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What is it with all the numbers as names?


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2017 Jul 25, 1:48pm   8,606 views  70 comments

by lostand confused   ➕follow (3)   💰tip   ignore  

Any reason ?? Oh I guess I am too-did patrick make a change or Dan??

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58   Dan8267   2017 Jul 27, 7:50am  

errc says

It's interesting to me that others value the personal nature of the usernames (aliases). I like to read the comments without prejudices of who it is that's posting. What if you were sure you hated someone, but they had a good idea, or piece of information, you may have discarded prior to even considering such, solely because you know said person is a complete dickhead?

You are very guilty of this. And it's that A perceives B to be a dickhead, regardless of whether or not that is true.

59   Patrick   2017 Jul 27, 7:59am  

errc says

It's interesting to me that others value the personal nature of the usernames (aliases). I like to read the comments without prejudices of who it is that's posting.

Yes, people build up an online identity that they are attached to, and have feelings about that name and about the other names that they have come to know.

Which is a bit odd because our real-world identities are generally unknown. There must be something really fundamental in human psychobiology which causes attachment to one's name. I wonder if other animals actually have names for each other, but we just don't know it. I can imagine crows are smart enough for that, and apes, and dolphins.

Anyway, I plan to create anon.patrick.net after I get this site migrated to node. There will be no users at all on that one, just a stream of disembodied posts and comments.

60   Dan8267   2017 Jul 27, 8:11am  

rando says

Yes, people build up an online identity that they are attached to, and have feelings about that name and about the other names that they have come to know.

Which is a bit odd because our real-world identities are generally unknown.

It's more than that. It's groupism. Randomly divide a room full of people into two groups and members of each group will become less cooperative with the members of the other group. Humans are stupid. They follow cave man instincts even when it makes no sense to do so.

61   Patrick   2017 Jul 27, 8:15am  

Yes, that sounds about right:

People have mental models of the self as a group member and of groups as sources of identity and esteem. These models affect thoughts, emotions, and behaviors related to group membership. Three studies show that two dimensions of attachment to groups, attachment anxiety and avoidance, can be assessed with good reliability, validity, and over-time stability. These factors are distinct from relationship attachment and from other measures of group identification. Group attachment predicts several important outcomes, including emotions concerning the group, time and activities shared with a group, social support, collective self-esteem, and ways of resolving conflict.

62   anonymous   2017 Jul 27, 9:22am  

Dan8267 says

rando says

Yes, people build up an online identity that they are attached to, and have feelings about that name and about the other names that they have come to know.

Which is a bit odd because our real-world identities are generally unknown.

It's more than that. It's groupism. Randomly divide a room full of people into two groups and members of each group will become less cooperative with the members of the other group. Humans are stupid. They follow cave man instincts even when it makes no sense to do so.

You are very guilty of this

63   Dan8267   2017 Jul 27, 9:23am  

errc says

You are very guilty of this

I'm too stubbornly rational and objective to be guilty of this.

64   Dan8267   2017 Jul 27, 9:24am  

PCGyver says

Truth is in the eye of the beholder.

No, it's not. Reality is objective.

65   anonymous   2017 Jul 27, 9:26am  

Dan8267 says

errc says

You are very guilty of this

I'm too stubbornly rational and objective to be guilty of this.

Lol. That's hilarious

You've literally posted mountains of evidence to the contrary

66   Dan8267   2017 Jul 27, 9:27am  

errc says

You've literally posted mountains of evidence to the contrary

Then it should be trivially easy for you to quote plenty of examples. Go on, do that.

67   anonymous   2017 Jul 27, 9:27am  

Dan8267 says

errc says

You've literally posted mountains of evidence to the contrary

Then it should be trivially easy for you to quote plenty of examples. Go on, do that.

Why waste my time? Everyone knows I'm correct

68   Dan8267   2017 Jul 27, 9:29am  

errc says

Why waste my time? Everyone knows I'm correct

You are wasting everyone else's time with your baseless assertions. I challenged you to back up that assertion with evidence. If you refused to do so despite allegedly having "mountains of evidence", then we all know you are lying. Your reputation is on the line.

That which can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence.

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