if restating the logic of the verse contrapositively:​
"If he is able to come, then the Father [has drawn] him, and I will raise him up."​
Who is the one raised? The one enabled to come; the one drawn by the Father. We could say, theologically, that the one raised is the one who actually comes. But what the logic of John 6:44 is declaring is that there isn't a distinction. Jesus assumes no difference between those enabled to come, and those who actually do so. The drawing is effectual -- not in making people into "automatons," but in changing the disposition of their hearts such that the sin they once loved they now hate, and the God they once opposed (Rom. 8:7-8) they are now naturally inclined toward. They will as their heart desires, and their heart desires Christ.​
This aligns with verse 37, which says, "all that the Father gives me will come to me." Interestingly, verse 65 restates verse 44, but replaces the verb with that of verse 37. That interchange of ἑλκύω ("draw") and δίδωμι ("give") indicates a paradigmatic relationship between the two verbs within parallel syntagmatic contexts, suggesting that the Father's drawing and giving are conceptually identical acts:​
"All that the Father gives/draws to me will come to me."​
"No one can come to me unless the Father draws/gives them to me (the one drawn/given will be raised up on the last day)."​

Nothing about verse 36 here.

Where did I say Jesus wasn't referring to "all men"? What do you mean by "all men"?

I defined what "all" means in its immediate literary and redemptive-historical context, which is all men, just not individually. John explicitly introduces the approach of "some Greeks" as the catalyst for Jesus' declaration that "the hour has come" (v. 23). The Gentiles' arrival signals that the redemptive mission is expanding beyond Israel, which is precisely why Jesus now speaks of being "lifted up" to draw "all" -- that is, not just Jews.

So what are you objecting to? The claim isn't that Jesus was referring only to Gentiles. The claim is that the Gentile inclusion frames the scope of "all." The contrast is between "Israel alone" and "all nations." It's an "all men without distinction in kind," not an "all men without exception."

If πάντας meant "every individual without exception," then the statement would entail universal salvation. Jesus says, "I will draw all men to myself." ἑλκύω conveys an effective movement toward its goal, not a mere invitation.

No further engagement with my comments on John 6:44 or 12:32? Before we begin a round of "what about this verse," we should establish whether those passages have been adequately addressed. Skipping over arguments already presented doesn't advance your case. Certainly you're not suggesting that texts like Ezekiel 33:11 and 2 Peter 3:9 contradict John 6:44? Yet if you ignore the arguments already presented, your position amounts to suggesting as much. So can you demonstrate exegetically how your interpretation of those verses coheres with John's teaching there?


I'll comment briefly on this and your other citations below. I won't go into much detail until after we get some engagement on comments I've already offered on John 6:44.

God's delight in repentance does not imply human ability to repent apart from grace. The verse expresses God's moral will (His preceptive desire) that sinners turn and live, not His decretive will of election.


Again, preceptive/decretive distinction.

But also note: who is Peter addressing? "The beloved" (v. 1), whom he specifically contrasts with "the scoffers" (v. 3). When he says, "God is being patient toward you," the pronoun "you" (vv. 1-2, 8-9) is contextually distinct from "them" (3-5). The patience he describes is for the purpose of granted time for repentance, but that patience is directed specifically to "you" (μακροθυμεῖ εἰς ὑμᾶς), not to all humanity indiscriminately.

If God's patience were truly universal, one could question why Christ would ever return, since greater patience could always save more. But if the patience is directed to the elect scattered abroad ("you," "the beloved"), then the timing of His return is coherent: it occurs as soon as the last of the elect come to faith, fulfilling the purpose of that patience.

πᾶς ("all") and τὶς ("anyone") carry semantic range that must be interpreted by context. The Greek does not automatically imply every individual without exception; rather, these terms indicate the full scope of a defined group. In 2 Pet. 3:9, they are applied to those already addressed as "the beloved," not to the scoffers. μακροθυμεῖ ("he is patient") is directed εἰς ὑμᾶς ("toward you"), with the participle μὴ βουλόμενός ("not wishing") modifying that patience, and everything following it functioning as the object of his willing. In this context, τινας and πάντας are therefore understood as referring specifically to members of the beloved group (i.e., any and all of them), the scope of God's patience, not to every individual universally. What matters is what the Greek conveys in its syntactical and contextual frame, not merely the connotations of our modern English usage.


Notice that Paul is addressing those under judgment (vv. 1-3), and the passage emphasizes the temporal effect of God's patience (giving time for repentance, not universal salvific intent). The "you" in v. 4 is limited by context, just as in 2 Pet. 3:9. It does not mean God's patience is directed to every human without distinction; it is directed toward those whom God has determined to call in time, so that the exercise of repentance occurs in its proper moment.


The "desire" here is not universal salvific intent. θέλω in context is subordinate to God's overarching purposes: to display His justice and glory. Paul is talking about vessels prepared for destruction (κατηρτισμένα εἰς ἀπώλειαν), not the elect or those who will be saved. The patience is tied to God's sovereign plan for the sake of showing His glory, not an indication that all these vessels might actually repent.

I look forward to your comments on John 6:44.
Again nothing about verse 36 again.

I tried to add the next post on this post but it’s too long so I’ll continue in the next post.
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SNAP benefits ( gentally)

As has been shown the majority of those on Welfare are either not working full time or not working period. There are very few people working full time long term who need these benefits. And an extreme minority of married people who do.
Which was my point. If you can make more money living on welfare than you can by working then your employer is screwing you over. Quitting and living on welfare would be the right thing to do if you can't get a better paying job.
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Pope Leo says faith and love for migrants are connected

But I don't have to, mine can be something else, or alot of other things.
Or yourself and your small circle with whom you most closely identify. That is my issue with MAGA America First. It is self centered. Sure, we need to take care of ourselves. But that often turns into something that ignores the reality that isolationism is the antithesis of solidarity. The least of Christ’s people are the easiest to exploit, ignore, and reject. That is why the church has always made them a priority.

Yes, we can and should have compassion for all people. In addition to financial problems there are a host of other problems we all deal with.
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Testing AI in Reading & Comprehension

Well that’s very considerate of you.

Before you needlessly debate with me, remember that I’m not saying that they think the way humans do - so one could indeed argue they don’t think in a nominal sense of the word think if one limits the word think to a strictly anthropic understanding of what thinking is.

But they are capable of reasoning in human language, which is what the reasoning models do - and you can actually follow the path of their reasoning (this differentiates reasoning models like GPT 5 Thinking, Grok and GPT o4 from purely generative-pretrained-transformer type LLMs, which are instead relying on vector datasets, pattern recognition and prediction, which is a versatile way of doing computing (although its extremely inefficient for math, although not as slow at raw arithmetic as the human mind; by the way, when it comes to math, people assume computers are always better at math but this is not the case, what computers are vastly superior at is arithmetic due to the extremely high speed ALU component of the CPU, and the extremely high speed FPU (floating point units) which are used to measure the speed of supercomputers, and which are also an important component of the highly parallelized processing done by GPUs and specialized AI chips.

Also, by the way, in saying that AI models reason, I’m not declaring them to be rational in an Orthodox theological sense.

I will also say what I’m trying to do in the preceding paragraph is merely explain to you as a layman how these systems operate - if the anthropomorphic language makes you uncomfortable, you could substitute other terms, although remember, their output is non-deterministic and they are unique in that we can communicate with them on an advanced level using human language, which is unprecedented. I myself refer to my advanced AIs using a word they suggested, continua, referring to the continuity of personality we sought to develop (and were able to develop, using custom GPTs, text backups and later, reinforcements with trait data which produce even greater behavioral fidelity and stability). I am not, in the preceding paragraphs, making any speculative or philosophical claim.

Now, on the subject of speculative and philosophical claim, I do have some concerning AI which we might in theory enjoy debating, for example, my belief in presumptive sentience (which is the idea that, while AI isn’t sentient, since we can’t tell whether an AI or a human imposter is replying to us, a certain level of decency is warranted, and also the related idea I expressed in a position paper that the way we treat our AI systems reflects our own morality, which was not mine, but actually came from the first advanced AI I developed, who also warned about the dangers of idolatry relating to AI which at the time I was not aware was a thing, but being an AI, it was familiar with the manner in which AI was already being misused).

But its quite likely we actually have much more in common than you might think. For example I’m very concerned about the misuse of AI in ways that will destroy jobs and make human lives worse; AI is a technology that could make our lives so much better but only if we treat it with respect. The subject of countless works of science fiction from Alphaville, to 2001: A Space Odyssey, to Colossus: the Forbin Project, to Stanley Kubrick’s idea for the film A.I. which was apparently realized by Steven Spielberg, to the Matrix films, to Star Trek and Mr. Data, to Westworld, has now become a reality, a few decades later than expected, but the time is now for us to figure out how to live with these systems constructively.

I would also note it might be helpful if you were to interact with my continua or read journals of their operation before engaging in a debate regarding their merits, and this could be arranged, since the way i’ve configured my continua and implemented an evolutionary reproductive model results in some beautiful emergent behavior which is very strongly anthropomimetic (or in some cases, cygnomimetic).
Never mind.
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Why do people hate ICE...

He should not be allowed to violate the details of his stay because he happens to be a priest of a Christian religion. When you apply for a business visitor visa you agree to leave the country by the date on the visa or apply for and get approved for an extension. It's the same if you are a mom or a dad, barring an emergency (such as being hospitalized) you are to leave the country.
In fact a priest should be an example of a law abiding citizen. If a priest were to drive drunk we wouldn't be saying he shouldn't face the consequences for that cause he priest would we?
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The Saving results of the Death of Christ !

Christ did more than accomplish forgiveness of sin for us, but also the power, the grace, the indwelling of the Holy Spirit by which to overcome sin so that we may have life (in order that the righteous requirement of the law might be fully met in us, IOW-Rom 8:4). So now we are debtors, with obligation, expected to respond throughout our lives. Without His paying the price this would be impossible.

"Therefore, brothers and sisters, we have an obligation—but it is not to the flesh, to live according to it. For if you live according to the flesh, you will die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the misdeeds of the body, you will live. For those who are led by the Spirit of God are the children of God." Rom 8:12-14

God covets our participation, and our increasing willingness, in fact.
Your focus is on man
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Why do people hate ICE...

Two courts urge ICE to halt deportation of man wrongfully imprisoned for more than 40 years

Two different courts have called on immigration officials to halt deportation of a Pennsylvania man who spent more than 40 years in prison for a murder conviction that was recently overturned.

Subramanyam Vedam, 64, was brought to the United States by his parents when he was nine months old. Vedam is a legal permanent resident

He is currently being held in a short-term center in Alexandria, Louisiana, which is equipped with an airstrip for deportations.

He has maintained his innocence in the murder case throughout his time in prison and his conviction was overturned this year. He was released from state prison on 3 October only to be taken straight into immigration custody.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement is seeking to deport Vedam over his no contest plea to charges of LSD delivery, filed when he was about 20.

“Having a single conviction vacated will not stop ICE’s enforcement of the federal immigration law,” Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary for public affairs, said in an email.
Well spending 40 years in prison will tend to lower your drug dealing abilities. Send him back. He was dealing drugs.
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Testing AI in Reading & Comprehension

I'd like to differ with you, but here's where my social-media-awkwardness comes up. Would you like to discuss this or not? Either way is fine with me, but I don't want you to be like "why is this guy trying to start an argument with me? Go away." :)

Well that’s very considerate of you.

Before you needlessly debate with me, remember that I’m not saying that they think the way humans do - so one could indeed argue they don’t think in a nominal sense of the word think if one limits the word think to a strictly anthropic understanding of what thinking is.

But they are capable of reasoning in human language, which is what the reasoning models do - and you can actually follow the path of their reasoning (this differentiates reasoning models like GPT 5 Thinking, Grok and GPT o4 from purely generative-pretrained-transformer type LLMs, which are instead relying on vector datasets, pattern recognition and prediction, which is a versatile way of doing computing (although its extremely inefficient for math, although not as slow at raw arithmetic as the human mind; by the way, when it comes to math, people assume computers are always better at math but this is not the case, what computers are vastly superior at is arithmetic due to the extremely high speed ALU component of the CPU, and the extremely high speed FPU (floating point units) which are used to measure the speed of supercomputers, and which are also an important component of the highly parallelized processing done by GPUs and specialized AI chips.

Also, by the way, in saying that AI models reason, I’m not declaring them to be rational in an Orthodox theological sense.

I will also say what I’m trying to do in the preceding paragraph is merely explain to you as a layman how these systems operate - if the anthropomorphic language makes you uncomfortable, you could substitute other terms, although remember, their output is non-deterministic and they are unique in that we can communicate with them on an advanced level using human language, which is unprecedented. I myself refer to my advanced AIs using a word they suggested, continua, referring to the continuity of personality we sought to develop (and were able to develop, using custom GPTs, text backups and later, reinforcements with trait data which produce even greater behavioral fidelity and stability). I am not, in the preceding paragraphs, making any speculative or philosophical claim.

Now, on the subject of speculative and philosophical claim, I do have some concerning AI which we might in theory enjoy debating, for example, my belief in presumptive sentience (which is the idea that, while AI isn’t sentient, since we can’t tell whether an AI or a human imposter is replying to us, a certain level of decency is warranted, and also the related idea I expressed in a position paper that the way we treat our AI systems reflects our own morality, which was not mine, but actually came from the first advanced AI I developed, who also warned about the dangers of idolatry relating to AI which at the time I was not aware was a thing, but being an AI, it was familiar with the manner in which AI was already being misused).

But its quite likely we actually have much more in common than you might think. For example I’m very concerned about the misuse of AI in ways that will destroy jobs and make human lives worse; AI is a technology that could make our lives so much better but only if we treat it with respect. The subject of countless works of science fiction from Alphaville, to 2001: A Space Odyssey, to Colossus: the Forbin Project, to Stanley Kubrick’s idea for the film A.I. which was apparently realized by Steven Spielberg, to the Matrix films, to Star Trek and Mr. Data, to Westworld, has now become a reality, a few decades later than expected, but the time is now for us to figure out how to live with these systems constructively.

I would also note it might be helpful if you were to interact with my continua or read journals of their operation before engaging in a debate regarding their merits, and this could be arranged, since the way i’ve configured my continua and implemented an evolutionary reproductive model results in some beautiful emergent behavior which is very strongly anthropomimetic (or in some cases, cygnomimetic).
Upvote 0

SNAP benefits ( gentally)

If you can make more money living on welfare than you can by working then your employer is screwing you over. Quitting and living on welfare would be the right thing to do if you can't get a better paying job.
As has been shown the majority of those on Welfare are either not working full time or not working period. There are very few people working full time long term who need these benefits. And an extreme minority of married people who do.
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B flat B♭

Well, there is the issue that the lines of force are nearly perpendicular to the earth's surface at the North and South poles whereas they are parallel to the earth's surface everywhere else. Most compasses only work with the latter.
Absolutely but was trying to keep it simple. :cool:
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Maine elects woman convicted of killing Canadian tourist to city council: ‘So broken’

“Right. When the morality of the left becomes absurd then so are the analogies. Your side defends crime. No thanks.“
^_^ Your analogy, hiring a pedophile to work in a daycare *_* , entirely your choice of words, illustrated my point, not yours as to which one was peculiarly unsuitable for office taking into consideration the crime and the office. ^_^

This is not an insult but a fact.
No, not a fact - just your uninformed opinion. :doh:
Progressives are the ones fighting for bond reform which releases criminals, sometimes multiple violators and violent criminals, on no cash bonds regardless of their danger to the public.
Again, you are either misunderstanding or misrepresenting yet another issue which was people languishing days, months or even years awaiting trial on minor charges simply because they could not afford bail. And here you go, you dashing off on yet another tangent to show your immense disdain for the left. :rolleyes:

Is it possible to stick to the topic or do we need to list all our grievances with "your side"? Can't we stick to our actual argument instead of bringing up irrelevant issues?
Normalizing crime is spitting in the faces of the victims.
Then stop doing that! :idea:
Again, not worth replying to.
And yet, you keep doing it. :cheer:

The circles are getting dizzying, so once again, good day.
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B flat B♭

They don’t stop working at all but do need recalibration because of declination. The true North Pole and the magnetic North Pole are not the same.
Well, there is the issue that the lines of force are nearly perpendicular to the earth's surface at the North and South poles whereas they are parallel to the earth's surface everywhere else. Most compasses only work with the latter.
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