Nathan Miller's Comments

I'll jump on the 100% bandwagon...

But this isn't 'logic' so much as a simple p->q test. Modus Tollens and what have you. There's a lot more to logic, including logical fallacies, which is what I was expecting.
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Actually, the posters are also available for only 10 bucks for a smaller size...

The Godfather and Scarface ones are so cool, I'm seriously considering one of them, if I can find a place to put it. [Which may mean that it's time for Tony Romo to come down now that football season is over for the Cowboys...)
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@The Other Parker - I was thinking the same thing. I had somewhere in the 40s, I believe, by the time I was done with Scouts, but there were so many more that the requirements were so simple and I could have easily earned if only someone would "teach" them!

But really, this kid, though obviously not otherwise occupied, accomplished quite a bit. It's very impressive!
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I've played these games before. They're fun, but tedious. I hate continually dragging the same ball back and forth... I wish I could just click the next step instead of dragging.
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@The Other Parker - agreed. I would have thought that Einstein, Fermi, Salk, or others would have made the list before Newton.

But... exaggeration is a zillion times more effective than understatement.
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I recently read something similar, but it didn't blame the 'sweet tooth' on the weight gain of diet soda, but rather the 'seatbelt effect' of people making up for the diet soda with extra whatever.

The idea being, if I get a diet soda instead of a regular soda, I can justify super-sizing the meal.

Interesting now that Gov Paterson is proposing a tax on non-diet sodas in NY.
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gatherdust brings up a very valid point.

I also question the veracity of such claims but my argument comes from the subject of Universities.

While many many American schools in rural areas are elite, it seems to me that the greatest schools I can think of are in or around cities: Columbia, Harvard, Rice, UCLA, to name a few across the country.

If city environments are indeed so poor (and if NY is indeed so taxing on the brain), then how could Columbia or NYU continue to be so productive?

This argument may seem ridiculous because it is only a tiny percentage of a city's population, and because it could easily be an anomaly, but it's what came to my mind.
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I'm interested in what exactly caused the liver damage and to what extent the liver was damaged.

I don't know a lot about jumping or free-falling but what exactly about that activity can cause liver damage?
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Profile for Nathan Miller

  • Member Since 2012/08/04


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