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WJM on Talking to Rocks

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UDEditors:  WJM’s devastating rebuttal to Aleta’s materialism deserves its own post.  Everything that follows is WJM’s:

Aleta said:

William, I know that your view is that unless morality is somehow grounded (purportedly) in some objective reality to which we have access, then it is merely subjective, and that then people have no reason not to to do anything they want: it’s not just a slippery slope, but rather a black-and-white precipice to nihilism.So actually discussing this with you, which we did at length one other time, is not worth my time.

It’s odd that you say that it is not worth your time apparently because you already know my position. If the only thing that makes a discussion “worth your time” is finding out the other person’s position on a matter, then surely most of what you write here is “not worth your time” because you already know the views of most of the participants here you engage with. Correct?

Is it “not worth your time” to engage in a discussion in order to demonstrate to onlookers (and this site has quite a few thousand onlookers) the rational soundness of your views?

1. I believe human beings have evolved to have moral nature, and that this has been part of our evolution as a social animal.

But I believe we are materially-based biological organisms, and that there is no non-material dualistic aspect to our existence.

There are questions here, right off the bat, to consider about your worldview. First is the question of if whether or not a being produced entirely from unliving, material forces and necessarily, entirely obeying the naturalistic forces of chemistry and physics can even meaningfully be said to have a “moral” nature at all. This depends on what one is using the term “moral” to mean.

If one uses the classic definition, then morality is about how one ought behave; but under the naturalist view of human behavior, humans always act how they must act – according to what physics and chemistry demands. Indeed, under the naturalist view, there is no other available cause for any thought or behavior.

The idea that an entirely physics and chemistry-driven being ought do something other than what physics and chemistry actually drive that entity to do cannot, to my knowledge, be rationally supported. Care to give it a try?

Also, you appear to definitionally link morality to the social aspect of human interaction, when the classic definition of morality draws no such parameter around what “morality” entails. You’re free to believe that, of course, but the rest of us have no reason to consider that limitation valid.

2. I believe that our moral belief system, and our desire to behave morally (which varies among individuals), develops just as many other aspects of us do: through a combination of developmental biology (nature) and learning from our surroundings (nurture.)

So morality is a combination of innate tendencies to judge right from wrong with a great deal of cultural influences about the particular details of right and wrong.

Here you have terminologically strayed from your original premise of humans being the result of the evolutionary processes of material forces acting in biology. IMO, re-labeling “physics and chemistry” as “innate tendencies”, “nurture” and “cultural influences” serves to obfuscate what is actually going on in your worldview: physics and chemistry generating effects via the interaction of various physical commodities.

So, when you say: “judge right from wrong”, it invokes a classical perspective that is unavailable to you. Perhaps you mean it in a different way, but the problem is what the terms appear to mean. Under your worldview, it is perhaps more accurate to say that a physical entity is driven by physics and chemistry to feel it ought do one thing, and ought not do another, and that you are calling this aspect of physics & chemistry driven activity “morality”.

However, also people mature, and just as children go from concrete to abstract thinking, morality goes from being primarily influenced by feeling pressure from the judgments of adults and the desire to avoid punishment (external sources) to an internalized sense of willful choice informed at least in part by reason and education.

Under your naturalism, all of the above is nothing more than terminological re-characterizations of the same fundamental, exclusive driving force of human behavior (energies and particles interacting according to physics and chemistry) in order to gain conceptual distance from the naturalist facts of your view of morality.

In other words, calling some group of those forces interacting “nurture” and “judgement” and “morality” and an “internalized sense of willful choice” doesn’t change the fact that what is going on is nothing more than the brute, ongoing effects of the processes of physics and chemistry.

For example, because I might terminologically refer to what computer-generated characters do in a video game as their “judgement” and “internalized sense of choice” and “nurture” doesn’t change the fact that everything in the video game is just acting as the code dictates. I can say the code is “making a choice” or “making a judgement”, but under the classic understanding of those terms, it is no more making a “choice” or a “judgement” than river water makes a choice or a judgement about which way to go; the outcome is dictated by physics (and/or chemistry).

You go on through your statements furthering your re-characterization of “physics and chemistry” in broader terms to make it seem like something else is going on, but the problem is that everything you say later is rationally laid to ruin by the nature of your premise: naturalism ultimately insists that all human behavior is generated by physics and chemistry and not by a locus of consciousness that has any top-down free will power. The terms you use throughout your statements to re-characterize your naturalist premise are terms that deeply implicate, classically and traditionally speaking, metaphysics your naturalism doesn’t have access to.

So, what you must mean by them boils down to “the cause and effect of physics and chemistry”, which ruins renders the moral judgement of humans equitable to the moral judgement of rocks rolling down hills or the choice of river water about where to flow. That physics and chemistry happen to also make humans feel as if they have some sort of top-down choice and feel as if they are responsible and feel as if they have a conscience and moral obligations is irrelevant because all of those sensations are also physics and chemistry driven instances of physical cause and effect, just like the actions of rocks rolling down hills and river water taking any particular curve.

You say in your statement that you think I and others are “wrong” about where we think morality comes from and what it is. Why should I care what a physics and chemistry-driven biological automaton utters? Like anyone else under your paradigm, you would think and say whatever physics and chemistry commands; you would feel and believe whatever physics and chemistry dictate. If chemistry and physics dictate that you bark like dog and believe you have said something profoundly wise, that is what you will do. If physics and chemistry dictate that you rape little boys and mutilate little girls an believe that to be a good, moral thing, that is what you will do. Period.

If those things are what physics and chemistry commanded, that is what you would be doing and arguing for today, and there would be absolutely no external standard by which you, let alone anyone else, could judge your behavior and beliefs wrong, nor would you have any objective, top-down access or capacity for making such a judgment even if such a standard existed, let alone change your behavior.

That is the sad dilemma you find yourself in, Aleta, whether you know it or not. Under your paradigm, you and KF and Stephen and Gandhi and Obama and George Wallace and everyone else are just streams of water going wherever physics and chemistry dictates – yet here you are, arguing as if any of us could do anything other than what physics and chemistry commands.

Do you also try to argue rivers out of their course, or try to convince the weather to change?

Comments
Aleta: It is made of fundamental particles that themselves make two distinct elements, sodium and chloride, and when they combine they make salt. The physical world has emergent properties, so just reducing all things back to their basic constituents parts doesn’t adequately account for what things are.
Emergent properties are irrelevant to freedom of choice. Let's say, arguendo, that emergent properties do exist. Emergent properties are fully constrained by lower level physicality — there is no "wiggle room". IOWs emergent properties have no independent existence from a lower level physicality. This means that emergent properties are fully constrained by underlying physicality and are therefore unable to ground freedom of choice. IOWs naturalism does not get to freedom of choice when it inserts a hypothetical non-physical "emergent" layer which is fully constrained by (and dependent on) a fully determined lower level of physicality.Origenes
May 3, 2016
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Andre, how does salt get its properties from the basic particles it is made from? How would you explain how and why salt is very different from its constituent particles?Aleta
May 3, 2016
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If morality is subjective, it becomes nothing more than a personal opinion. Racism, sexism, classism, and even mass murder share the same moral status as love, peace, harmony and goodwill. Disturbing to know that atheists/Darwinists think this way.Truth Will Set You Free
May 3, 2016
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Aleta
There is no set of “objective” moral rules that answers all these questions.
Your statement makes it clear that you do not understand the difference between a general moral principle, which is simple, and a specific moral application, which is often complicated. The purpose of the natural moral law is not to provide ready-made answers to all ethical questions but to provide a general framework of understanding about morality so that humans can make reasoned decisions about specific moral problems. The Natural Moral Law is self-evident in its primitive form, but that doesn't mean that it can be fully understood in the absence of reasoned judgment, which is its essential component. Does the natural moral law, for example, inform you immediately about how to resolve the moral dilemmas involved in war? No. Can reasoned judgment in the context of the NML inform you that a nation that is attacked has the moral right to defend itself? Yes. If objective morality didn't exist, that calculation could not be made. The Natural Moral Law is inseparable from reason. The irrational rejection of one will automatically lead to a rejection of the other. Reasoned judgment, for example, often involves the task of weighing the better of two goods, or the lesser of two evils, or some other calculation. Without the NML there is nothing to weigh because there is no standard to tell us what we should be weighing. In your case, you think that you have proven something against the natural moral law if you can find a difficult moral dilemma. All you have proven is that you privately recognize the validity of the same code that you publically disavow. The very fact that you can recognize a moral dilemma proves that you also recognize the conflict of objectively good and objectively evil circumstances that make it dilemma.StephenB
May 3, 2016
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PaV - I was a teenager in the 60's. FWIWAleta
May 3, 2016
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Right there is the magic word.... emergent.... poofed into existence just like magic! Zachriel of course does not even get it that his own moral arguments is "fraught with problems" Now what on earth is the human condition Zachriel?Andre
May 3, 2016
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PaV: Just pick up a paper from the 1960’s, and compare it to today’s. https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/53/ab/50/53ab50122eecf12933e3ee496cbe17de.jpgZachriel
May 3, 2016
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Origenes: Naturalism holds that there is nothing over and beyond fermions and bosons That is not correct. A naturalist may be an emergentist, someone who thinks that the sum is more than the parts. Origenes: "everything supervenes on the physical." Supervenes is not the same as saying there is nothing above and beyond elementary particles. Emergentism is the obvious counterexample. Wet is a property of moisture that is not a property of the elementary particles that make up water. gpuccio: (i) it even makes sense to say that arguments are capable of determining the behavior of organisms (i.e. human beings); Of course they are. Humans don't always share the same presuppositions, but even when they do, there is still enough subtlety over circumstance that it often leads to disputes over the application of these moral presuppositions. gpuccio: (ii) the arguments we make are themselves determined by our biology and our past history of interacting with our environment; and Abstraction takes on a life of its own. Culture, while a result of evolution, is an emergent phenomenon. gpuccio: (iii) we have good reason to trust our arguments, if they are determined in this way. Human moral arguments are fraught with problems. gpuccio: Zachriel would doubtless answer all three questions in the affirmative. Apparently not. gpuccio: Lacking a physical representation, how could they possibly determine the behavior of human beings? Moral abstractions relate to the human condition.Zachriel
May 3, 2016
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PaV Donald Trump is the perfect personification of our culture IMO. Please all you Trump fans I get it. By saying this I don't mean to denigrate your candidate. Vividvividbleau
May 3, 2016
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Aleta:
Your arguments boil down to “if everything is just physics and chemistry, one doesn’t have any ground for morality.” But, I reply, if there is no God and thus no objective source of morality, and in fact human beings are as I describe them, then your argument is empty.
I propose a simple test. If God exists, then Christianity, as a revealed religion, should assist people to properly interpret the natural law. So, if Christianity should reign in a culture, then we should see within that culture a growth in civility, ethics, education and moral behavior. Likewise, if Christianity should no longer reign in the culture, because more and more people can no longer properly interpret the Law placed in their hearts, then civility, ethics, morality and levels of education should falter. I declare this experiment to have taken place, it's results duly noted, and that these results point to a God-based origin of morality. Just pick up a paper from the 1960's, and compare it to today's. Simple experiment. And most of what you'll see, is really what you don't see in the 60's. [An historical note. When in the late 60's and 70's the demonic left (see Ann Coulter's book on the topic, which points to the "mob" as the hallmark of the Left) began to take over our culture, everyone point out how much more coarse our society had become. The Left, always filled with lies and myths, denied this saying, "Oh, it's no different today, then twenty years ago; the only difference is that now we 'talk about it.'" The Left went on to totally dominate our society, and with this domination, society continued its downward trend (cf. Patrick Moynihan's "defining deviancy downwards," a trend that continues to this day), to the point that the Left no longer made this argument because it was now patently false. So, they continued down their evil paths, refusing to acknowledge the truth, and furthering the unraveling of civilized culture. Aleta, your too young, I suspect, to be aware of this. But do your reading up on history. The mantra of the 60's was: "The bug is beautiful," a patent ubsurdity, since the VW bug in those days was borderline ugly. The mantra today is: "Same-sex marriage is the same as traditional marriage": another patent absurdity.] BTW, children of "same-sex" unions are beginning to talk up, and to raise concerns about what it's like growing up in such a union. But, of course, the fascist Left basically silences them. This means you'll have to look around to find out what's being said. Don't believe the myth the Left wants to spin, and which you've bought into; i.e., children do just as well in same-sex marriages. [BTW, I could "sugar-coat" my remarks about the "Left," but choose not to since we now live in "Donald Trump"-times when, rather than invoking civil discourse, which inevitably leads to the lies of the Left prevailing, we step up to the "politically correct" nonsense that's leading us to Hell. I mean this last statement quite literally. Just think of a world in which Hitler, Pol Pot and Mao TseTung were victorious. That's where we're heading.]PaV
May 3, 2016
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"And I don’t agree with Ivan." Well then that settles the matter and pretty much confirms the points others have made. Aleta disagrees therefore it is wrong. Sweet Vividvividbleau
May 3, 2016
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Aleta Then I ask again what does communication need?Andre
May 3, 2016
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mike, I wrote an answer at 24. We can see, and we're not blind.Aleta
May 3, 2016
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to Origenes: the example we used in another thread is salt. It is made of fundamental particles that themselves make two distinct elements, sodium and chloride, and when they combine they make salt. The physical world has emergent properties, so just reducing all things back to their basic constituents parts doesn't adequately account for what things are.Aleta
May 3, 2016
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FWIW, I am re-reading The Brothers Karamozov right now. Read it in high school and wrote my AP English essay on it. It is being interesting to revisit it. And I don't agree with Ivan.Aleta
May 3, 2016
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I have always asked.... Do chemical reactions concern themselves with truth or do they obey the laws of nature?Andre
May 3, 2016
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The neural circuits in our brain manage the beautifully coordinated and smoothly appropriate behavior of our body. They also produce the entrancing introspective illusion that thoughts really are about stuff in the world. This powerful illusion has been with humanity since language kicked in, as we’ll see. It is the source of at least two other profound myths: that we have purposes that give our actions and lives meaning and that there is a person “in there” steering the body, so to speak. -A.Rosenberg, The Atheist's Guide To Reality, Ch.9
***<<>>*** Dawkins from an October 2006 interview on determinism:
Dawkins:….What I do know is that what it feels like to me, and I think to all of us, we don’t feel determined. We feel like blaming people for what they do or giving people the credit for what they do. We feel like admiring people for what they do. None of us ever actually as a matter of fact says, “Oh well he couldn’t help doing it, he was determined by his molecules.” Maybe we should… I sometimes… Um… You probably remember many of you would have seen Fawlty Towers. The episode where Basil where his car won’t start and he gives it fair warning, counts up to three, and then gets out of the car and picks up a tree branch and thrashes it within an edge of his life. Maybe that’s what we all ought to… Maybe the way we laugh at Basil Fawlty, we ought to laugh in the same way at people who blame humans. I mean when we punish people for doing the most horrible murders, maybe the attitude we should take is “Oh they were just determined by their molecules.” It’s stupid to punish them. What we should do is say “This unit has a faulty motherboard which needs to be replaced.” I can’t bring myself to do that. I actually do respond in an emotional way and I blame people, I give people credit, or I might be more charitable and say this individual who has committed murders or child abuse of whatever it is was really abused in his own childhood. …. Manzari: But do you personally see that as an inconsistency in your views? Dawkins: I sort of do. Yes. But it is an inconsistency that we sort of have to live with otherwise life would be intolerable. But it has nothing to do with my views on religion it is an entirely separate issue.
***<<>>***
“Consider the following propositions, selected from the naturalistic creed or deduced from it: (i.) My beliefs, insofar as they are the result of reasoning at all, are founded on premises produced in the last resort by the collision of atoms. (ii.) Atoms, having no prejudices in favour of truth, are as likely to turn out wrong premises as right ones; nay, more likely, inasmuch as truth is single and error manifold. (iii.) My premises, therefore, in the first place, and my conclusions in the second, are certainly untrustworthy, and probably false. Their falsity, moreover, is of a kind which cannot be remedied; since any attempt to correct it must start from premises not suffering under the same defect. But no such premises exist. (iv.) Therefore, again, my opinion about the original causes which produced my premises, as it is an inference from them, partakes of their weakness; so that I cannot either securely doubt my own certainties or be certain about my own doubts. This is scepticism indeed; scepticism which is forced by its own inner nature to be sceptical even about itself;,,, -Arthur Balfour, The Foundations of Belief
Heartlander
May 3, 2016
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Aleta Again what does communication need?Andre
May 3, 2016
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There’s a famous passage from “The Grand Inquisitor” section of Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov in which Ivan Karamazov claims that if God does not exist, then everything is permitted. If there is no God, then there are no rules to live by, no moral law we must follow; we can do whatever we want. Some philosophers, like Jean-Paul Sartre, have assumed that Ivan is right; without God there is no moral law that tells us what we ought to do. But is Ivan right? http://www.anselmphilosophy.com/read/?p=449 Is Jean-Paul Sartre right?Mung
May 3, 2016
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"Eskimos, and many primitive nomadic people, traditionally have left people behind and alone in the wilderness to die. Is this moral?" It is permitted. "Numerous cultures at times kill girl babies because they are a detriment to the family in some ways that boys aren’t. Is this moral?" It is permitted. "We dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. Was that moral?" It is permitted. "In some cultures, including America in the past, women are/were routinely beaten by their husbands without consequence. Is that moral?" It is permitted. "In some states one can now get assistance in choosing to die under certain circumstances. Is that moral?" It is permitted. "We sometimes execute people for crimes we think they committed, even though there are a significant number of cases where people have been exonerated after years of imprisonment Is that moral?" It is permitted. Vividvividbleau
May 3, 2016
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Notice how Aleta will never answer my simple question? How could people in a world without eyes come to debate sight vs blindness?mike1962
May 3, 2016
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"No one has addressed several of points: What if there is no God and objective morality" Then everything is permitted. "If there is no God everything is permitted" Dostoevsky Vividvividbleau
May 3, 2016
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Aleta: you take a strong reductionistic approach to what that means, and that isn’t a necessary consequence of thinking everything is physical.
Let me see ... everything is physical, but that does not mean that everything is reducible to the physical? You somehow seem to think that one can say that everything is physical without actually saying it. Kindly provide your definition of naturalism.Origenes
May 3, 2016
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Yes, Orignenes, but you take a strong reductionistic approach to what that means, and that isn't a necessary consequence of thinking everything is physical.Aleta
May 3, 2016
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And we have to deal with consciousness! What vjt says implies that language can't influence people, because symbols aren't physical things. But again - again!, if in fact symbolic understanding is embedded in our brain and available to us in various ways, both consciously and sub-consciously, then this idea of there being something non-material about our minds, and our understanding of abstract concepts, is wrong. I'm afraid all of this disagreement is all of a piece: consciousness, free will, morality, rationality, etc., and if we follow all the threads it get's way too big. Probably getting close to over and out for me. When I replied to wjm on the other thread I said I knew I wouldn't convince anyone. This is for a couple of reasons. One is that metaphysical speculations are unverifiable, so those that hold them can hold them indefinitely. and second, this is a site devoted to ID and thus I am an interloper. But I obviously find reasons to continue to comment (I've discussed my motivations before), and I enjoy finding like minds to engage with. But I also find myself spending way too much time on this, and this proliferation of the topic to all of human nature has gotten pretty big. Oh well, we'll see what happens.Aleta
May 3, 2016
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Aleta:
Origenes: Naturalism holds that there is nothing over and beyond fermions and bosons (...)
No “naturalism” doesn’t hold that. You hold that that is what naturalism entails, but that is a strawman of your own making.
Please provide your definition of naturalism. I use the terms naturalism, materialism and physicalism as synonyms. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Physicalism is the thesis that everything is physical, or as contemporary philosophers sometimes put it, that everything supervenes on the physical.Origenes
May 3, 2016
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Aleta and Zachriel contend that human beings' behavior is determined by their heredity and their environment, that human beings have evolved to find certain kinds of anti-social behavior (e.g. needless killing and acts endangering public safety) instinctively repugnant, and that this repugnance is now deeply entrenched and very widely shared, as the vast majority of all human beings in all societies feel this way. They claim that these facts are sufficient to serve as a basis for human morality. But it is an undeniable fact that human beings are swayed by arguments, including moral arguments. (Think of the public debate on global warming, gay marriage or abortion, and of how many people have changed their minds on these issues, on the strength of arguments they have listened to.) So the real question that Aleta and Zachriel need to address is whether: (i) it even makes sense to say that arguments are capable of determining the behavior of organisms (i.e. human beings); (ii) the arguments we make are themselves determined by our biology and our past history of interacting with our environment; and (iii) we have good reason to trust our arguments, if they are determined in this way. Aleta and Zachriel would doubtless answer all three questions in the affirmative. I have a problem with (i) right off: arguments make use of abstract, formal terms such as "true," "valid" and "entails," which are incapable of being represented physically. Lacking a physical representation, how could they possibly determine the behavior of human beings? I have a problem with (ii) as well: evolution selects behaviors, not arguments. Finally, I have a problem with (iii): moral arguments are never conducted on a purely practical level in any human society, as they always involve an appeal to some abstract principle of morality (e.g. the principle that all human beings are equal, or the Precautionary Principle), which most people in that society happen to accept. While natural selection would tend to eliminate races of human beings who were incapable of making valid inferences on practical matters, it fails to guarantee the soundness of our abstract moral norms.vjtorley
May 3, 2016
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Stephen, I want to know what the objective morality that you claim exists says about the Eskimos and the other examples I gave. You are the one that claims an objective morality, so you tell me what the objective moral truth is about those examples.Aleta
May 3, 2016
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No "naturalism" doesn't hold that. You hold that that is what naturalism entails, but that is a strawman of your own making.Aleta
May 3, 2016
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Boy, Aleta really doesn't get it. WJM is going to need to walk him through it even slower.AnimatedDust
May 3, 2016
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