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A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
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obiwanobiwan (248 D)
09 Mar 11 UTC
"Foolish...Voting For Liberals. It's What Kids Do." The GOP Targets Students
http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_theticket/20110308/ts_yblog_theticket/ahead-of-the-2012-campaign-states-debate-voting-rights

So to expel their image of being stuffy old white males in flanel suits, the genius GOP has decided to try and eliminate same-day voter registration and voting and limit college voters in other ways...nice...
219 replies
Open
mindphaser (149 D)
09 Mar 11 UTC
More judge-like game settings?
I really like the web-based driven Diplomacy game play but are no fan of the handling of deadlines and the high occurrence of no ordering and civil disorders. Has anyone attempted to bring a more judge-like approach to game settings, deadlines and grace periods to this project? Anything up and running out there or does anyone having work in progress? I'd rather join forces if anyone is working on it than starting on duplicate work,
5 replies
Open
Putin33 (111 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
Designing my final syllabus
So I'm in the process of designing my last syllabus before they cut off my funding, and I wanted to do something different this time. What cases do you think would most interest 18-20 year olds?
30 replies
Open
vexlord (231 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
gunizzle for shizzle!
attack your neighbor for not interpreting your moves correctly! whats more fun than that!
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=53044
3 replies
Open
joey1 (198 D)
11 Mar 11 UTC
I finally won 2 games !!!
I have been playing webdip here for almost a year, and I had finished 48 games not being able to win any of them. Then in the last hour I won not 1 but 2 games. gameID=47420 and gameID=51611. I think I finally found a strategy that works for me.
6 replies
Open
TrustMe (106 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
2011 The Masters, Round 3 is getting underway!
Please check your emails and signup for your games. Let me know if there are any problems, so we can get them resolved quickly.
6 replies
Open
peter25 (0 DX)
11 Mar 11 UTC
New and fast game JOIN
CAn we join to the game click on ready please? Will start today and is 5min game
1 reply
Open
largeham (149 D)
08 Mar 11 UTC
FTF game in Melbourne
It has come to my attention that there are a few people here who are from Melbourne, Australia. Anyway, being completely and utterly free this Labor Day weekend (read: no one wants to hang out with me), I would like it if people wanted to meet up and play a game of Diplomacy. I know that it is a little late, so if a later date was organised, I'm fine with that.
11 replies
Open
thatwasawkward (4690 D(B))
11 Mar 11 UTC
8.9 earthquake off the coast of Japan, tsunamis, aftershocks
CNN livestream: http://www.justin.tv/live_news#/w/948725776/18
I know, CNN sucks, but this is the best stream I've found so far.
Al Jazeera's livestream has it too: http://english.aljazeera.net/watch_now/
If you know anyone in Japan, or anywhere on the Pacific coast in Asia you might want to give them a call and let them know. Tsunamis are still moving and there may be more aftershocks in the region.
8 replies
Open
mr.crispy (0 DX)
11 Mar 11 UTC
Report
How do you report someone you think may be cheating to knock them off the game?
2 replies
Open
Zenobia (100 D)
11 Mar 11 UTC
PLEASE JOIN GAME
Any interested parties are welcome to join: http://www.webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=53004 Password is "havefun". only 20 hours left to join!!!
0 replies
Open
TURIEL (205 D)
11 Mar 11 UTC
Players (noobs preferred) Needed for live game
A Late Live Game For Noobs
1 hour b4 start time.
20 replies
Open
TURIEL (205 D)
11 Mar 11 UTC
New Game 5 players needed (LIVE)
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=53127
2 replies
Open
curtis (8870 D)
11 Mar 11 UTC
LIve Ancient Med Game in 15 min
1 reply
Open
Macchiavelli (2856 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
NEW GAME : COMPETETIVE WORLD DIP
2 day phazes, 50 ante, ppsc, full chat, no anonymous
1 reply
Open
zscheck (2531 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
Step into the ring
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=53012
100 point buy in
0 replies
Open
coffeebean (355 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
forced draw conditions?
Say you have a (purely hypothetical, of course) situation where 2 countries are holding a stalemate line against a 3rd in a gunboat game, and the 3rd country is refusing to draw.

Is there some number of moves with no change to the line after which the mods will force a draw?
4 replies
Open
shadowplay (2162 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
Soros v LCTM, or how I learned to love the quants...
So I've been reading Niall Ferguson and his view on George Soros when LCTM begged for a bail out and it got me thinking, if the worlds decisions can be divided into gut or analysis, what kind of diplomacy player am I?

I'm interested to know if players on webdip would evaluate their styles as a gut player or an analytical player?
2 replies
Open
Puddle (413 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
Hey Guys
After a long hiatus (another) I'm back. Anyone up for a live game?
0 replies
Open
Zenobia (100 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
Invite to join game "Take Two"
Please join the game http://www.webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=53004 , otherwise called "Take Two". password is "havefun". We unfortunately haven't had many sign up for it and time runs out in 27 hours.
Thanks!
0 replies
Open
Maniac (189 D(B))
10 Mar 11 UTC
Sitter required
for 6 games (3 gunboat & 3 Traditiona) I'm away for 4 days - apply within ASAP - thx
4 replies
Open
Indybroughton (3407 D(G))
10 Mar 11 UTC
Tips on Ghost Rating..
When I joined, I was pure. I would not let GR nor points rating deter me from joining a game that looked interesting, for whatever reason. ...But now I find the ratings to be one factor in my considerations. I'm sliding down the slippery slope to letting GR rule me!!!!!! But I digress...
34 replies
Open
WhiteSammy (132 D)
09 Mar 11 UTC
Ankara Crescent
I think it's well past due for the forum to play another game of this classic text based Diplomacy variant.

Just make sure to follow the rules guys or else its no fun for anyone else.
81 replies
Open
fulhamish (4134 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
All purpose explination found in natural selection
I went to animal rescue cente with my daughters on Sunday to choose a new pet, and it gave me pause for thought.

trip (696 D(B))
10 Mar 11 UTC
I was just thinking the same thing.
fulhamish (4134 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
While I was walked around seeing all of the volunteers at work, it provoked me to consider whether this inter-species care and concern might constitute an example of pure- rather than reciprocal-altruism. In the next instant I realised that someone else would say something along the lines of - ''they only do it because it makes them feel good'' and that is an 'evolutionary' response. Unfortunately I am a reductionist by training and I have to specifically ask what is the proposed mechanism for this hypothesis and how might it work. Forgive me if I enumerate:

1) We need a gene mutation which will code for this social response in the phenotype This instinctively seems unlikely to me, but pressing on -

2) Taken in isolation this specific mutation must be at least as powerful as other gene mutaions which migh code for stronger legs, better eyesight etc......Again even more unlikely, but pressing on..........

3) There might well be competing gene mutations coding for selfish behaviour which will be approperiate under times of environmental stress. Which one will prevail in the long-term. My feeling as that at a boleneck stage selfishness will win out every time. Pressing on, however..........

4) Most importantly, can someone show me the reciprocal altruism gene(s)?

In summary my view is that many people, when in doubt, reach for the natural selection paradigm as an explanatory tool for almost anything & everything and that this kneejerk reaction often has no rational scientific basis .
fulhamish (4134 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
I should add that in many aspects the extended paradigm has all the characteristics of a believe system, which I like to call evolutionism.
Alderian (2425 D(S))
10 Mar 11 UTC
Saving the lives of an animal makes you feel important which makes you feel good. After all, if it weren't for you, those animals would be in worse shape or even dead. You must be a good person to spend your time helping. You're definitely a better person than the sonofabitch that cut you off in traffic on your way over to the shelter, and savings these animals proves it so.

As Joey Tribbiani said, "There is no unselfish good deed."
gigantor (404 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
"I like helping dying animals because it makes all the girls want to do me." --uncited.
fiedler (1293 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
And tomorrow there will probably be a thread about how sadists get a thrill from being.... well, sadistic. Altruism or cruelty, there's always a choice - you should be thankful for those that choose to help.
Onar (131 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
I wrote a paper on this a while back, about how there's no such thing as a truly 'unselfish' deed. In fact, all deeds in one way or another trace back to a root selfishness that is, what I called in my paper, "human nature." It makes us feel good to help others. Not to mention, as diplomacy players, present company can see that helping someone for no readily apparent reason can, in fact, pay off.

On to another idea, in the same vein, your initial example provides another talking point, with regards to darwinism, that I'm not entirely certain you noticed. When we help weaker animals, and endangered ones, we are, in fact, playing god. Consider the phrase, "survival of the fittest.' At no point does it state anything about someone helping the weaker, or unfit animals to survive. In fact, that is simply standing in the way of progress.

But that's just my two cents. Bet this post gets ignored/lost in the discussion.
fulhamish (4134 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
@ fiedler there's always a choice

I agree with this bald statement. For years I battled with how much choice the child in Bangladesh (or inner-city Detroit?) actually had when compared to one born into a 'nice' middle class family in the suburbs. A couple of years ago* I started to think that free-will or choice actually worked on two intimately connected levels or orbits. The first was at the level of the individual, as you say above, while the second was at the level of the community, or society as a whole, if you like. Sometimes the teeth on both wheels in the mechanism need to be engaged to turn in the same forward and productive direction.

As to being 'thankful', some would perhaps regard that act as prayer?

* If someone is interested I can elaborate if you like, but it is a little personal.
Darwyn (1601 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
"Bangladesh (or inner-city Detroit?) "

Really? Have you been to either?
orathaic (1009 D(B))
10 Mar 11 UTC
i largely disagree with your analysis.

Your definition of evolutionism is fine and i whole-heartedly approve.

How and Ever, i disagree with your analysis of the observed behaviour, and as a physicist i'm used to the reductionist methods you talk of, i just think you're applying them badly.

In this case i believe the human brain is rather flexible and has a given set of tools (which includes alturism, as has been shown in rats and chimps) and that the complexity of the human brain allows us to apply them in different ways. (i don't neccesarily think there is only a genetic component to this behaviour, this is also a feature of the environment which the 'care workers' grew up in - or essentially their neural network, and how it developed to care for animals - or to put it another way, how they are applying their specific set of genetically pre-determined tools)

The second tool i think you're missing is not something which codes for loving all things, but instead something which allows us identify family members. When applied generally this means we can love our pets and care for them whether they are genetically related or not.

We are socially conditioned to certain responces, and the genetic explanation probably fails on it's own, but given your request that someone show you the gene, i think i have to point out how unfair this request is.

It is more than likely that some people with this gene exhibit different behaviour, not because they are incapbale of alturism, but instead because they are only alturistic to their 'own' people which they identify not with other mammals/animals, but instead with a particular social grouping (religious, political or ethnic)

in short, i imagine it is a combination of genes rather than any specific one which codes for this, and not being a geneticist i can't give any examples of this kind of complexity in mamals. However the social criteria is i believe equally important to consider.

Flexibility of humans to act in the best interest of the group as varying challenges approach is the strength which has allowed our population grow to 7 billion. Is that neural infrastructure which we all share not flexible enough that some people will care for animals even at the expense of their own genes? They can currently spread ideas as memes instead of genes... a qualitatively different approach, but someone could equally write book titled the 'selfish meme' and explain how successful ideas are taken up by humans and thus replicate... how they mutate, and how mutant strains can be more or less successful.

and why it is evolutionary beneficial for humans to be able to use 'successful' ideas.
orathaic (1009 D(B))
10 Mar 11 UTC
@Onar: re 'playing god'

i entirely disagree, we're not slowing down evolution, it doesn't have anywhere to go, competition among species is also balanced out by co-operation. Living Systems develop symbiotic relaitonships and share resrouces to benifit both. If we humans happen to be doing this we're integrating these animlas into our system rather the letting them die in the wild (the wild we have destroyed) this is a part of evolution aswell.

It's not slowing down because there is no target place which it is trying to get. It is just changing. Evolution can produce less complex systems, entropy sometimes requires it, system complexity sometimes prohibits growth and systems collapse (whether that system is biological, social or environmental)

both competition and co-operation are important. And both dynamically push evolution 'forward' - that is forward in time, not toward any 'perfect' or 'most fit' solution. Simply towards the future which will be different....
fulhamish (4134 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
@ Orthiac

Thank you for your considered reply, I would respond as follows from the perspective of a geochemist rather than a biologist!
1) You write: - ''We are socially conditioned to certain responces, and the genetic explanation probably fails on it's own, but given your request that someone show you the gene, i think i have to point out how unfair this request is.''

I am afraid you misquote me, I did ot write gene but rather gene(s), a crucial difference I think that you will agree, which affects much of what you subsequently write. It is funny how we all (myself included :-]) somehow conspire to see what we want to see.

2) Your argument elsewhere seems to revolve on the interactions of out genetic makeup with the prevailing and, largely temporary, environment. I do not take issue with you on this, it is classical stuff, often forgotten by many ignorant 'evolutionists', particularly some Social Darwinists. Where I am unclear, however, is whether you remove some human behaviourial patterns from any genetic constraint and, if so, why.

3) The idea of the ''group'' (hunter gatherer, family, nation state, race -??) as an evolutionary driver interests me greatly. Ultimately, given sufficent environmental pressure, this must result in speciation, wouldn't you agree? And if so what implications might this carry, for the human race in particular.

4) The idea of memes I find very problematical and, to be frank, a classic example of the evolutionism to which we both refer. Please note I do not argue with the idea of cultural transmission; I just query the application of natural selection to the process. Dieter Lohmar, I understand, in particular is very good on this although he does not use the word evolutionism ( I am keeping that one for myself!)

5) What do you exactly do you mean when you qualifiy 'evolutionary' with 'beneficial'? Given mutation is random and given that chanes in the environment are random, isn't the whole process itself essentially directionless? Today's succesful, adaptation may will be tomorrow's recipe for disaster, under a different environmental regime. I think that words such as beneficial and forward etc. in the context of evolution are essentially emotive and have no place in the discussion. Just one of my little hobby horses :-]

Thank you again for your considered reply.
Onar (131 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
@orathiac:

You say that we humans destroy 'the wild,' implying certain animal's habitats. But perhaps, this is another form of evolution. As we are fitter animals, the less fit ones, as per darwinism, are supposed to die out.

I agree that there is no goal or target to evolution, but human interference seems to be shoehorning nature into one. Take, for example, global warming. Assume, for a second, that it is happening naturally, rather than through human causes. For example, because the sun is heating up. Now, if this assumption is followed, then preserving animals meant to live in warmer climates should thrive, while those meant to live in cooler ones won't. Granted, this may lead to the end of certain species, sadly, this may include many species of penguin, but if man isn't playing god, then he will allow this to happen. Again, I want to stress that that was a hypothetical scenario, and I hope penguins, as a species shall continue on for a long, long time.

Also, on another note, thank-you for replying to my message.
fulhamish (4134 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
@ Onar
you write - 'Consider the phrase, "survival of the fittest.'

I have indeed researched this phrase. In fact, despite claims by some that it has a specific and unemotive bilogical meaning, I am afraid that this is not the case. It was originally used by Herbert Spencer and adopted from him by Darwin only for the later editions of ''On the origin of species''. I think we must be very niave to think that Darwin meant anything other than Spencer's original meaning - "This survival of the fittest, which I have here sought to express in mechanical terms, is that which Mr. Darwin has called 'natural selection', or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life."
Spencer then went on to apply the term to matters economic, so my hypothesis is that what I refer to as 'evolutionism' has its origins with Darwin and Spencer themselves. Even if it might be considered politically/scientifically incorrect to do so.
Onar (131 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
@fulhamish:

I think you're getting bogged down in semantics. The phrasing and wording are nowhere near as important as my original point. You bring up this quote:

"This survival of the fittest, which I have here sought to express in mechanical terms, is that which Mr. Darwin has called 'natural selection', or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life."

which is not incompatible in the slightest with my argument. Should I rephrase, saying that the favoured races are the ones meant to survive, and as humans, we are getting in the way of progress via keeping the unfavoured alive?
Tom Bombadil (4023 D(G))
10 Mar 11 UTC
Darwyn +1000
fulhamish (4134 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
@ Onar

You are probably right about semantics and as you can see, from my appaling English, words are not me forte! On occassion, however, the analysis of the use of particular words by particular people in particular contexts can be informative, wouldn't you agree? A good example is your use of the words ''getting in the way of progress'' in your last post. I wonder what caused you to pick this particular word, over say the word ''regress'' or perhaps ''process'', dependng on your meaning?

I sympathise with your view, if I have it correct, that we are perhaps as humans are CURRENTLY interfering with the evolutionary process. But to bring you back to the title of the thread for a moment - I wonder if you too are annoyed by the tendancy to look for a Natural Selection paradigm explanation in so many areas where the science offers little or no support for its application?
orathaic (1009 D(B))
10 Mar 11 UTC
@Beneficial: "5) What do you exactly do you mean when you qualifiy 'evolutionary' with 'beneficial'? Given mutation is random and given that chanes in the environment are random, isn't the whole process itself essentially directionless? Today's succesful, adaptation may will be tomorrow's recipe for disaster, under a different environmental regime. I think that words such as beneficial and forward etc. in the context of evolution are essentially emotive and have no place in the discussion"

I whole-heartedly agree, how ever, some tools which increase adaptability (like the brain) can give a creature greater chance of surviving different environmental conditions.

on the other hand stable environmental conditions will/may select for simpler creatures which don't need brains...

If you think about it in terms of temperature regulation (or survivability against changes in temperature in the environment) there is an advantage for multi-cellular organisms to have a gland which is specialized into providing a greater range of conditions which can be regulated (essentially controlling the internal environment of the body.. ie where cells live)

Contrasting with single-celled organisms (bacteria) or no cell'd life (viruses) they may have a much simpler regulatory system (or none) and they will have less things which can go wrong, but in some cases will be completely disabled when they wander out of their normal environmental temperature range (so a virus which goes dormant when it is frozen... a lot of viruses would just be destroyed, those which actually manage to survive coated in some protein - if i'm not mistaken - are better adapted for a wider temperature range, but they are still more limited than something which has a specialized part for dealing with this environmental variability...)

Anyway, yes, i'd agree fully. I fear i may have failed to properly convey some of the ideas, but i think more generally that adaptability CAN be selected for, and this can lead to more complex organisms, meanwhile if the environment is particularly stable then i imagine simple systems will be preferred...

@$ and the idea of memes, I agree once again, this is taking the ideas from evolution and applying them to ideas which is not necessarily fair or appropriate.

Nevertheless, i think we should build a theory of memes, and it should borrow from some evolutionary ideas.... i do accept it will have several different qualities and features...

@Onar : 'As we are fitter animals, the less fit ones, as per darwinism, are supposed to die out. '

No, not supposed to. Darwins theory is a description of how things happen 'in nature'. How things are 'supposed' to happen is for US to decide. In this case we are controlling our environment, and i don't think you can fall back on a description of a 'natural' system and use it to justify any kind of human behaviour. Humans have to decide for themselves what they are 'supposed' to do.

I don't beleive 1) we can play god - we a re mere humans and everything we do is natural. (man-made disasters are just ones that we could have prevented by acting in a different way, natural disasters are just ones which we can't figure out how to prevent)

I don't believe 2) there is any a priori supposed/right and wrong, when it comes to our interactions with the rest of nature. I don't think we 'should' act in a given way, unless we're trying to control our environment even more.

I believe we can make choices about the kind of world we WANT to live in. And then say, 'this is supposed to work like so' OR 'We should do this, for our greater goal'.

But i believe this is merely a human plan for control of or harmony with our environment.
orathaic (1009 D(B))
10 Mar 11 UTC
@The idea of group "3) The idea of the ''group'' (hunter gatherer, family, nation state, race -??) as an evolutionary driver interests me greatly. Ultimately, given sufficent environmental pressure, this must result in speciation, wouldn't you agree? And if so what implications might this carry, for the human race in particular."

i really have to agree. I guess the closest example would be the south of the US in the 50s, no interbreeding for generations (between blacks and whites) would likely have resulted in speciation. I think it takes a long time for humans and the cross-cultural 'evolution' of ideas is a bigger and faster method of developing our adaptability and improving our chances of survival.

This probably over-comes some 'group-ing' (in this case, historically, it was a social movement which was based on the idea of freedom and equality, which in principle was to avoid internal conflict and civil war...)

Separately i think it would really interesting to approach this problem from a longer view point, and look at how speciation HAS occurred in the homo genus. ie Neanderthal and Homo Floresiensis (hobbit man) and eh, devonian man? maybe i'm messing up a bit on that last one... was there three species of homo alive in the past 50,000 years, or was there four?



19 replies
Maniac (189 D(B))
10 Mar 11 UTC
pausing gunboat games
could anyone playing in gunboat games check to see if a pause has been requested?
1 reply
Open
hellalt (70 D)
02 Mar 11 UTC
2 years hellalt anniversary game.
the game will start on march 16th.
I'm thinking of wta anon PUBLIC PRESS 25hrs/turn 30 D bet.

100 replies
Open
MadMarx (36299 D(G))
06 Mar 11 UTC
Why do you care so much about winning?
What are you trying to prove? Who are you trying to prove it to?
79 replies
Open
maltizok (787 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
quick question
if you are defeated in a game and another player CD's, can you take over for that player even though you were killed off as your original country?
3 replies
Open
The Situation (100 D)
10 Mar 11 UTC
Voting Pause.
I am not currently in a game awaiting players to pause, nor am I complaining about a past game. This just struck me as somewhat impractical. A Pause vote, in my opinion should be a majority vote. I'm sure countless situations have occured where a small number of players refuse to vote pause when a legitimate reason is given. Pausing, as far as I'm aware, does not affect the outcome of the game.
19 replies
Open
terry32smith (0 DX)
10 Mar 11 UTC
We need one for diplo classic - 5 min
http://www.webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=52994

Classic, True Diplomacy, 5 min phases, 7pm PST
0 replies
Open
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