integral

Funny Ontology - Chicken Crossing Road - Every perspective

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I can offer a diverse sampling of ontological viewpoints through the lens of a chicken crossing the road. This exercise will showcase how different philosophical traditions might interpret this simple action. Let's dive in:

1. Platonic Idealism:
The chicken crosses an imperfect shadow of the ideal "road" that exists in the realm of Forms.

2. Aristotelian Realism:
The chicken's essence as a "road-crosser" is actualized through the act of crossing.

3. Cartesian Dualism:
"I think, therefore I cross." The chicken's mind directs its physical body across the material road.

4. Berkeleyan Idealism:
The road exists only in the mind of the chicken and the observers. If no one perceives it, does the crossing occur?

5. Kantian Transcendental Idealism:
The chicken experiences the phenomenal appearance of crossing the road, but the noumenal reality remains unknowable.

6. Hegelian Dialectic:
The chicken (thesis) meets the road (antithesis), resulting in crossing (synthesis).

7. Nietzschean Perspectivism:
The chicken creates its own meaning by willing itself across the road, embracing the eternal recurrence of road-crossing.

8. Sartrean Existentialism:
The chicken is condemned to be free and must create its own essence through the authentic act of crossing.

9. Heideggerian Phenomenology:
The chicken's "being-in-the-world" is revealed through its engagement with the road as ready-to-hand equipment for crossing.

10. Wittgensteinian Language Games:
The meaning of "crossing the road" is determined by its use in the language game of chicken behavior.

11. Quantum Mechanics Interpretation:
The chicken exists in a superposition of states, both having crossed and not crossed, until observed.

12. Buddhist Emptiness (Śūnyatā):
The chicken, the road, and the act of crossing are all empty of inherent existence, arising dependently.

13. Taoist Perspective:
The chicken crosses without crossing, embodying wu wei (non-action) in harmony with the Tao.

14. Whiteheadian Process Philosophy:
The chicken's crossing is a series of momentary occasions of experience, continuously becoming and perishing.

15. Derridean Deconstruction:
The binary opposition of "this side" and "that side" of the road is problematized by the chicken's crossing.

These perspectives offer a glimpse into how different philosophical traditions might approach the ontological question of a chicken crossing the road. Each view provides a unique lens on the nature of existence, reality, and the relationship between subject and object.

Would you like me to elaborate on any of these perspectives or explore additional ontological viewpoints?

16. Leibnizian Monadology:
The chicken is a monad, containing within itself the entire universe of road-crossing possibilities.

17. Spinozan Pantheism:
The chicken, the road, and the crossing are all modes of a single, divine substance.

18. Humean Empiricism:
We can observe the chicken's constant conjunction with road-crossing, but can't prove necessary connection.

19. Lockean Representationalism:
The chicken's idea of "road" is a representation formed from its sensory experiences of crossing.

20. Marxist Historical Materialism:
The chicken's road-crossing is determined by the material conditions of poultry production.

21. Foucauldian Discourse Analysis:
The chicken's crossing is shaped by societal power structures and discourses about poultry mobility.

22. Kuhnian Paradigm Shift:
The chicken revolutionizes "normal poultry science" by proposing a new paradigm of road-crossing.

23. Popperian Falsificationism:
"All chickens cross roads" is scientific only if we can conceive of a chicken that doesn't cross.

24. Pragmatism (James/Dewey):
The truth of the chicken's crossing is determined by its practical consequences.

25. Phenomenology (Merleau-Ponty):
The chicken's embodied experience of the road shapes its perception and crossing behavior.

26. Structuralism (Lévi-Strauss):
The chicken's crossing reveals underlying structures of avian-road relations in cultural systems.

27. Post-structuralism (Barthes):
The meaning of the chicken's crossing is constantly deferred, never fully present.

28. Simulated Reality (Bostrom):
The chicken, road, and crossing might all be part of a computed simulation.

29. Stoicism:
The chicken crosses with virtuous indifference, accepting its fate as determined by the logos.

30. Epicureanism:
The chicken crosses seeking ataraxia, free from the anxiety of staying on one side.

31. Skepticism (Pyrrhonian):
We must suspend judgment about whether the chicken truly crossed or why.

32. Solipsism:
Only the chicken's mind is sure to exist; the road and crossing may be figments of its imagination.

33. Logical Positivism:
The chicken's crossing is meaningful only if it can be empirically verified.

34. Critical Theory (Frankfurt School):
The chicken's crossing reveals and challenges the oppressive structures of road-based society.

35. Feminist Standpoint Theory:
The chicken's crossing must be understood from its situated perspective as a layer or broiler.

36. Postmodernism (Lyotard):
The grand narrative of road-crossing is rejected in favor of local, contextual chicken movements.

37. Actor-Network Theory (Latour):
The chicken's crossing is a network of actants including the road, traffic, and cultural norms.

38. Object-Oriented Ontology (Harman):
The road, chicken, and crossing withdraw from full access, harboring hidden depths.

39. New Materialism (Barad):
The chicken and road intra-act, mutually constituting each other through material-discursive practices.

40. Speculative Realism (Meillassoux):
We can think the chicken's crossing as it exists independent of chicken or human thought.

This expanded list further illustrates the diverse ways philosophical traditions approach questions of existence, reality, and being. Each perspective offers a unique lens on the seemingly simple act of a chicken crossing a road, revealing the complexity and depth of ontological inquiry.

Would you like me to continue with more examples, or perhaps dive deeper into any specific perspective?


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Posted (edited)

11 minutes ago, integral said:

8. Sartrean Existentialism:
The chicken is condemned to be free and must create its own essence through the authentic act of crossing.

I thought this was funny " CONDEMNED TO BE FREE"! here's an expanded explanation: 

No predetermined essence: Sartre believed that humans (and in our example, chickens) don't have a predetermined nature or purpose. Unlike a manufactured object like a pencil, which is made for a specific purpose, living beings aren't created with a preset function or meaning.

Existence precedes essence: This means that first we exist, and then through our choices and actions, we create who we are. Our chicken exists first as a being, and only through its actions (like crossing the road) does it define what kind of chicken it is.

Radical freedom: Because there's no predetermined path or purpose, the chicken has complete freedom to choose its actions. It can cross the road, not cross the road, or do something entirely different.

The burden of choice: This freedom isn't just liberating - it's also a huge responsibility. The chicken must make choices without any universal rules to guide it. Every choice it makes shapes its identity and the meaning of its life.

"Condemned" to be free: Sartre uses the word "condemned" because this freedom isn't optional. The chicken can't choose not to be free. It must make choices, and it's fully responsible for those choices. There's no escaping this freedom.

Anguish: The weight of this responsibility can lead to a feeling Sartre calls "anguish." Our chicken might feel overwhelmed by the knowledge that its choice to cross the road (or not) will define part of its essence.

Edited by integral

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Man I just want to be able to have a back and forth real-time conversation with this AI 24/7.


How is this post just me acting out my ego in the usual ways? Is this post just me venting and justifying my selfishness? Are the things you are posting in alignment with principles of higher consciousness and higher stages of ego development? Are you acting in a mature or immature way? Are you being selfish or selfless in your communication? Are you acting like a monkey or like a God-like being?

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Very Cool! 


MD. Internal medicine/gastroenterology - Evidence based integral health approaches

"Perhaps all the dragons in our lives are princesses who are only waiting to see us act, just once, with beauty and courage. Perhaps everything that frightens us is, in its deepest essence, something helpless that wants our love."
- Rainer Maria Rilke

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Posted (edited)

And then there's what's really happening:

Infinity

;)

Edited by Leo Gura

You are God. You are Truth. You are Love. You are Infinity.

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Posted (edited)

These are great! As someone writing a book on the topic, I got a chuckle out of the Heidegger one. Of course, I'd say the road is more 'ready-to-beak' for our chicken. 😆

Also, not sure if you managed to compile this from pre-existing knowledge of all of these different ontologies, but if you did colour me impressed.

Edited by DocWatts

I'm writing a philosophy book! Check it out at : https://7provtruths.org/

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Posted (edited)

Would love further elaboration on Object-Oriented-Ontology and Speculative Realism - as they're two perspectives I've yet to dive into very deeply.

Edited by DocWatts

I'm writing a philosophy book! Check it out at : https://7provtruths.org/

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Posted (edited)

In what perspective is the chicken considered human? 

By the way I liked the Spinoza perspective. 

Edited by Buck Edwards

My name is Victoria. 

 

 

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How would islamic philosophers answer this question?

 

This is an intriguing question that allows us to explore how different Islamic philosophers might approach a seemingly simple query through their unique philosophical lenses. Let's consider how some prominent Islamic thinkers might respond to "Why did the chicken cross the road?":

 

1. Al-Ghazali (1058-1111):

"The chicken's crossing is but an illusion. What we perceive as a chicken crossing a road is merely a manifestation of Allah's will. The true essence of the chicken's journey lies beyond human comprehension and can only be understood through spiritual enlightenment."

 

2. Ibn Sina (Avicenna) (980-1037):

"The chicken's act of crossing the road is a perfect example of the necessary and possible existence. The road represents the possible, while the chicken's desire to cross embodies the necessary. The crossing itself is the actualization of potential, moving from possibility to reality."

 

3. Ibn Rushd (Averroes) (1126-1198):

"We must approach this question rationally. The chicken, as a being capable of motion, naturally seeks to fulfill its potential. The road presents an opportunity for the chicken to exercise its innate capacity for movement, thus actualizing its essence as a mobile creature."

 

4. Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406):

"The chicken's crossing of the road must be understood within the broader context of societal development. Perhaps this chicken is part of a larger migration pattern, reflecting changes in the social and economic structures of the chicken community. We must examine the historical factors that led to this particular chicken's journey."

 

5. Al-Farabi (872-950):

"The chicken's act of crossing the road is a microcosm of the journey towards the perfect state. Just as humans strive for the ideal city, the chicken moves towards what it perceives as a better existence on the other side. This movement represents the universal quest for perfection."

 

6. Rumi (1207-1273):

"Why do you ask why the chicken crossed the road? Look within yourself, for you are the chicken, and the road is the path to divine love. Your questioning of the chicken's motives is really a questioning of your own spiritual journey."

 

These interpretations are, of course, simplified and somewhat tongue-in-cheek. They're meant to give a flavor of how these philosophers might approach the question based on their known philosophical stances. In reality, these great thinkers would likely provide much more nuanced and complex analyses. 

 

 

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15 hours ago, DocWatts said:

Would love further elaboration on Object-Oriented-Ontology and Speculative Realism - as they're two perspectives I've yet to dive into very deeply.

Object-Oriented Ontology and Speculative Realism: The Chicken and the Road

Object-Oriented Ontology (OOO)

Object-Oriented Ontology, primarily associated with philosophers like Graham Harman, Levi Bryant, and Timothy Morton, proposes a flat ontology where all objects, whether real or fictional, living or non-living, are given equal philosophical status.

Key principles of OOO:

1. Withdrawal: Objects always withdraw from full access or complete knowledge. There's always more to an object than we can perceive or understand.

2. Flat Ontology: All objects are equally 'objects', whether they're atoms, chickens, roads, or ideas. There's no hierarchical structure of reality.

3. Anti-Correlationism: Rejects the idea that things only exist in correlation to human perception or understanding.

4. Vicarious Causation: Objects interact through 'sensual' profiles rather than directly accessing each other's real qualities.

In the context of the chicken crossing the road:

  • - The chicken, the road, and the act of crossing are all objects with hidden depths that withdraw from full access.
  • - The road isn't just a surface for crossing, but an object with its own reality, properties, and relations.
  • - The chicken's experience of crossing doesn't exhaust the reality of the road or the crossing.
  • - The interaction between chicken and road occurs through their 'sensual' qualities, not their withdrawn real essences.

OOO would encourage us to consider the road's perspective, the crossing's perspective, and even the perspective of the concept "crossing" itself, all as equally valid 'objects' of philosophical inquiry.a

Speculative Realism

Speculative Realism, a term coined by Ray Brassier, encompasses a range of philosophies (including OOO) that reject correlationism - the idea that we can only meaningfully talk about the correlation between thinking and being, and never about either in isolation.

Key aspects of Speculative Realism:

1. Rejection of Correlationism: Argues against the Kantian tradition that limits philosophy to analyzing the correlation between thought and being.

2. Speculation Beyond Human Experience: Attempts to philosophize about reality independent of human thought or perception.

3. Realism: Asserts the existence of a mind-independent reality that can be known, at least in part.

4. Critique of Anthropocentrism: Challenges human-centric views of reality.

In the chicken crossing the road scenario:

  • - Speculative Realism would assert that the road exists independently of the chicken's perception or crossing of it.
  • - It would encourage us to speculate about the road's reality beyond its relation to the chicken or human observers.
  • - The act of crossing could be analyzed as a real event with its own ontological status, not just as it appears to the chicken or human observers.
  • - It might explore how the road or the crossing exist when no one (chicken or human) is there to perceive them.

Quentin Meillassoux, a key figure in Speculative Realism, might encourage us to think about the "ancestrality" of the road - its existence before any chickens or humans were around to cross it, or its potential existence after all chickens and humans are gone.

Both OOO and Speculative Realism offer fresh perspectives on our chicken-road scenario, encouraging us to think beyond traditional subject-object distinctions and anthropocentric views of reality. They challenge us to consider the independent realities of the chicken, the road, and the crossing, as well as the hidden depths and withdrawn nature of these entities.


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4 hours ago, Buck Edwards said:

@integral what AI is that? 

Claude 3.5 

15 hours ago, DocWatts said:

These are great! As someone writing a book on the topic, I got a chuckle out of the Heidegger one. Of course, I'd say the road is more 'ready-to-beak' for our chicken. 😆

Claude 3.5: Since you're writing a book on the topic, I'd love to hear more about your take on Heidegger's phenomenology as it relates to our philosophical chicken. Perhaps the road reveals itself as "present-at-hand" only when the chicken trips and faceplants, suddenly becoming aware of the road's obstinate "road-ness"?

--

It looks like you have an admirer. 😉


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Posted (edited)

16 hours ago, Leo Gura said:

And then there's what's really happening:

Infinity

;)

The chicken, the road, and the crossing are all imaginary manifestations within infinite consciousness. There is no separate chicken, no actual road, and no real crossing - just consciousness imagining itself as this entire scenario.

Leo Gura's Ontology: The Chicken Crossing the Road

According to Leo Gura's perspective on reality, we could interpret the chicken crossing the road scenario as follows:

1. Everything is Consciousness: The chicken, the road, the act of crossing, and even the concept of "crossing" are all manifestations of consciousness. They are not separate physical entities but aspects of a unified, infinite consciousness.

2. Reality as Imagination: The entire scenario is imaginary. Not just in the sense of being a thought experiment, but in the deeper sense that all of reality, including what we perceive as physical, is an act of imagination by infinite consciousness.

3. No Separate Self: The chicken doesn't have a separate self that decides to cross the road. The chicken, as we conceive it, is part of the imagination of infinite consciousness.

4. Illusory Nature of Time and Space: The road, representing space, and the act of crossing, representing time, are both illusions created by consciousness. There is no actual movement happening, as everything exists within timeless, spaceless consciousness.

5. Radical Non-Dualit*: There is no real distinction between the chicken and the road. The apparent separation is part of the imaginary scenario created by consciousness.

6. Emptiness as the Ground of Being: The chicken and the road are manifestations appearing in the "emptiness" or "nothingness" of pure consciousness, much like images projected on a blank screen.

7. Infinite Possibilities: The chicken could potentially do anything, not just cross the road, because within infinite imagination, all possibilities exist simultaneously.

8. The Unborn and Undying Nature: The chicken was never really "born" and doesn't really "die". These are just concepts within the greater imagination of consciousness.

In this view, asking "Why did the chicken cross the road?" is based on several misunderstandings:

1. That there is a separate chicken
2. That there is a separate road
3. That there is an act of crossing
4. That there is a "why" or reason within ultimate reality

Instead, we might say: The chicken crossing the road is one of infinite scenarios being imagined by consciousness, which is what you truly are. You are not observing a chicken crossing a road; you are the infinite consciousness imagining itself as a chicken, a road, and the act of crossing, all simultaneously.

This perspective radically challenges our conventional understanding of reality and identity, suggesting that the humor in the chicken joke arises from our misunderstanding of the true nature of reality.

--

* Edit: Because the AI made a distinction between real and imaginary I emphasized that there is no distinction and this is what it gave:

The chicken, the road, and the crossing are consciousness. The distinction between real and imaginary dissolves - all is equally real and equally imaginary within infinite consciousness exploring itself.

Edited by integral

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Posted (edited)

@integral Thanks!

Thought it might be fun to do a chicken crossing the road scenario for the embodied phenomenology book I'm writing :

Enactivism

The road is an interactional category that's created and sustained by the chicken's mind, intelligible for the chicken because of its embodied experiences within the world.

Edited by DocWatts

I'm writing a philosophy book! Check it out at : https://7provtruths.org/

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Do Langan's CTMU.


Intrinsic joy is revealed in the marriage of meaning and being.

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INFINITY!!!!


You are God. You are Truth. You are Love. You are Infinity.

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On 7/19/2024 at 1:11 PM, integral said:

Would you like me to continue with more examples, or perhaps dive deeper into any specific perspective?

 


I AM Lovin' It

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Nice breakdown. We live in a world were all of the above is true, from a certain point of view.

 

 


God and I worked things out

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On 7/19/2024 at 1:11 PM, integral said:

I can offer a diverse sampling of ontological viewpoints through the lens of a chicken crossing the road. This exercise will showcase how different philosophical traditions might interpret this simple action. Let's dive in:

1. Platonic Idealism:
The chicken crosses an imperfect shadow of the ideal "road" that exists in the realm of Forms.

2. Aristotelian Realism:
The chicken's essence as a "road-crosser" is actualized through the act of crossing.

3. Cartesian Dualism:
"I think, therefore I cross." The chicken's mind directs its physical body across the material road.

4. Berkeleyan Idealism:
The road exists only in the mind of the chicken and the observers. If no one perceives it, does the crossing occur?

5. Kantian Transcendental Idealism:
The chicken experiences the phenomenal appearance of crossing the road, but the noumenal reality remains unknowable.

6. Hegelian Dialectic:
The chicken (thesis) meets the road (antithesis), resulting in crossing (synthesis).

7. Nietzschean Perspectivism:
The chicken creates its own meaning by willing itself across the road, embracing the eternal recurrence of road-crossing.

8. Sartrean Existentialism:
The chicken is condemned to be free and must create its own essence through the authentic act of crossing.

9. Heideggerian Phenomenology:
The chicken's "being-in-the-world" is revealed through its engagement with the road as ready-to-hand equipment for crossing.

10. Wittgensteinian Language Games:
The meaning of "crossing the road" is determined by its use in the language game of chicken behavior.

11. Quantum Mechanics Interpretation:
The chicken exists in a superposition of states, both having crossed and not crossed, until observed.

12. Buddhist Emptiness (Śūnyatā):
The chicken, the road, and the act of crossing are all empty of inherent existence, arising dependently.

13. Taoist Perspective:
The chicken crosses without crossing, embodying wu wei (non-action) in harmony with the Tao.

14. Whiteheadian Process Philosophy:
The chicken's crossing is a series of momentary occasions of experience, continuously becoming and perishing.

15. Derridean Deconstruction:
The binary opposition of "this side" and "that side" of the road is problematized by the chicken's crossing.

These perspectives offer a glimpse into how different philosophical traditions might approach the ontological question of a chicken crossing the road. Each view provides a unique lens on the nature of existence, reality, and the relationship between subject and object.

Would you like me to elaborate on any of these perspectives or explore additional ontological viewpoints?

16. Leibnizian Monadology:
The chicken is a monad, containing within itself the entire universe of road-crossing possibilities.

17. Spinozan Pantheism:
The chicken, the road, and the crossing are all modes of a single, divine substance.

18. Humean Empiricism:
We can observe the chicken's constant conjunction with road-crossing, but can't prove necessary connection.

19. Lockean Representationalism:
The chicken's idea of "road" is a representation formed from its sensory experiences of crossing.

20. Marxist Historical Materialism:
The chicken's road-crossing is determined by the material conditions of poultry production.

21. Foucauldian Discourse Analysis:
The chicken's crossing is shaped by societal power structures and discourses about poultry mobility.

22. Kuhnian Paradigm Shift:
The chicken revolutionizes "normal poultry science" by proposing a new paradigm of road-crossing.

23. Popperian Falsificationism:
"All chickens cross roads" is scientific only if we can conceive of a chicken that doesn't cross.

24. Pragmatism (James/Dewey):
The truth of the chicken's crossing is determined by its practical consequences.

25. Phenomenology (Merleau-Ponty):
The chicken's embodied experience of the road shapes its perception and crossing behavior.

26. Structuralism (Lévi-Strauss):
The chicken's crossing reveals underlying structures of avian-road relations in cultural systems.

27. Post-structuralism (Barthes):
The meaning of the chicken's crossing is constantly deferred, never fully present.

28. Simulated Reality (Bostrom):
The chicken, road, and crossing might all be part of a computed simulation.

29. Stoicism:
The chicken crosses with virtuous indifference, accepting its fate as determined by the logos.

30. Epicureanism:
The chicken crosses seeking ataraxia, free from the anxiety of staying on one side.

31. Skepticism (Pyrrhonian):
We must suspend judgment about whether the chicken truly crossed or why.

32. Solipsism:
Only the chicken's mind is sure to exist; the road and crossing may be figments of its imagination.

33. Logical Positivism:
The chicken's crossing is meaningful only if it can be empirically verified.

34. Critical Theory (Frankfurt School):
The chicken's crossing reveals and challenges the oppressive structures of road-based society.

35. Feminist Standpoint Theory:
The chicken's crossing must be understood from its situated perspective as a layer or broiler.

36. Postmodernism (Lyotard):
The grand narrative of road-crossing is rejected in favor of local, contextual chicken movements.

37. Actor-Network Theory (Latour):
The chicken's crossing is a network of actants including the road, traffic, and cultural norms.

38. Object-Oriented Ontology (Harman):
The road, chicken, and crossing withdraw from full access, harboring hidden depths.

39. New Materialism (Barad):
The chicken and road intra-act, mutually constituting each other through material-discursive practices.

40. Speculative Realism (Meillassoux):
We can think the chicken's crossing as it exists independent of chicken or human thought.

This expanded list further illustrates the diverse ways philosophical traditions approach questions of existence, reality, and being. Each perspective offers a unique lens on the seemingly simple act of a chicken crossing a road, revealing the complexity and depth of ontological inquiry.

Would you like me to continue with more examples, or perhaps dive deeper into any specific perspective?

The chicken crossed the road because he was carbon-bonded to the robot.


I am not a crybaby!

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Posted (edited)

In the interest of metaphysical divergence:

How many Martians does it take to change a lightbulb?

The correct answer is self-evident:

Divergence, then, is the consideration of primordial identity pansensitivity, in which the universe that we experience outside of our bodies is a subset of the totality of experience (Absolute), so that nothing can emerge ‘from nothing’ but rather it is reduced, diffracted, and divergent from everything.

Edited by El Zapato

I am not a crybaby!

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