Aerospace engineering is not done that way. And one bitcher - if listened to might have saved one of the Shuttles.DavidWillard wrote:There's a saying that went around at Intel in the QA and Engineering circles......Cut short and compiled as....MSimon wrote:Betruger wrote:More adversity, not less, produces the fittest arguments/designs/etc.
Argggggggghhhhh. Matey. A man after me own black heart.
"Don't bitch unless you have a fix."
So how much things are "improving" in the muslim w
Engineering is the art of making what you want from what you can get at a profit.
-
- Posts: 498
- Joined: Sat Nov 07, 2009 12:35 am
oh you guys... a bunch of engineers talking about anthropology.
Religion, being part of culture, is um.... okay, cultural relativism is a big thing that most people do not understand. To me, it may be too harsh to say that to understand a culture, you must be part of that culture; it actually requires both the inner lens and the outter lens. Being, kinda, an anthroplogy student, I know I havent even begin to start to learn about humanity and the human experience as a whole.
The modern world's concept of freedom and liberalism, even tho it may be progress and just, may not apply to some of the muslim world. But I do believe in one thing, cultural progressionism. There are bits and pieces of our old culture that are benefitual or cause no harm, so those bits survive, in anthropological terms, we call these things, "survivals". So traits of a culture can and should continue as long as they are good and/or they cause no harm.
If traditions of a cultural causes harm or injustice, it should be removed. That's how I feel about certain practices in the muslim world. No amount of twisted rationization, bad interpretation or archaic passages of religious text can ever justify harm. This obviously should be true for all cultures.
On the subject of burqa and veiling, that's reserved for another day.
Edit: bad spelling.
Religion, being part of culture, is um.... okay, cultural relativism is a big thing that most people do not understand. To me, it may be too harsh to say that to understand a culture, you must be part of that culture; it actually requires both the inner lens and the outter lens. Being, kinda, an anthroplogy student, I know I havent even begin to start to learn about humanity and the human experience as a whole.
The modern world's concept of freedom and liberalism, even tho it may be progress and just, may not apply to some of the muslim world. But I do believe in one thing, cultural progressionism. There are bits and pieces of our old culture that are benefitual or cause no harm, so those bits survive, in anthropological terms, we call these things, "survivals". So traits of a culture can and should continue as long as they are good and/or they cause no harm.
If traditions of a cultural causes harm or injustice, it should be removed. That's how I feel about certain practices in the muslim world. No amount of twisted rationization, bad interpretation or archaic passages of religious text can ever justify harm. This obviously should be true for all cultures.
On the subject of burqa and veiling, that's reserved for another day.
Edit: bad spelling.
Last edited by Robthebob on Wed Mar 03, 2010 12:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Throwing my life away for this whole Fusion mess.