(a) Mostly, I can afford to spend my time researching, and you can’t. Few people

(a) Mostly, I can afford to spend my time researching, and you can’t. Few people can. (b) I follow people and publications in other fields who recommend these things, reducing my labor. (c) Surprisingly there are not that many people worth following – but following them requires you comprehend their discipline sufficiently to extract the meaning from it. (d) I keep a series of google alerts running that find what I miss. (e) I look for papers and especially videos that I think are useful to others becaues they emphasize the points I make in my research. (f) I’m in my 60’s and have been doing this for a very long time, have read voluminously, especially in the philosophy of science and the scientific method, artificial intelligence and computer science, cognitive science, behavioral economics, law and history – the “meaningful” studies. And my work in performative truth and unification of the sciences helps a great deal. In other words, my ‘filter’ is quite good.

That said I keep a rather substantial library of papers and books – and it’s all digital now, so that I can search easily if I can’t recall it. As soon as I have the opportunity to pay for an AWS Service that hostes an LLM’ I’ll upload my work and those papers and books, and train it to speakin in ‘the method’ so that I can, or anyone else can, query it. But we have to finish the first three books at least first. So we have a lot of work ahead of us.

Thanks for asking.

Reply addressees: @zmb_bllbry_mffn @YouTube


Source date (UTC): 2023-09-11 17:22:02 UTC

Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1701284980435910656

Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1701281995886829633

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