No, you just slept through your history class, evidently.I must have been fairly young at the time.I take it you don't remember the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire?
While a reply of that sort was not exactly unexpected, your conclusion is impossible to be sure of due to too many missing variables.

To the extent that it was ever actually illegal, no. What I'm basically saying is that while homosexuality has never been illegal, BEATING UP homosexuals no longer is.
So another cultural change, thanks.
Change begets change, that's for sure. OTOH, the Dark Ages were also followed by a similar boom period of technological advancement under the Roman Empire.
For the record only, one date range I saw for the Dark Ages was between about 476 and 800 AD.
My entire point is that they won't, because Afghan and Western culture have two COMPLETELY different ideas about relationships between men and women.
And I am saying that while not so extreme the changes in the view points of western women still constitute a significant cultural change.
Women who WANT to be independent have always been free to do so; …
You’re not a stand up comedian by any chance?
"How some of its members want it to be" is another aspect of how it is.
Only if the "want" has some outward expression. Otherwise it might as well not exist.
"Never again" is also a trait of that culture, with the same curious fact that most Israelis never experienced it the first time.
Since they are talking about not letting a particular type of event occur again, not necessarily something that happened to them personally, it’s quite understandable.
And in context, it's the same culture. The motives and beliefs haven't changed, only the patterns of behavior.
I’ll need some evidence for that conclusion. You can suppress behaviour sure, but over time the motives and belief will often fall into line as the norm. Not with everyone obviously but that isn’t required, just enough.
No, he's bald. He's just 50% more bald than the guy with two hairs. They're BOTH bald, it's just a difference of degree.
Great, so we agree that if enough "hairs" are removed, the culture can be said to have changed.
Of course we could, but whether and how much we LIKE those results is determined by culture, not the technology. A race of nomads with zero interest in agriculture and a romantic obsession with nature would probably find a permanent storm-proof dwelling less than useless, asking "How the hell are we supposed to pack this up and move it?"
At any given time of course, but the more exposed they are to the technology the more use they may have for it, either in part or in full. You keep looking at snap shots, but what we are dealing with is a motion picture.
Your values determine what you find useful. Not everyone lives for the same outcomes, and not everyone WANTS to.
It only takes a few to be intrigued and then a few more …
Me too. I'm saying that "something" is not a piece of technology, nor is it based on technology. You yourself mentioned interactions with our environment and our world; but technology is a very small aspect of that world, …
For the average westerner it is almost their entire world. Try counting up the number of things you do in your average day that have some connection with technology compared to those that don’t.
Machines do not create their own advertisements. PEOPLE create them.
It doesn’t matter who creates them so long as they work.
Machines, being not alive, do not produce feedback. Until they do, it IS a one-way street in that regard; the feedback effect is only in play between the producer of a technology and the consumer.
Feedback: "The process in which part of the output of a system is returned to its input in order to regulate its further output". Nothing there about the system needing to be human. Athough humans can be thought of as parts of such systems I was actually using the term a little more loosely to indicate interaction. Which certainly happens. But the "feedback" can obviously be of a more philosophic variety. By which I mean how we reflect on it. How technology makes us feel etc.
… We spend a lot more time learning behavior from other people than we do from available technology, after all.
What? Because there aren’t too many robots we can learn things from? Think of technology as having some of the qualities of a maze we have to make our way through.
At that point, he's inventing technology, not discovering it. The process of experimentation is how he looks for a more efficient way of killing animals.
No, the "invention" has obviously taken place, he is just trying to find out how it works.
Not a preconceived plan, a PREEXISTING NEED. The discovery of the microwave was a useful thing because it was thought that people might NEED a faster way to heat up their food.
The fact remains the microwaves weren’t just discovered by your "preconceived plan theory".
Which was expressed this way:
It isn't until he gets the idea "I need to use something to help me kill that tiger" does he start to go about the process of analyzing his environment and looking for things that will serve that purpose.
If he is faced with a tiger unexpectedly and grabs a sharp stick at random, such accidents can contribute to the process of developing technology. There was no idea in advance or analysing in advance.
Yes it is. You're either borrowing someone else's idea, or you're inspired to come up with an idea yourself. Ideas, being composed of thoughts, cannot originate from things that do not think.
Exactly, you are inspired (by something in your environment) to come up with an idea.
"Effect peoples views" and "create an idea" are two COMPLETELY different things.
I don’t see why that would be the case. Effecting a view and contributing to the creation of an idea don’t seem that far apart, giant dog turds notwithstanding.
Yes we do, because it did.That’s the excuse but we don’t know that.
No we don’t, because it didn’t. Kirk upped the provocation to ensure Spock was pushed over the edge.
We don’t know how Spock would have behaved in the absence of that action.
He had exactly the same info Kirk had at that point. The only thing Spock DIDN'T know about was where Nero got his black hole technology from.
He didn’t know about the long range beaming technology and was trying to ascertain that information but Kirk wouldn’t tell him and he was given no time to try to work it out.
It did. But it was Chekov--NOT Kirk--who came up with the idea.
The trans-warp beaming tech was critical. That allowed Chekov to come up with a place to hide, see below. If Spock had known about it he would probably have reconsidered his original decision to meet up with the fleet and asked for suggestions which Chekov could have provided to him rather than Kirk.
WHAT long range beaming tech? By all accounts they used conventional transporters to board the Narada.
In the film Scotty states that his instructor thought normal beaming is limited to about 100 miles. The Enterprise was hiding in the rings of Saturn (near Titan) and the Narada was near Earth when Kirk and Spock beamed aboard. If they had gotten within normal beaming range, and therefore presumably within sensor range, they would have been destroyed.
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