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jordanlund, in What do you think is the coolest designed sci-fi gun?
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

Spetsdöd.

I guarantee you’ve never heard of it because it only appears in a series of novels by Steve Perry, the Matador books.

The gag is, it glues to the back of your hand. The barrel runs along your index finger, and you fire it by pointing your finger and touching the barrel tip with your fingernail.

It fires microdarts which can have a variety of effects, the #1 use being a drug called “Spasm” which makes every muscle in the body contract involuntarily, leaving the victim tied in a knot for 6 months.

The original trilogy of books:

The Man Who Never Missed
Matadora
The Machiavelli Interface

Then solo books after:

The Albino Knife
Black Steel
Brother Death
Churl

Prequels:

Omega Cage
The 97th Step
The Musashi Flex

Curious_Canid,
@Curious_Canid@lemmy.ca avatar

I’m a big fan of the Matador series. I was surprised to find that another had been released. “Churl” apparently did not get much fanfare.

jordanlund,
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

Print on demand through Amazon, he doesn’t have a publisher for it. It’s about Dirisha and Geneva’s kid. Oh, yeah, they have a kid now. ;)

stoy,

I am a Swede, and while I have indeed never heard about the Spetsdöd gun, I can tell you it would translate into something like:

“Point of death” or “Death point”

The mechanics sounds similar to the SCP skeleton bow…

PrinceWith999Enemies, in What do you think is the coolest designed sci-fi gun?

The pod gun from Fifth Element is one of the most interesting from both a design and an effects perspective IMO.

stoy,

Ah, the Zorg ZF-1, nice one!

Ohi,

Four full crates, delivered right on time! What about you, my dear Aknot, did you bring me what I asked you for?

Spiralvortexisalie, in People with Disney+, how's the movie selection?

I personally only ever see kids/YA kind of material offered up, the Simpsons material and Marvel stuff was about as “adult” as it got, I actually think Hulu has a better film selection if you aren’t looking for specifically Disney/Marvel/Star Wars.

Usernameblankface,
@Usernameblankface@lemmy.world avatar

There is a setting to allow more adult content, it defaults to PG-13

0x4E4F, in Non microsoft git repo
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

Codeberg. It’s open source and completely free (as in beer as well).

Valmond,

Now that seems like it’d fit my shoe!

Thanks!

fne8w2ah, in Why in the year 2024 and with all the knowledge humans have now do people still believe in religion?

Especially among the uneducated, peer pressure and fear of the unknown.

paradiso,

I know many extremely bright people who are religious, but I do agree with what your saying. Nothing wrong with having existential dread. Such is the human condition.

Welt,

They can catch the clever kids too if they get 'em young enough.

Aceticon, (edited ) in Why in the year 2024 and with all the knowledge humans have now do people still believe in religion?

It’s not about what an individual could know, it’s about what they do know and how structured is a person’s thinking.

So just because out there somewhere there are tons of explanations for tons of things doesn’t mean people actually know them (lots if not most is quite obscure or requires understanding of a lot of other things first before you can trully understand those things) plus people have to think in very structure ways to spot gaps or flaws in what they thing they know and go look for better info.

And this is just the Logic level problem.

The Emotional level stuff is way more important. Religion:

  • provides easy non-scary explanations for tons of things which can be terrifying to accept as just random (Massive Earthquake, killing hundreds of thousands: “It’s the will of Deity” is a calming explanation which implies “someDeity” has control)
  • provides hope for one’s and one’s loved one’s future (Granny died: “She’s gone to Heaven!”)
  • makes the World seem so much simpler and hence understandeable for anybody by explaining away all complexity (All those lights in the night-sky: “There was a fight between the SunGod and the MoonGod during which his rays pierced the black veil that surrounds us”).
  • for those born into it, it’s just familiar and “the way people think”.

And last but not least, Religion is a ready made tribe, generally mutually supporting, so it satisfies people’s lowest tribalist instincts and provides concrete benefits from being part of a social circle from which you can get help.

This also explains why supposedly Religious people are selective in what they believe from their religion (notice how almost none of Christians take to hearth the whole point of Christ casting out the Money Lenders from the Temple), why they don’t actually know all that much detail about their own Religion (if they don’t think in a way that helps them spot what they do not know, that gets reflected on not looking for more info both outside and inside religion) and why it’s so easy to manipulate people with religion (if the complexity of the world is explained as “blady, blady, blah, Deity”, those trusted to understand the Deity can make sure pretty much all complex things get reasoned as “Deity wills it so because my bullshit reason” - plus remember, religious types are the non-structured non-skeptic thinkers).

Dkarma,

Eh…it’s easier than that. You know what you’re told growing up.
Kids who are abused think that’s normal. Kids who are abused with religion also think that’s normal.

Kind of like how your dad’s fav sports team is your fav too cuz reasons. If your dad was Muslim you probably will be too.

Crikeste,

To believe that god creates atrocities and that they’re not just random is actually malicious and stupid.

If god kills millions of people without warrant, why fucking worship the dumb cunt?

Soggy,

Mysterious ways, test of faith, etc.

Welt,

Netanyahu moves in mysterious ways

xionzui, in Why in the year 2024 and with all the knowledge humans have now do people still believe in religion?

Religions are sort of like mind viruses. The ones that have survived have done so because they are very good at taking root and multiplying in the human mind. Sort of a natural selection of ideas. They develop the necessary features like a way to ignore contrary evidence and severe consequences for not believing

Welt,

Richard Dawkins coined a word for exactly that - a meme.

neuroneiro, in Why in the year 2024 and with all the knowledge humans have now do people still believe in religion?

I have a minor in religious studies because belief in things outside science seemed ridiculous.

Then, a couple years ago I was walking my dog with my wife talking about Huitzilopochtli & a hummingbird flew from the top of a giant redwood to about a foot from my face, flew in a perfect square 7 times, then back to the top.

Then I was under a sycamore tree at the Rosicrucian temple in San Jose meditating on Hathor & inadvertently copied a statue of Plato when I tried to clean a cobweb off it with a walking stick & a single leaf fell gently to the exact middle of my feet.

Then I was driving & thinking about getting a tattoo of Horus when a falcon began flying next to my head outside my driver’s side window for about 5 seconds, flew past my windshield, perched on a freeway sign & watched me drive off.

I could go on but the gist is I always said I couldn’t believe unless I had concrete proof & now I have concrete proof.

Welt,

concrete proof

You mean anecdotal evidence that means something to you personally. If it’s a personal proof, it’s a spiritual matter, not a factual one.

blazeknave,

I believe in science and have had a lot of experiences that lead me to believe math is a language used to describe the metaphysical, and whether divine intervention, there are patterns and things that happen that seem to appear in nature when they statistically shouldn’t. Things that point to more than my day job and Netflix. Maybe it’s monkeys typing Shakespeare over an infinite time, yellow car syndrome, projection, but it’s just so narcissistic and small minded to think we know it all and this is it, and we’re not connected to anything more than the mundane, ants scurrying about a spinning rock consuming our environment until our cave collapses becoming another dead satellite spiraling toward a burning star. I’ve experienced love. Wonder. The unexplainable. Just because we have Western words to describe something, doesn’t make it less magical or spiritual.

Have you read 100 years of solitude?

neuroneiro,

Not yet but it’s on my list.

Have you heard of Earl Nightingale’s The Strangest Secret?

youtu.be/GBJiq1A9hCw

blazeknave,

It’s amazing. I want to say what it is about this exchange that makes me suggest it but I don’t want to spoil it. I think you would enjoy it from this tiny bit of Internet sharing through which I know you 🤷

No, I haven’t. I’ll watch this tomorrow.

banneryear1868, (edited ) in Why in the year 2024 and with all the knowledge humans have now do people still believe in religion?

“Religious suffering is the expression of real suffering and also a protest against it. Religion is the opium of the masses. Religion is the heart of a heatless world. Religion is the soul of soulless conditions.”

Religion isn’t a separate thing from culture that can be cleaved off like this. The form it takes is contingent on conditions of people’s lives and power structures. People also don’t make a conscious choice to believe or disbelieve in religion, if you’re an atheist you can’t just willingly choose to believe. Society is not directed by the willful actions of people’s collective beliefs like this either, it’s more a Darwinian process.

Also civil religion is a thing and it doesn’t necessarily align with what people think of “religion” but operates in a very similar way. A lot of atheists are probably adherents to aspects of civil religion without knowing or thinking of it this way.

Mikina, (edited )

if you’re an atheist you can’t just willingly choose to believe

I wouldn’t really agree with this. As a programmer, I was always sceptical and an atheist, but I never had problems with believing into something obviously not true, such as when LARPing or TTRPGs. And when I once got into a rabbit hole of mysticism in high-school, one of the movements I read about was advocating for doing “paradigm shifts”, forcing yourself to believe into a specific religion, like truly believe, so you can try it out in practice and see whether you get something out of it or not and should move on. And since that felt like a fun experiment, I tried it with various dogmas or religions, and once you get over the inherent jugement and feeling pretty stupid chanting, drawing circles and burning incense in your room (which may take a while), you may get to point where you slowly convince yourself to believe. That is, if you are serious about it. And it’s also pretty fun.

But of course, it’s not for everyone.

Mikina, (edited ) in Why in the year 2024 and with all the knowledge humans have now do people still believe in religion?

Being a programmer, I was always just as baffled about religion, mysticism, and various esoteric stuff, because it just didn’t make logical sense, and it was hard to take people who are into it seriously.

tldr: Was sceptical, gave it a try just for fun and to see what’s the fuss, found out it’s net-positive as long as you don’t take it too seriously, let it define your whole personality, or use it as an excuse to be a dick. It’s basicaly just like playing solo TTRPGs, and it feels great once you get rid of your jugement.

Then, during high-school, I’ve stumbled upon the Psychonaut Field Manual, which is a nicely written guide about chaos magic. And I read into it, because the presentation seemed fun, and most importantly - it was the first book where the introduction and first few pages convinced me, that it makes sense and could, in a limited fashion, actually work.

What convinced me was looking at mysticism as something akin to “hacking your own mind” - by using symbols, rituals, meditation and whatnot, you convince your unconscious mind to push you slightly more towards doing what you need. And that sounded like something interesting, especially since I just finished reading the Art of Game Design, which had a few great chapters focused on the subconscious and how to work with it when being creative. Of course I still don’t believe that you can affect any external factor of your life through it, but now something like “I do a ritual to finish this exam”, and my subconscious may just give me a little nudge to study more, since that’s what it’s convinced we really want.

So I went into the rabbit hole of modern mysticism, and eventually discovered more about the whole movement of Chaos Magic, with authors like Phil Hine. And their reasoning has won me over - their main point is that all mysticism is the same - learning symbols and doing rituals, so you can convince your subconsciousness. And the flavor or dogma you attach to it doesn’t matter, so just do whatever you want. Want to do Wicca? Suit yourself. Christianity and angels? If it works for you. Invoke Spongebob with pentagram out of pizza, or go with Lovecraftian Old Gods? Why not, the only important thing is that you do really believe in it, because otherwise you probably won’t convince your subconscious.

And that’s why they work with something I find really interresting - they call it paradigm shifts, where you hop around various systems, dogmas and religions, immersing yourself into their rabbit hole and honestly giving it a try, to see if that’s what works for you. And that sounded like fun, letting go of the prejudice about religion or esoteric bullshit, and just trying it out for myself, log what results I have, and have fun learning about it.

There’s another point that won me over for chaos magic - one of their core principles is, that every mysticism was so full of themself and took it too seriously, that they’ve forgotten how to have fun. And having fun while doing it is important.

And so I throughout next few years went into the rabbit hole of Wicca, Golden Dawn, Enochian, and probably bunch more I don’t really remember, just trying to take it seriously and see for myself how does it work for me. The hardest part was getting rid of feeling absolutely stupid when you sit in your room with candles, incense, and memorize various bullshit, but it was still pretty fun.

To get to the point - Wicca is one of the only systems I’ve tried that is also a Religion, and works with deities. And I’ve enjoyed this system more than the others, which were more focused on occultism and abstract concepts, because it basically meant you got an imaginary friend. The small daily rituals, that are celebrating nature while also being appreciated by said imaginary friend were fun little games, that made my day pretty much universally better, just like it turned a simple walk through nature as something wonderful - because I started paying more attention to what is around me.

As long as you don’t take it too seriously, don’t let it control your life, don’t talk about it with others that are not interrested, or use it as an excuse to be a dick to anyone, and just enjoy adding a little bit of magic and fantasy into your daily life, I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that. It’s a net-positive change, and not too different than just playing a game of TTRPGs.

I’ve since forgotten about it and don’t really do anything in regards to religion or mysticism, but I still fondly remember the few years I’ve tried, and it has definitely changed my point of view on a lot of things in life. I’d recommend to everyone here to give it a try and see for yourself - you don’t have to tell anyone, it’s a fun rabbit hole to explore (if that’s something you find interresting), and most importantly - you can decide it’s not for you and forget about it at any moment.

Jackhammer_Joe,

tl;dr

Yearly1845, in Why in the year 2024 and with all the knowledge humans have now do people still believe in religion?

deleted_by_author

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  • blazeknave,

    Imagine there’s no heaven

    SelfHigh5,

    When I was a kid I could not understand how that line was meant to be peaceful. Even listening to the rest of the song, it was still unsettling. I was raised Catholic so the song just starts with like “imagine the worst case scenario”. As an atheist now, it’s more hopeful to me. Like imagine what the world could be like if we weren’t just biding time until we were dead. If we all just knew this was the one chance one opportunity mom’s spaghetti.

    blazeknave,

    Yeah exactly. Jewish but same.

    I mean… the first thesis statement in capitalism is “there is a scarcity of resources” and that dominates our lives. Yet, not when we think of life itself.

    You seen that Timeless(?) movie with JT?

    sizzler,

    This is more relevant than most people realise. There is seemingly an increase in religion the older you get. As you said, fear of death and the comfort of something still to come.

    NeoNachtwaechter, in What do you think is the coolest designed sci-fi gun?

    Genius needs simplicity. But many of these suggestions here lack in that respect.

    I like the Jedi Killer.

    stoy,

    The meme?

    NeoNachtwaechter,

    A meme was made out of it, yes.

    otter, in What do you think is the coolest designed sci-fi gun?

    Someone needs to go through and add inline images to each of these

    morphballganon,

    You’re someone!

    pixeltree, in Why in the year 2024 and with all the knowledge humans have now do people still believe in religion?
    @pixeltree@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    Feelings are a powerful force. It makes people feel good, why would they stop?

    SelfHigh5,

    As a former Catholic, I can say at least personally, religion did not make me feel good. It made me feel like many thoughts and feelings I had made me a bad person. It made me smug and judgemental.

    csm10495, in Why in the year 2024 and with all the knowledge humans have now do people still believe in religion?
    @csm10495@sh.itjust.works avatar

    Some would say ya gotta have faith faith faith

    SelfHigh5,

    A-BAAAY-BAAAYYY!

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