brimstoneSalad wrote:If you have a video or audio recording with a credible chain of evidence, then the fact of him saying that can have a very high degree of certainty. Likewise, if Sanders has confirmed having said that, and even repeated it many times, again that adds to the certainty. A large number of witnesses with no reason to lie can also add to the credibility.
Sure, but, either way, that claim is less certain than that "bat" means "šišmiš" in Croatian.
brimstoneSalad wrote:Linguistics is MUCH more tied up with history
I don't think it is, not even historical linguistics. I think the knowledge of history helped us minimally, if at all, to decipher or reconstruct ancient languages. The first sentence of Hittite that was deciphered read "Bread (Sumerian loan-word 'ninda') you will eat (a word obviously related to Latin 'edere'), water (a word obviously related to English 'water') you will drink.". Nothing about history will make this likely. In fact, historians back in the day argued that Hittite was most likely a Semitic language, possibly hindering the progress. Similarly, historians back in the day argued that the language of Linear B was almost certainly not Greek, almost certainly hindering the progress.
To be fair, the first fragment of Old Persian that was deciphered read "King Daurish...", that was guessed based on a historical context of the inscription. But if it were not for it, it would be something else.
Historical sources, as far as I can see, often give us misleading clues. Quite a few historical sources tell us Etruscans came from Anatolia, but now there are very good linguistic reasons to think this is not the case. There have been quite a few ancient attested languages in Anatolia, none of them appear to be even remotely related to Etruscan. Historical sources suggest that a language related to Latin was spoken in Troy, when historical linguistics strongly suggests it wasn't the case. Historical sources made no suggestion that Sanskrit is related to Latin and Greek, it's linguistics that gave us that information.
Now, admittedly, the part of historical linguistics I am rather familiar with, the study of the meanings of names of places in Croatia, is a bit more tied with history. Still, the main source of information is the comparative method, and not historical sources. And I have also tired to apply the combinatorial method.
brimstoneSalad wrote:modern political science actually does experiments to test hypotheses in contemporary times
OK, then, what would political scientists from different countries agree on? Political scientists from China mostly argue that democracy is bad, those from the USA usually argue democracy is good. If it were based on science, we would expect them to agree on those things. What do they agree on? Economists from different countries generally agree on matters of microeconomics, even though they don't agree on matters of macroeconomics. Linguists from different countries would agree on most things.
I am not saying linguistics isn't influenced by politics to some degree, it obviously is. A linguist from Croatia is much more likely to believe Serbian and Croatian are different languages than a linguist from somewhere else is, a linguist from Russia is much more likely to believe in Nostratic hypothesis than a linguist from somewhere else is, a linguist from China is much more likely to believe that Tai-Kadai languages are distantly related to Sino-Tibetan languages... But it's not comparable to how much economics and political science are influenced by politics.
brimstoneSalad wrote:By that logic physics would be a softer science than linguistics too because physicists use words sometimes
Physicists use words differently than politicians (or common people) do. In physics, the word "work" has a rather precise meaning, different from the meaning it has in everyday life. It's not a matter of linguistics to determine what a physicist has said.
The only cases in which it's comparable would be, for example, determining what Newton meant in Principia Mathematica in Latin with his formulation of the Newton's Second Law. The words he used back then didn't have precise meanings, and it obviously doesn't literally translate as force being equal to the product of mass and acceleration.
brimstoneSalad wrote:I don't think Hr even has a phonetic equivalent.
Well, the English word "her" (the accusative and genitive of "she") sounds rather similar. Of course, neither Croatian 'h' is the same as English 'h' nor the Croatian 'r' is the same as English 'r'. The Croatian 'h' is pronounced a bit more in front of your mouth (as 'ch' in Loch Ness), and the Croatian 'r' is more like the 'tt' in "butter" in some dialects of English. It's called "Croatia" in English because it came to English via Medieval Latin, and Medieval Latin (as well as Late Latin) didn't have any 'h'-like sound, so they substituted 'h' for 'k' (spelt 'c').
brimstoneSalad wrote:Third point, if you want to pretend to be a linguist, have some idea what you're talking about
Well, I asked on an Internet forum about Chinese about it,
here, before posting my last post here.
brimstoneSalad wrote:If you knew anything about Chinese naming convention you'd also know that isn't weird at all.
Well, maybe you are right. When I think about it that way, the names connected to Vukovar Massacre also don't seem that weird. The name "Vukovar" is demonstrably a coincidence, it comes from the name of the Vuka river, and Vuka was called that way since before Croatians conquered Croatia (as I've written on my
website, the name was attested as
Ulcae on Tabula Peutingeriana), it demonstrably doesn't actually come from the Croatian word meaning "wolf". The name of the part of Vukovar "Grabovo" could come from the Croatian word "grab" meaning "hornbeam", whatever the odd suffix "-ovo" meant. As for the name "Ovčara", apparently meaning "meat from sheep", it's also not too weird once you consider that some part of Osijek used to be called "Bikara", apparently meaning "meat from oxen". Maybe the suffix "-ara" used to mean something different.
brimstoneSalad wrote:I don't think you get that, you've never seen a big city in your life.
And why should that be important? Real knowledge is one that's not based on experience.
brimstoneSalad wrote:that could be EASILY dismissed with the most basic research.
And why should doing that form of research be important, considering that real knowledge is not based on experience? Results of proper experiments, such as perhaps
this one, can also be called real knowledge, but doing that form of research is not remotely a proper experiment.
brimstoneSalad wrote:First, they rarely to never end up in Jail.
Well, I haven't studied it that much. While I was living in Donji Miholjac, some young driver crashed into a police car, the young driver didn't survive while the policeman did with small injuries, and the policeman somehow ended up in jail (even though, by all common sense, it wasn't his fault). Though that might not be a representative of what's usually going on.
brimstoneSalad wrote:Second, don't you dare misrepresent me on this "murder should be legal" claim of yours again.
I don't know how I misrepresented you here.
brimstoneSalad wrote:Apparently there is, and as nationalistically delusional and conspiracy prone you are, I can only imagine that's common there.
I am not sure what you mean. If it was common here, how come it's not well-known that such things happen today? The only thing that resembles the Duhacek case that I have heard of before is that the mathematics professor Drago Vukojević, who taught at the Economics Department at the University of Osijek, got drunk and sang some parody of Vilo Velebita in a pub and ended up in jail for 10 days because of that. But that was in the 1960s.
brimstoneSalad wrote:I don't think you understand Croatian grammar better than Google does, no.
Chances are, Google Translate doesn't understand Croatian grammar at all. For most languages (probably still including Croatian), it uses statistic translation, it makes no attempt to make syntax trees.
brimstoneSalad wrote:No, laws are interpreted based on convenience and beliefs of Judge and Jury. A good defense attorney can argue that, but people get prosecuted with and convicted with vague laws all the time. The prosecution will just claim it's not vague and it means X and X means guilty. No law defines itself as vague or admits to being so. Again a good defense can put the law itself on trial and sometimes that works, but it's not a guarantee and people get locked up on vague laws; always have.
I don't know now, that just sounds too complicated to be true.
brimstoneSalad wrote: You think you know how many people are in jail for that?
Well, if there were many people in jail for that, it would be a well-known thing, don't you think?
brimstoneSalad wrote:Teo...
And why would that actually be irrational, yet alone insane? Real knowledge is one that's independent of the experience. And maybe the results of the properly done experiments (maybe something like
this) can also be called real knowledge. But me remembering that my mother was in jail is not good evidence that jails exist, it's not a properly done experiment. My reason telling me jails don't exist has more weight.
brimstoneSalad wrote:Or insane. You need to institutionalized.
And do you think then that all idealistic philosophers should get institutionalized? Do you also think Zeno was insane?
brimstoneSalad wrote:The point is that censorship can backfire, but it can also mostly work.
If it's a well-known thing in China that Tiananmen happened, then their censorship system does worse than what Croatia is doing. Croatia doesn't invest money in censorship, yet people here appear to be rather ignorant. I have asked a few people about Varivode Massacre, and nobody I asked has heard of it. In 1995, when it happened, the Croatian government allegedly (if Wikipedia is to be trusted about it) openly denied it. Though, the numbers of victims of Varivode Massacre was in tens or hundreds, certainly not in thousands. I have also asked a few people what they think about what BBC claimed at the time that the Croatian government let the Vukovar Massacre happen on purpose, and they also all responded they haven't heard of that. In schools we are told that it's a good thing to read foreign media, but that it's important not to be manipulated by them. And there is probably some truth to that.
For some reason, I get the "Access To Website Blocked" error when I click that link. That can't be due to the government censorship, because the HTTPS connection is established and is signed by GlobalSign nv-sa. It seems that the website you linked to rejects my IP address for some reason. If there is something important there, quote that here, it's easier for you than for me.
Yes, polygraphs are not reliable enough to be admitted as evidence in courts. But they do work significantly better than chance, and are invaluable tools in investigations, because false positives are much more common than false negatives. That's why polygraphy is so highly dignified as science.
brimstoneSalad wrote:Methodology like that is so bad it's much more likely to result in false confidence about something.
It's unlikely to result in false confidence about something, because false negatives are exceedingly rare. If the polygraph tells you are not lying, that strongly suggests you aren't. But if the polygraph tells you are lying, the police can't be certain you are lying, because false positives do happen.
Admittedly, there don't appear to be many studies about the reliability of the linguistic sings somebody is lying, but I see no reason to think it would be much different.
brimstoneSalad wrote:It's like getting a zero on a true or false quiz.
I thought we agree on some things, such as veganism, atheism and that I did well arguing against
@Sunflowers.
Red wrote: I think the reason why you don't ban him outright is because he's (unfortunately) a more active member.
And don't you think I am one of few people on this forum whose ideas have some intellectual merit? Saying "I think bombs don't exist, because 2nd Law of Thermodynamics says that a system can't do work from its own internal energy, and bombs would have to do a lot of work with very little energy input." has some intellectual merit, it proves I actually thought about the issue, rather than just accept what I was being told. Even if I ended up being wrong, I was just one step away from the solution. Saying "You are stupid for not simply trusting the authorities." is basically the equivalent of saying "Who cares if bombs exist or not?!", that's what most of the people on this forum are saying, and it holds no intellectual merit.
And have you made some videos promoting veganism? I have recently,
here is my video-response to Peer Ederer's arguments against veganism.
Red wrote:I thought only Tankies denied it?
As far as I know, communists usually say "Well, that wasn't real communism!".
Red wrote:acknowledge your papers and especially amateurish ones aren't gonna make any groundbreaking discovery.
I don't claim I've made a groundbreaking discovery with my recent paper about computer science, but I think I've asked some interesting questions. Can the number of comparisons QuickSort will do be predicted in linear time, just like it can be done in constant time for MergeSort? I am not aware of anybody having asked that question before. Can that knowledge be used to implement an efficient sorting algorithm for a standard library of some language? Again, I think this is an interesting question that nobody asked. I am not claiming I've solved the P vs NP problem, that would be thinking you've made a groundbreaking discovery and that would almost certainly be wrong.
And similarly with linguistics, my latest paper (which I still haven't managed to publish) basically asks if it's reasonable to dismiss the patterns in the names of places just because they aren't collaborated by the comparative method and, related to that, if the combinatorial method can be used to interpret the names of places.