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forcibly retire everyone at age 60, unironically alternately just kill old people, either/or
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# ? Oct 19, 2019 23:36 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 09:42 |
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Phlegmish posted:A lot of people don't realize that it was only in the 19th century that we got rid of most of the insane medieval bullshit that was still in science (even if the foundations for modern science were laid in the 17th and 18th centuries). For example, the discussion about spontaneous generation wasn't fully put to rest until Pasteur's experiments. It's not that long ago. The prevalence of the belief in the miasma theory of disease was one of the reasons for the huge death tolls of the Panama canal and other large engineering projects, even in the early 20th century.
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# ? Oct 20, 2019 00:28 |
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steinrokkan posted:The prevalence of the belief in the miasma theory of disease was one of the reasons for the huge death tolls of the Panama canal and other large engineering projects, even in the early 20th century. If I recall correctly, folks in America at least were still giving salt tablets and refusing to give water for dehydration from work or exercise up into the 70s or 80s. Unleaded gasoline didn't become mandatory in America until the late 70s, which means every city was cloaked in an inescapable fog of mad hatter juice. Also for folks independently familiar with Dr Lister, I just listened to the Dollop England episode about him and I'm curious how accurate it was. They do relate the triple-kill and the accidentally amputated testicle as real events, though based on other things I know about Victorian medicine and science (and journalism) I'm definitely willing to believe that those stories weren't made up out of whole cloth. On the other hand, by its nature the Dollop tends to play up the goofy, macabre, and goofily macabre aspects of every story.
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# ? Oct 20, 2019 00:48 |
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It's entirely possible that they were real, but not representative of his overall competence as a surgeon. Everyone has bad days.
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# ? Oct 20, 2019 00:49 |
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LonsomeSon posted:If I recall correctly, folks in America at least were still giving salt tablets and refusing to give water for dehydration from work or exercise up into the 70s or 80s. Just to make sure we're disambiguated here, Robert Liston was the exceedingly fast surgeon with the triple kill. Joseph Lister was the surgeon who introduced antiseptic to surgery.
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# ? Oct 20, 2019 01:36 |
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Liston/Lister has become one ridiculous 19th century concept that scientists are begrudgingly helpful while still chopping your balls off so don't believe in vaccines for a few more decades just in case.
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# ? Oct 20, 2019 01:42 |
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Hey, a free orchiectomy is nothing to turn your head and cough at.
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# ? Oct 20, 2019 09:32 |
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DarkHorse posted:I like that the idea "maybe you should wash your hands of deadguy juice before delivering babies" was just unfathomable and insulting in that era. Handwashing didn't face THAT much resistance, and the common Semmelweis story is a myth in the same way that the idea that Colombus proved the Earth is round is a myth.
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# ? Oct 21, 2019 06:13 |
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packetmantis posted:Hey, a free orchiectomy is nothing to turn your head and cough at.
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# ? Oct 21, 2019 07:07 |
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packetmantis posted:Hey, a free orchiectomy is nothing to turn your head and cough at. Why did it have to be that word
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# ? Oct 21, 2019 18:33 |
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From here. It does make more sense than it looks like, to a brass player, but if you try to interpret this diagram from a physics/math perspective, it's awful. The article as a whole is great but that diagram is someone trying to "dance about architecture".
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# ? Oct 21, 2019 19:10 |
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From the Bitcoin thread on technical analysis:
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# ? Oct 21, 2019 20:04 |
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klafbang posted:From the Bitcoin thread on technical analysis: LOL, technical analysis, for the sophisticated Savings and Loans marks.
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# ? Oct 22, 2019 00:14 |
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klafbang posted:From the Bitcoin thread on technical analysis: Fukkin lol
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# ? Oct 22, 2019 03:39 |
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https://twitter.com/oocwesternr34/status/1187076882849812480?s=21
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# ? Oct 23, 2019 21:28 |
rourd?
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# ? Oct 24, 2019 10:28 |
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Zereth posted:rourd? Roo row, rike rurumbers ror ralabashes, Rorge.
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# ? Oct 24, 2019 12:21 |
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You don't wanna see the original picture.
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# ? Oct 24, 2019 19:37 |
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I don't like these new Stand stats
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# ? Oct 24, 2019 19:41 |
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Just Offscreen posted:You don't wanna see the original picture. I dug too greedily and too deep. A terrible doom is now upon me.
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# ? Oct 25, 2019 10:20 |
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Sorry about the awful quality, a colleague just got a CV featuring this masterpiece and I had to take a quick pic. The y-axis is "professional fluency", the x-axis I assume is meant to read speaking and not sneaking, but was cropped like that in the CV. We are a goddamn lab, this is for a post-doc scientist position, why would you do this.
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# ? Oct 25, 2019 10:57 |
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The x-axis should be drunkenness. And then German would get super high around super drunk.
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# ? Oct 25, 2019 11:39 |
Just Offscreen posted:You don't wanna see the original picture.
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# ? Oct 25, 2019 11:57 |
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Fathis Munk posted:Sorry about the awful quality, a colleague just got a CV featuring this masterpiece and I had to take a quick pic. Maybe the x axis is time, and the big downward trend marks the fateful car accident that damaged the speech centers of their brain
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# ? Oct 25, 2019 12:20 |
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I think it means he's fluent, but doesn't know how to say hello or goodbye.
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# ? Oct 25, 2019 13:03 |
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Zereth posted:I'll take your word for it, i doubt the original is going to give any context on "rourd" anyway It's "round". Though that doesn't help my understanding.
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# ? Oct 25, 2019 13:41 |
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Munin posted:It's "round". Though that doesn't help my understanding. I can only assume based on context that they mean girth.
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# ? Oct 25, 2019 15:06 |
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Aramoro posted:I can only assume based on context that they mean girth. im pretty sure the artist's first language isn't english don't loving judge me
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# ? Oct 25, 2019 15:35 |
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Tunicate posted:Handwashing didn't face THAT much resistance Handwashing still faces a lot of resistance. It is routine to find major hospitals in developed countries where hand washing compliance is below 50%. The numbers on this site look good until you realize that they aren’t weighted by patient traffic and the smaller facilities pull the average up, but more importantly that they are measured by someone announced and visible standing outside rooms observing. This is the behaviour when people know in the moment that they are being evaluated, and that (in the Ontario case) the results will be posted at the entrance to the unit or hospital. Other studies comparing incognito observations show much lower compliance measurements. https://www.hqontario.ca/System-Performance/Hospital-Patient-Safety/Hand-Washing-in-Ontario-Hospitals-by-Hospital-Care-Providers And check those 2008 numbers, at a 35% worse average! Probably improvement since then, but the data collection method is so distorting that it’s hard to actually tell. HAIs haven’t dropped as you would proportionately expect, or materially changed in how they manifest, so it’s likely that actual practice didn’t improve as much as the report cards would indicate. The punch line is that Ontario is actually a leader in this area, and US average compliance is generally under 50% even with known observers. IIRC the “non-Hawthorne” observers saw rates under 25%. Lister was fighting an uphill battle, and it’s still being fought.
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# ? Nov 1, 2019 08:31 |
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Hmm, what's the small text?
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# ? Nov 1, 2019 12:38 |
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I'm amazed they included that with the chart
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# ? Nov 1, 2019 12:50 |
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Meanwhile, in reality... https://twitter.com/Harryb22/status/1189815496243339265?s=19
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# ? Nov 1, 2019 13:00 |
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The election is expected to be largely a referendum on Brexit, which has already been hilariously disastrous even before even being implemented, and Labour has been waffling on the issue, so the Lib Dem candidate probably actually will do a lot better than in 2017. Such is my limited understanding of British politics. Still lolling at that blatant manipulation though e: wow, did the Brexit referendum really happen all the way back in in 2016? Still, it's only become more a shitshow since 2017 Phlegmish has a new favorite as of 13:11 on Nov 1, 2019 |
# ? Nov 1, 2019 13:08 |
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Yeah 2016. I remember being at my last job +1 and refreshing the BBC all day going "don't tell me these loving shitheads are actually going to do it"
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# ? Nov 1, 2019 13:20 |
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Phlegmish posted:e: wow, did the Brexit referendum really happen all the way back in in 2016? A lot of low-probability events happened that year. Brexit. Trump. Cubs winning the World Series. And of course the great celebrity die-off.
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# ? Nov 1, 2019 23:10 |
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Powered Descent posted:A lot of low-probability events happened that year. Brexit. Trump. Cubs winning the World Series. And of course the great celebrity die-off. I still don't get how a bunch of aging rockstars who did obscene amounts of drugs dying in their 60s was a low-probability event I'm not making GBS threads on you I just remember how people were freaking out when it happened and it must be proof we're in a simulation blah blah blah
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# ? Nov 2, 2019 16:42 |
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ArtIsResistance posted:I still don't get how a bunch of aging rockstars who did obscene amounts of drugs dying in their 60s was a low-probability event yea we're all mostly in our 30s (still young enough to consider death a far future, but young enough that our teenage idols are mostly over 60) + confirmation bias ("they die in threes") = it doesnt really matter which musician/actor dies, they all basically fit the pattern. also 27 club, etc
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# ? Nov 2, 2019 16:54 |
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Human brains are really good at picking up patterns. So good, in fact, that they manage to find patterns even when none exist.
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# ? Nov 2, 2019 17:29 |
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Celebrities die 2.7183 at a time tl;dr is that clusters of three is about what you'd expect if random events happen according to a simple but reasonable model for celebrity deaths.
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# ? Nov 2, 2019 19:32 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 09:42 |
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ArtIsResistance posted:I still don't get how a bunch of aging rockstars who did obscene amounts of drugs dying in their 60s was a low-probability event Lemmy wasn't supposed to die.
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# ? Nov 2, 2019 23:36 |