m_f

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Caption:

β€œHey, Jimβ€”go out for a short one!”

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SPORTING GOODS

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Washington crossing the street

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Transcript:

Arlene: How about us having a lasting relationship, Garfield?

Garfield: I'm sorry, Arlene. I'm already hopelessly in love with somebody else.

Arlene: Who?

Garfield: Me.

 

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Caption:

Long before his show business career, he was known as Mr. Liberace, the wood-shop teacher.

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122

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β€œWell, I just feel like I’m living under a microscope.”

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Innovative concepts in exposing city kids to nature

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SCORPION PETTING ZOO / FARM ANIMALS

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Early clock-watchers

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β€œOo! Icky icky! … Something just went down that surrrrrrre wasn’t plankton!”

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[–] m_f@discuss.online 0 points 4 days ago

That would be great! No platform has been set up yet, will get that set up soon.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 17 points 4 days ago

Some background on this comic:

Transcript:

Actually, I rejected the first version of this (on the left) myself. I knew my editor would ponder the good-taste quotient of this cartoon, so I decided not to risk it and closed the door a few more inches.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 22 points 5 days ago

Some background on this comic:

Transcript (sketch):

"Oooooo!.. Mr. Van Horn!.. The duck is back--staring at your back."

Raymond could feel it…First a tingling at the base of his neck and then a cold sweat would quickly engulf his body--yes, the duck was staring at him again."

Transcript (commentary):

Another example of perhaps overworking a cartoon. In hindsight, I wish I had used the final drawing but with the second caption in the sketch above, which begins, "Raymond could feel it…" It just seems a little more interesting to me.

In coming up with the name for the phobia, I played around with words like "quackaphobia" and "duckalookaphobia" and so on. But then I got the bright idea to look up the scientific name for ducks, and discovered their family name is Anatidae. Ad so, I ended up coining a word that twelve ornithologists understood and everyone else probably went, "Say what?"

[–] m_f@discuss.online 16 points 5 days ago

Some background on this comic:

Transcript:

THE WRONG NUMBER

Larry lived alone in his small inner-city apartment. He had no friends and most people ignored him at all costs.

Then one day, unexpectedly, the phone rang. And Larry was surprised to find himself talking to God.

"Is this 555-3178?" God asked.

"No, this is 555-7138."

"Sorry." And God hung up.

The chapter opened with:

Sometimes ideas have come out of short stories or ramblings I write just to shift gears once in a while. Cartoons are, after all, little stories themselves, frozen at an interesting point in time. What follows are several stories that either led to cartoons, could have led to cartoons, or were just ideas in and of themselves.

Interesting that this seems to have been published after its inclusion in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prehistory_of_The_Far_Side. Or maybe they just forgot to include the resulting comic. Some of the other short stories have the resulting comic included.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 13 points 6 days ago (2 children)

It's a play on the term "La-Z-Boy". The name comes from people being able to be lazy in it, but the joke is that the chair itself is no longer lazy.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 3 points 6 days ago (1 children)

There's a quote I can't find the source for, but is along the lines of "If you want to punish a cartoonist, give him daily syndication"

[–] m_f@discuss.online 2 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

The coloring made it a little weird because it just looks unfinished. Here's a B&W version that makes it IMO a little clearer:

I see now in the colored version that it's supposed to be red at the end of the neck, but I thought that was the bottom part of the head. It looks like they redrew it a bit while coloring.

EDIT: Turned it into a comparison gif:

[–] m_f@discuss.online 0 points 1 week ago (1 children)

It can be insufferable, but also sometimes has good comments 🀷

[–] m_f@discuss.online 8 points 1 week ago

Some background on this comic:

Sketch Caption:

Mountain Businessmen

Transcript:

I just started thinking about mountain men and the wild frontier and Jeremiah Johnson and before long out came Seymour.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I think we generally agree with each other. The existence of an omniscient AI or deity doesn't change the "experience" of free will. It doesn't "invalidate choice" from the point of view of the observed. It does "invalidate choice" from the point of view of the observer, who can now say "This thing exhibits no unpredictable behavior to me". You and I both think we have free will, because we can't predict our own behavior. Our experience is unchanged, whether or not some other observer exists or could exist that could predict our behavior.

Agreeing on a frame of reference is exactly my point. "Does something have free will?" requires the follow-up question, "According to whom?". Just like "I'm far from that rock" requires the followup question, "According to whom?". The ant might think you're far from the rock, something else might think you're near the rock.

To boil it down a bit more, my point is just that you can always replace the phrase "free will" in speech with "unpredictable behavior" without loss of meaning, because that is what people actually mean when they say it, whether they realize that or not.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago (3 children)

We're not "relieved" of free will. It's not an intrinsic property that one "has". It would be like having "big" or "near". You don't "have" big, it's a relative term.

It's simply a description of observed behavior. That's all it really is in the end, even though people treat it as this super mysterious thing.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago

Why not? It might seem absurd, but can you prove they don't "choose" to flit about here or there? A super-intelligent AI might also be able to "pierce the veil" and determine the underlying mechanics, like a video game character determining the math behind the random number generator that powers their world.

That's also only one interpretation of quantum mechanics, mechanistic interpretations aren't ruled out (though a number of variants have been).

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