Razia

joined 5 days ago
[–] Razia@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

At the risk of being stereotypical, I'm playing Workers and Resources: Soviet Republic. I just recently finished setting up oil industry and rail for exporting fuel, alcohol, and food. The alcohol is only for export and no-one is addicted. I'm determined to achieve self-sufficiency and am working on the steel industry next!

I've also reinstalled Morrowind with a monstrous Vanilla-Extended Mod Pack from the Open Morrowind Modding community and spent last night sleepily clicking my way through 440 mod downloads. I've succeeded, and am now slightly terrified of the monster I've created.

[–] Razia@lemmygrad.ml 7 points 3 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

It's an interesting thing to think about - I would argue that you have a point, but unlike economics, which is by definition social because humans are fundamental to the economy - statistics can be focused on non-human subjects across the natural sciences. But, when statistics is applied to humans and societies e.g. through sample surveys, I would argue that in those situations it is operating as a social science.

I've not delved deeply into the definitions around this, my work is usually in programme evaluation in the development sector, but I'd be interested to look up academic writing around this question.

I'm unfortunately one of those crazy people who is genuinely enthusiastic about the philosophy of science and abstract definitions.

[–] Razia@lemmygrad.ml 11 points 5 days ago (1 children)

It's incredibly self-defeating to desperately want manufacturing to come back to the US, and then punish the Chinese when they do actually go and invest, I love how consistently the US is pulling the rug out from under its own feet these days.