• jackalope@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Education is knowing that tomatoes are a fruit. Wisdom is knowing to not put them on a fruit salad.

      • Drivebyhaiku@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        While this has become a popular saying the more interesting portion I found is that science tends to taxonomize by similarity, form and behaviour in isolation. Culture tends to taxonomize by useage and by weight of historical value bias.

        Both are valid because their aims are to do entirely different things. One is to make the study of something more efficient and the other is to inform it’s everyday instance of use.

        However I find it very unnerving when a judge cares only for cultural precedent and not other ethical systems of determining what is just.

        • Kethal@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Modern taxonomy is based on ancestory. Similarity of form and behavior are ways of assessing ancestory, but they are no longer the basis of the taxonomy itself.

          • Drivebyhaiku@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            You act as though there is only one correct taxonomy. Scientific taxonomy is determined that way - not cultural taxonomy. Different cultures and language groups taxonomize things in their own way. Like if you are speaking a native Botswanan language things are not divided by plant or animal it is sorted into

            1. Things you can eat
            2. Things that can harm you
            3. “Useless” things

            Algonquin language distinguishes animate and inanimate but while plants are generally inanimate somethings like feathers are considered animate.

            No one is suggesting these taxonomies should be how we categorize things scientifically but at the same time they are not “wrong”. Being able to accept multiple taxonomy systems as functionally correct is nessisary for being able to make useful judgements. In English a blackberry is culturally a berry. We harvest and use it as a berry and have named it thusly while botanically it is an aggregate drupe. Something that helps us interpret it as something closer to a stone fruit. Hence calling it a berry is not wrong. Just not fulfilling the requirements of every available taxonomy. People who are obsessed with being “correct” often latch onto scientific taxonomy but there are risks to creating hierarchy where there is only one right answer that flattens nuanced issues.

            Is a fish meat? The level of adhereance to a single answer reveals the individual cultural bias of the individual. Respecting more than one answer means you can better empathize and understand where that person comes from.

            • Kethal@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              You said “science tends to taxonomize by similarity, form and behaviour in isolation”. I am saying that modern science does not form taxonomies on those bases.

              • Drivebyhaiku@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                If you are talking about the branch of scientific taxonomy that deals with biology only then yes.

                But biology is not the only branch of science that sorts things into categories. Chemistry, Psychology, Geology etc. all have different taxonomic principles based in similarity, behaviour and formation. It is fair I probably should have mentioned ancestry in the case of biology as it’s usually the first (and often only) thing people think of when they hear the word “taxonomy” but I admit glossed it over.

                Probably since the taxonomy originally being referred to was botony, specifically what counts as a fruit…which is based out of formation and structure of a plant’s ovary. Not ancestry.

      • DrPop@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        I’m gonna use my food wisdom to devise a tomato fruit salad just to spite this comment.

  • someguy3@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    …Chief Justice Roberts’ oft-cited remark that the job of a Supreme Court justice is to “call balls and strikes, and not to pitch or bat.”

    The concept of identity-protective cognition helps explain Justice Scalia’s reflexive response to the question of whether fish is meat. Rather than dispassionately considering arguments rooted in biology and social practice, he jumped immediately to his group identity as a practicing Catholic. That identity led him to a clear answer that reflected his group’s moral values and shared commitments: Fish is not meat.

    That’s the setup and knockdown.

    • postmateDumbass@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Justice Scalia

      Scalia has been dead for 7 years.

      All the current shit going on with the SC, and they pick this to write about?

      • someguy3@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        It’s not about Scalia, it’s explaining the concept of justices making rulings based on their own identity and beliefs instead of facts and logic. To, you know, explain “All the current shit going on with the SC”.

        • postmateDumbass@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Bribery, corrruption, and buying court decisions are the issues of today.

          Personal identity and beliefs don’t factor in when its already bought and paid for.

        • Zippy@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          If they have to go back 7 years to being up an example, that would indicate it is very rare they use only their identity to determine rulings.

          I don’t doubt they often ignore science but this article indicates that is not the case. Is there not something recent they could refer to?

      • Zanz@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Clerks don’t talk about justices that are serving or about the court while the clerk is serving.

  • Asafum@feddit.nl
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    1 year ago

    Chicken of the sea™! Is it Chicken or tuna!?

    If you remember, you remember :P

  • snarf@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I get the need to have a distinction between fish flesh and other meats such as beef, pork, and chicken, but using the same logic as in this article, I’ve always thought of fish as part of the general “meat” category. It confuses me how Catholics do the “no meat, yes fish” thing. Maybe there’s some etymological explanation for why our current-day definition of meat doesn’t explicitly have this distinction (assuming it ever did), but if there is, that context seems to have been lost long ago. For some reason, many people now just reflexively believe that fish is not meat – even non-Catholics.

    • thisbenzingring@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      Fish is the exception because one of the miracles Jesus performed was to fed a whole mass of people with only 7 loaves of bread, small fish, and turning water into wine. Catholics sort of re-create this in weekly mass and the Pope lets Catholics eat fish during lent. It’s just supposed to be symbolic. But religion always forgets what is symbolic and what is reality.

    • squiblet@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      When I was a vegetarian I ran into people who thought meat was only beef… so they thought being a vegetarian meant sure, you’d eat pork, lamb, fish, chicken, turkey, just not beef. Kid of a weird thing to think, since for one a chicken is clearly not a vegetable, but also why even bother to make that distinction? “I have a special diet where I don’t eat beef!” and that sounds drastic to them. Some people’s minds are blown by the idea of no animal parts at all, like “What do you eat?

      • Sodis@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        And then they forget, that just a hundred years ago huge parts of the population were more or less vegetarians, because meat was sparse and expensive. In Germany we had the phrase of the “Sonntagsbraten”, so basically a meat dish on Sunday, because it was a special occasion to eat meat at least one time a week.

      • chinpokomon@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        The cow is sacred in India, so they don’t eat beef. Most of the Western world won’t eat dog or cat, but that isn’t a universal thing and while probably not as common today, it doesn’t mean that it’s an unheard of practice. Until recent times, people would eat what was available which didn’t have alternative value.

            • squiblet@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              It’s pretty crazy… It’s a disease that you can get by being bit by a tick, like Lyme disease, but it gives you a severe allergy to red meat. I am not sure of the spiritual implications! Ha ha

    • Neato@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      And just in case anyone missed the point of his character: he’s almost always wrong and an aggressive contrarian by nature. It’s celebrated when he’s right for that reason specifically.

  • MxM111@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Fish is not meat. It is an animal. And it has muscles. The mammal muscle is traditionally called meat. Science (other than dietary) do not use word “meat” for anything. Just muscle. And dietitians use the same definition of the word meat as traditional. So, saying that “scientifically” meat is just flesh on bones is total baloney, scientifically speaking.

    • Neato@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Well you didn’t read the article and/or missed the point.

      “Of course fish isn’t meat!” he boomed. “Why else do I—and millions of Catholics—eat fish on Fridays during Lent?”

      “But from a scientific perspective,” I responded, “isn’t meat just the flesh of an animal? And aren’t fish animals?”

      Scalia scoffed. “You’re telling me the Pope has been wrong for centuries?”

      Scalia used the bible and the pope as evidence against science on a scientific question. He could have said what you did, and it’d have been accepted. But he espoused stupid reasoning that backed up his life choices. Fuck him and everyone like him that abuse their power without thought.

    • chinpokomon@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      If you really want to get into traditionally, meat used to also refer to vegetables, a.k.a. green meat. The word meat comes from the Old English word mete, which referred to food in general. More recently, green meat might have referred to animals fed exclusively on vegetables or plant based feed. And today, with the existence of veg-burgers or Beyond and Impossible meats, those are also sometimes called green meat.

      So take me back a few centuries, and everything you eat would be mete, including that fish.

    • removed my reduction because - though i disagree with almost 100% of your statement - you are contributing to the conversation. you didn’t say some useless garbage like “this” or “wrong” or “my axe” some such nonsense. you expressed your side of the discussion.

      i still disagree. there are traditions that taxonomize bats as birds and whales as fish. these archaic categories do not help us understand the world around us anymore than the ptolemaic geocentric model of the universe. was around a long time. doesn’t make it accurate. but i do agree that meat isn’t exclusively flesh on bones.

      “eat the flesh of the olive and discard the stone”
      “dry fruits were present before fleshy fruits and fleshy fruits diverged from them”

      traditionally meat revolved around the sun and the flesh of fish was the center of the universe.

      or you know whatever man.

      • MxM111@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Again, except in dietary, meat is not used in science at all. So, your point about wrong taxidermy is not quite valid. In everyday use this word does not mean fish. It just does not. Go to the store and look at meat and fish product departments/sections. Also, it does make sense to separate them from dietary point of view - there are also several important distinctions between fish and other types of meat, especially in terms of their nutritional profiles and potential health benefits.