You must be using the wrong repositories... try enabling apt --please-dont-track-me-fbi
can we just stop making pointless cash grab remakes
But we're all out of ideas, and we hate paying creative people a living wage.
give me an xfiles lower decks instead
Hmm, does that work when Mulder and Scully were already like the underdogs of the FBI?
Or would it be like X-Files cleanup crew?
But a proper package manager is better, and we already had that.
If I know my Arthurian legend, this is how the fairy hunt begins. There will be a pack of hounds led by a small white dog.
El Dingerino, if you're not into the whole brevity thing...
Internet user's genius plan to garner more upvotes.
The body is full of reflexes that people attribute to skill.
I'm not sure how this is relevant. So the body is full of reflexes - so what?
If you had free will, you'd be able to will yourself to stop breathing and die but you cannot.
You'll have to justify this conclusion further. I don't agree that an instinct for self-preservation necessarily means that free will is an illusion. Again, my point is that part of "free will" may extend beyond the conscious into the sub- and un-conscious. Therefore, even if "I" unconsciously choose to continue breathing and not die, that is still "I" making that decision, regardless of whether I consciously recognize that decision or not.
The brain has tricked itself
This I certainly acknowledge is a possibility, the mind tends to construct narratives and justifications as a matter of course. However, this again does not preclude the possibility of free will.
That is, just because the mind tricks itself sometimes does not mean that it does so always, and that this accounts for all observed human behavior in all cases.
into believing it is more than it is despite mounting evidence.
If you are going to cite "evidence", please present it.
Hmm, I'm not convinced that this necessarily precludes the possibility of free will. It could just be that "free will" in practice is more complex and more subtle than the conscious recognition of that free will in action.
In your example, "I" decided to move my arm, apparently after the action happened - well the rest of my nervous system, beyond just the conscious decision-making part, is also "I".
I haven't watched the whole video yet, but I used to maintain a projection CRT. Beyond the insane PITA of trying to keep the 3 tubes aligned for more than a day, these things require scary amounts of electricity to operate.
The model I worked on had 40kV input for each CRT, and a disconnected CRT stores a charge like a capacitor, which is a real hazard if you're doing maintenance.
Very few people have actually read the social contract, and fewer still have signed it.
I used to be an adventurer like you...
Kind of true, and kind of a similar type of humor, though I think a true "Lower Decks" spirit would have to feature regular low-level office workers as the main characters, rather than the director/manager types.