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2 yr. ago

  • oh fuck. thats good.

  • $ on its the

    of cuttlefish

  • yes yes the Spruce Goose, i was asking about the Vultee XP-54 "Swoose Goose"

  • excuse me miss, have you ever heard the tragedy of the Swoose Goose?

  • "it's naht a toomah"

  • assuming we get to go in knowing what we know from each, and guessing we're joining most likely right before the shit to fan event, prob with little or no time to change anything with little to no rank or power ie (assistant to the part time janitor) . highest chance of survival? prob going with 1 aliens.

  • "im sorry Jon, i was so hungry. i now require goth lasagna Jon."

  • perhaps Captain Borodin, in a another life. maybe even sometime say oh i dunno in the third arc of that life you'll be a professor and run a failing dig site at Fort Peck Lake, Montana for fossils!

  • this just in, starfish need milk. news at 11.

  • this smacks of a Ringwraith showing up at Helms Deep instead of the elves.

  • im wellplussed over the shocked Sherman face. lol

  • nah thats the face of an 'ex-alcoholic' who only had two morning whiskeys

  • IMO i always interpreted that as 'hold fire, its a decoy get ready for the the real one'..

  • what i wanna know is what game someone can be 17ish minutes in and already got over a hundred percent of its value.

  • ah yes America's long time friend Rome, we go wayyy back.

  • Hegel's concept of "recognition" (or Anerkennung in German) is central to his philosophy, especially in his 'Phenomenology of Spirit'. It refers to the process by which individuals come to see themselves as self-conscious and free through the recognition of others. For Hegel, self-consciousness is not something an individual can achieve in isolation; it requires acknowledgment from another self-conscious being.

    Hegel argues that human self-consciousness is inherently relational. A person does not come to understand themselves simply by introspection. Instead, they need to be recognized by another self-conscious being. This recognition affirms their own existence as a self-conscious subject.

    Hegel ultimately sees genuine self-consciousness as arising from a form of mutual recognition, where two or more individuals acknowledge each other’s autonomy and subjectivity. This process allows individuals to overcome alienation, as each person is not merely an isolated subject, but is recognized by others as a free and self-conscious being.

    Recognition is also crucial in Hegel's views on ethics and society. For him, the state and social institutions are vehicles through which mutual recognition can be institutionalized. The individual's freedom is realized not in isolation but through participation in these social structures, where recognition is an ongoing process. This can be seen as laying the groundwork for later political theories, including Marx's ideas about class struggles and emancipation.