--- Chris Doss <lookoverhere1 at yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> I don't think anybody asserted that they did it
> _because_ they were stoned. The drugs supposedly are
> used to facilitate the act.
Perhaps on another drug this might be true; however, if I wanted to have someone do violence, the last thing I would do is to give them "E". On "E" one is more likely to embrace the enemy than kill them.
I dont see how "E" could be used to faciliate such an act. Anyone familiar with the drug would know such an assertion is preposterous. -Thomas
===== The real world gives the subset of what is; the product space represents the uncertainty of the observer. The product space may therefore change if the observer changes; and two observers may legitimately use different product spaces within which to record the same subset of actual events in some actual thing. The "constraint" is thus a relation between observer and thing; the properties of any particular constraint will depend on both the real thing and on the observer. It follows that a substantial part of the theory of organization will be concerned with properties that are not intrinsice to the thing but are relational between observer and thing.
W. Ross Ashby
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