• 0 Posts
  • 15 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: April 20th, 2023

help-circle


  • He’s free to discuss this article any way that he thinks is interesting. Just because he found it helpful to point out the bias in this case doesn’t obligate him to do it in any other cases. He doesn’t owe you anything.

    Also, responding to someone noting the reputation of your source with what amounts to "ARE YOU ACCUSING ME OF BREAKING THE RULES? ARE YOU SAYING CONSERVATIVE LEANING SOURCES ARE ILLEGAL?” is basically the textbook definition of a wildly defensive response lmao.






  • davitz@lemmy.catoMemes@lemmy.mlPlato
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    16
    ·
    9 months ago

    To oversimplify, it’s a metaphor about what it’s like to go through life relying only on your senses and not using reason to question or analyze the deeper meanings behind your surface impressions. The story goes on to discuss a prisoner who escapes the cave and gets a taste of true reality, that prisoner is meant to represent a philosopher. When the escaped prisoner returns and tells the others of what he’s seen, they reject his claims saying how absurd it would be to believe that there’s anything more than just the shadows. I think in this day and age it’s easy to guess what that interaction represents, but Plato had a particular bone to pick about this since his mentor had essentially been executed for questioning various things.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegory_of_the_cave?wprov=sfla1







  • It doesn’t seem that way. It seems like at least one person from your instance needs to have interacted with a community on another instance before it’ll be included in partial match search results. If you manually navigate to one of the instances you federate with and look for a very small community there and then go back to your instance and search for some of the words in that community’s name I don’t believe it will come up. But then it you search for the community’s exact fully qualified identifier it should come up and then once you subscribe it should come up if you try the previous search terms again. At least that’s been my experience. As a result, to flesh out my subscriptions I’ve spent time manually browsing to other instances, finding interesting communities in their catalogue and then manually copying the identifier and then tabbing back to my instance to find the community with the identifier and subscribe, which admittedly is far from an ideal experience. Luckily I think there’s a lot that the upcoming client implementations can do to make this discovery process easier.