Dakryn's Batshit Theory of the Week

:lol: You'll argue anything, you're ridiculous

Why do we need to cast Andre the Giant every time we need an ass-kicking?

Exaggerate much?

In the particular scene I was referring we need a man or an exceptional woman, especially physically.

I understand that the show could probably stand on it's own conceptually but then you're changing the dynamics of the characters. Especially a character like Rust who has "been in the shit" and developed a certain world view via this experience.
 
I will, and I am; but I happen to be right about this.

I guarantee you that Rust Cohle didn't kick ass because of his weight; those fucking bikers outweighed him by a lot. He kicked ass because he trained, and there's no reason to doubt that a female detective wouldn't train, being in that profession.

Furthermore, there's no reason to doubt that a female detective who trains wouldn't have an edge on bikers who, while they may lift, are likely also suffering from years of drug and alcohol abuse. You both are prescribing the role of "detective" to men, and it's fucking idiotic.

Finally, the criteria of attractiveness are culturally dictated. It's traditional beauty, and (Jimmy) your fucking thirty-point scale that contribute to this. Women are restricted by the very perspectives that you hold of them and criticize them for not being able to break out of.

EDIT: what makes True Detective great isn't the gun wielding or the ass-kicking, but the ideas and themes it explores. There's no reason to believe that introducing female leads would in any way diminish that. If we need shootout scenes like in episode four for this show to be great, then we have other problems in need of addressing.
 
Sorry man you're just way off here. Even a trained woman will tell you she can not match a bigger (not just by height and weight but bone density, natural ligament and tendon strength, stamina via oxygen capacity etc) or even same size male. This is why men and women do not fight in the UFC, it's just not fair.

You have a problem with my 30 point scale? who am I hurting really? it's just based on looks not the persons character or personality and I think this is understood; it's all in fun.
 
Training might allow a much smaller person to incapacitate a slow moving thickneck through accurate strikes at vulnerable areas, but this is not a tossaround, and still quite difficult depending on the strength difference besides. Ever punch someone with abs of steel in the stomach? Going to hurt your hand rather than knock the wind out of them. Same thing for trying to do a chop to the neck.

I'm not critiquing TD specifically because I haven't seen it yet, but I am pointing out the absurdity of small women and men flinging around hordes of muscly brutes.

Of course, if we just grant it's all just unrealistic TV anyway then this really isn't an issue. So what if tiny Tina knocks out Andre the Giant? TV is built on bullshit.
 
That's exactly where you're mistaken.

Sorry man you're just way off here. Even a trained woman will tell you she can not match a bigger (not just by height and weight but bone density, natural ligament and tendon strength, stamina via oxygen capacity etc) or even same size male. This is why men and women do not fight in the UFC, it's just not fair.

Ah, here we get to the problem: the question of realism. We do not depict women in these situations because they wouldn't realistically put themselves in such positions. But now we must ask the following rejoinder: does realism portray the world as it really is, or does it prescribe roles within the world?

The best answer is that it does both. So, for the sake of fiction, why not entertain the notion that a woman might fight off a 250-pound man? There was nothing generically realistic about the first season - in fact, detective fiction thrives on its use of sensationalist exaggeration. True Detective has so much more to offer than a mundane repeat of the first season.

Tina knocking out Andre the Giant doesn't need to be seen as bullshit within the context of fiction. Fiction works figuratively. Throwing a woman and man into a UFC ring and likely a woman would lose. But why are we assuming such dynamics would be the norm in a television show? Why do we rule out intelligence, trickery, capacity for elusiveness, etc.?

You have a problem with my 30 point scale? who am I hurting really? it's just based on looks not the persons character or personality and I think this is understood; it's all in fun.

I have no problem with it. I'm only saying that it contributes to the masculine expectations of our culture, no matter what you intend with it.
 
OK? so go watch Rizzoli & Isles and leave True Detective alone. ;)

yea and my biology also contributes to the masculine expectations of our culture

and the criteria of attractiveness is culturally influence but I also have some weird taste that has nothing to do with that culture and says more about my bio
 
Whatever man, I don't see why a female actress couldn't play a lead on your precious show. I love it as much as (if not more than) you; I'd love to see a female lead. There's no reason why there can't be. All your reasons point to you simply wanting to see a detective-fiction version of Aliens.
 
haha maybe, I do love Aliens.

Ah well I'm probably out of my depth anyway so I'll agree to disagree and stop dumbing down this thread.

Let me ask you a kinda weird question though. If you and I were hanging out, alone, and I see a girl walk by and ask you "dude, 1-30?" would you refuse? if so, why? especially if it was private
 
No, I probably wouldn't. I'm as complicit as you are.

Also, I don't think you're dumbing down the thread. I'm often as brash to Dak's arguments, but it doesn't mean I discount them. Even though I may fervently disagree, I acknowledge the depth and intensiveness of our "reality effect."

But I am still right. :cool:
 
I find it interesting how much discussion with Ein has provided me so many new perspectives and changes of discern without fundamentally changing my ethical or practical perspective. I just have a better understanding of the why rather than using really bad arguments.

Of course, don't you know? Everyone here is right.

shawshank_redemption_meals.jpg
 
No, I probably wouldn't. I'm as complicit as you are.

heh that's grim and cryptic. idk for me it's just chit chat bullshit among friends and "dudes" (I know, I know, this is a problem) to get an idea of my fellow mans taste and our differences. You know this though.

Also, I don't think you're dumbing down the thread. I'm often as brash to Dak's arguments, but it doesn't mean I discount them. Even though I may fervently disagree, I acknowledge the depth and intensiveness of our "reality effect."


Well that's cool of you. Although I end up feeling like Det. David Mills in Seven.


But I am still right. :cool:

15ouxas.gif


Although sometimes there are multiple rights
 
I find it interesting how much discussion with Ein has provided me so many new perspectives and changes of discern without fundamentally changing my ethical or practical perspective. I just have a better understanding of the why rather than using really bad arguments.

Of course, don't you know? Everyone here is right.

shawshank_redemption_meals.jpg

Hey? You calling my arguments "bad"?
 
From Luhmann's "Complexity and Meaning":

The concepts that serve as the title of my essay seem to mark this difference [i.e. between the Humanities and the Sciences]. They indicate the core problem of the two knowledge groups and of their two different types of research. These two knowledge groups, today, have become aware of seemingly insolvable problems, and no longer identify with a specific subject matter or domain of research but rather with a problem: complexity for the sciences, meaning for the humanities. Overstating the point a little, we could say that the hard sciences identify with complexity and the soft sciences with meaning. The core problem of the hard sciences is the complexity of complexity and that of the soft sciences is the meaning of meaning.

Overall, I agree with this. "Meaning" cannot be the domain of science, but must come from an interdisciplinary observation of various fields within given cultural contexts. "Complexity," on the other hand, must come from the sciences - from those fields that simulate and calculate the various patterns of physical/biological/chemical phenomena.

That said, I find it difficult to see how science can ever be properly removed from the sphere of culture. I would venture to say that cultural critics - those in the humanities - must always keep their scientific partners in check; but I cannot claim absolute authority for cultural critics, since we too are circumscribed by culture.
 
I think it should be totally obvious 9/11 required some measure of complicity. From whom and exactly how is open for debate though, until all the classified and buried information comes out.

Does "complicity" equal "conspiracy"? I mean, it could certainly be the case that various actors within the defense network had some knowledge that an attack was imminent, but due to a lack of specifics or actionable details failed to pursue an appropriate response. Would this count as complicity; and if so, does it equal conspiracy if it's covered up?

I'm always hesitant to call "conspiracy," but we've discussed this in the past. To me, a conspiracy entails a total network of equally complicit and intentional agents who took it upon themselves to bring about an event - whether through deliberate force or deliberate withholding of force - and proceed to conceal the evidence of their involvement.

I wouldn't say that the world system precludes the possibility of this happening, but I do think - especially in a world of increasingly available portals of information - that it's easier to project intention into various phenomena and coincidences than to accept them as contingent. Furthermore, I think the world system invites and encourages such speculation.
 
I think to require the "total network" as you describe for it to meet the definition of conspiracy is akin to radical skepticism, which I find inherently unreasonable. A coverup itself is conspiracy, even if there were no prior conspiracy.
 
Can you explain what you mean by this; specifically the "no prior conspiracy" part?

Let's say the situation you described happened, where 9/11 occurred due to honest mistakes or mere incompetence on the US end. As the tragic error unfolded, those responsible for the honest mistake or incompetence had the power to instigate a coverup of said mistakes/incompetence. That in itself is a conspiracy, even if there were no conspiracy involving complicity in the actual tragedy.

Edit: if I haven't posted this before:

 
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