Author: Curt Doolittle

  • Q&A: “Curt, What Do You Think of The Alt Right Authors?”

    —“I know that myself and others would be interested to read what you have to say about some big names on the alt right. I am assuming you are familiar with the work of the following: Jonathan Bowden, Guilliame Faye, Julius Evola, Alain DeBenoist.”—

    [C]hris, (all) Great Question Chris. We can communicate using different technologies. Some of these technologies are nonsense, some are meaningful, some are preferable or not, and some are decidable or not. I work with the DECIDABLE. As such while there might be justification and wisdom in literary authors they do not produce social science that can be expressed as decidable law in matters of dispute between people of different interests. The answer is that I consider all conservative work outside of law to be literary justification and perhaps intergenerational wisdom, but it’s not science or ‘true’ in the scientific sense, so I cannot use it. Part of this problem is caused by the concept of monopoly that has been with us since our days as tribal hunter gatherers. It was hard to teach people to use markets – humans thought they might be immoral, and some groups still do. It is just as hard to teach people market government rather than monopoly government. And these authors generally hold to monopoly thought. So they are of little or no use to me. Why? ‘Cause I know a lot of history. I don’t need it put into a moral narrative for me. Does that mean I wouldn’t recommend them? Not at all. The way to learn any subject is to find a Cliff Notes or Spark Notes version of the subject so that you can learn by association with what experiences you possess. I tell mothers and teachers that the best way to introduce a subject is through a children’s story or myth or fairy tale, then a biography, then a history, then SCIENCE. We need a path from our extant knowledge based upon experience, and new knowledge based upon layers of analogy to experience. These authors provide an intuitionistic and experiential framing of the world which we can then use to recognize that a scientific statement provides explanatory power. So these authors are a gateway for most people. (although not me sorry to say). I see the history of conservative and libertarian thought as an attempt at rational restatement of religious and cultural history, because they failed to discover the science behind their cultural and institutional evolution. Since we have that science, now, and science has emerged as the universal language of attempted truth speaking, then I prefer to work with the science, rather than be distracted by what I consider largely literary justification mixed with fancy – even if there is truth there. But that doesn’t mean there is no value in pedagogical evolution. There is. I just don’t consider it subject for debate or discussion because it’s not debatable, because it’s not scientific – it’s merely illustrative. And for the purpose of pedagogy illustration may be necessary prior to learning the science. (As for Bowden he didn’t write anything that I would consider meaningful. My interest in him is novel curiosity: why did he have his nervous breakdown? Why do so many deep thinkers have them? Does it place unnatural stress on the mind and body to continually engage in interpreting reality by some model or other? A ‘model’ is a bit of an obscurant non-operational term. But it means that we have produced a set of general rules from construction of properties, categories, relations, commensurability, decidability and explanatory power. We might call such a model ‘a frame’ depending upon its level of completeness. ) I hope this helps. Curt Doolittle The Philosophy of Aristocracy The Propertarian Institute Kiev,

  • Q&A: “Curt, What Do You Think of The Alt Right Authors?”

    —“I know that myself and others would be interested to read what you have to say about some big names on the alt right. I am assuming you are familiar with the work of the following: Jonathan Bowden, Guilliame Faye, Julius Evola, Alain DeBenoist.”—

    [C]hris, (all) Great Question Chris. We can communicate using different technologies. Some of these technologies are nonsense, some are meaningful, some are preferable or not, and some are decidable or not. I work with the DECIDABLE. As such while there might be justification and wisdom in literary authors they do not produce social science that can be expressed as decidable law in matters of dispute between people of different interests. The answer is that I consider all conservative work outside of law to be literary justification and perhaps intergenerational wisdom, but it’s not science or ‘true’ in the scientific sense, so I cannot use it. Part of this problem is caused by the concept of monopoly that has been with us since our days as tribal hunter gatherers. It was hard to teach people to use markets – humans thought they might be immoral, and some groups still do. It is just as hard to teach people market government rather than monopoly government. And these authors generally hold to monopoly thought. So they are of little or no use to me. Why? ‘Cause I know a lot of history. I don’t need it put into a moral narrative for me. Does that mean I wouldn’t recommend them? Not at all. The way to learn any subject is to find a Cliff Notes or Spark Notes version of the subject so that you can learn by association with what experiences you possess. I tell mothers and teachers that the best way to introduce a subject is through a children’s story or myth or fairy tale, then a biography, then a history, then SCIENCE. We need a path from our extant knowledge based upon experience, and new knowledge based upon layers of analogy to experience. These authors provide an intuitionistic and experiential framing of the world which we can then use to recognize that a scientific statement provides explanatory power. So these authors are a gateway for most people. (although not me sorry to say). I see the history of conservative and libertarian thought as an attempt at rational restatement of religious and cultural history, because they failed to discover the science behind their cultural and institutional evolution. Since we have that science, now, and science has emerged as the universal language of attempted truth speaking, then I prefer to work with the science, rather than be distracted by what I consider largely literary justification mixed with fancy – even if there is truth there. But that doesn’t mean there is no value in pedagogical evolution. There is. I just don’t consider it subject for debate or discussion because it’s not debatable, because it’s not scientific – it’s merely illustrative. And for the purpose of pedagogy illustration may be necessary prior to learning the science. (As for Bowden he didn’t write anything that I would consider meaningful. My interest in him is novel curiosity: why did he have his nervous breakdown? Why do so many deep thinkers have them? Does it place unnatural stress on the mind and body to continually engage in interpreting reality by some model or other? A ‘model’ is a bit of an obscurant non-operational term. But it means that we have produced a set of general rules from construction of properties, categories, relations, commensurability, decidability and explanatory power. We might call such a model ‘a frame’ depending upon its level of completeness. ) I hope this helps. Curt Doolittle The Philosophy of Aristocracy The Propertarian Institute Kiev,

  • I thought that you in particular would appreciate this!

    I thought that you in particular would appreciate this!


    Source date (UTC): 2015-12-23 16:20:00 UTC

  • #AltRight #Conservative #libertarian

    http://twitter.com/curtdoolittle/status/679765114267025412/photo/1?utm_source=fb&utm_medium=fb&utm_campaign=curtdoolittle&utm_content=679765114267025412#NRx #AltRight #Conservative #libertarian https://t.co/NqVOJN4ZXA


    Source date (UTC): 2015-12-23 15:46:00 UTC

  • Women aren’t victims of overpaying for beauty products. The marketers who do the

    Women aren’t victims of overpaying for beauty products. The marketers who do the research are largely women.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-12-23 14:45:04 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/679674086063210496

    Reply addressees: @voxdotcom

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/679672826501197824


    IN REPLY TO:

    @voxdotcom

    The hidden tax women pay on just about everything https://t.co/EpGDCVGJ6K https://t.co/RlZdjGJpMH

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/679672826501197824

  • Marketing Data: women buy things simply because they’re more expensive, and men

    Marketing Data: women buy things simply because they’re more expensive, and men buy things simply because they’re cheaper.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-12-23 14:44:16 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/679673883126030337

    Reply addressees: @voxdotcom

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/679672826501197824


    IN REPLY TO:

    @voxdotcom

    The hidden tax women pay on just about everything https://t.co/EpGDCVGJ6K https://t.co/RlZdjGJpMH

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/679672826501197824

  • Untitled

    http://www.examiner.com/article/of-10-highest-iq-s-on-earth-at-least-8-are-theists-at-least-6-are-christians?CID=examiner_alerts_article


    Source date (UTC): 2015-12-23 11:35:00 UTC

  • Why Do We Treat Das Kapital and The Communist Manifesto any differently than we

    Why Do We Treat Das Kapital and The Communist Manifesto any differently than we treat Mein Kampf? I mean, communism did far more damage to the world than the Nazis ever dreamed of. Yet nobody talks about banning those books? I’ve read them all and if you know a little economics there isn’t much to either of them. One is a sentimental journey, the other is pseudoscience.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-12-23 10:28:00 UTC

  • SPEAKING OF BOWDEN Bowden had a nervous breakdown (which is the outcome of stres

    SPEAKING OF BOWDEN

    Bowden had a nervous breakdown (which is the outcome of stress and depression). Your brain basically gives up trying to solve whatever problem is bothering you and just disassociates from reality in order to save itself. Which is kinda cool when you think about it: Sort of the human version of a computer crashing and rebooting.

    —“Mental breakdown (also known as a nervous breakdown) is a general term for an acute, time-limited psychiatric disorder that manifests primarily as severe stress-induced depression, anxiety, or dissociation in a previously functional individual, to the extent that they are no longer able to function on a day-to-day basis until the disorder is resolved. A nervous breakdown is defined by its temporary nature, and often closely tied to psychological burnout, severe overwork, sleep deprivation, and similar stressors, which may combine to temporarily overwhelm an individual with otherwise sound mental functions.”—

    I had a roommate have a breakdown in College – I think due to a relationship failure. I’m not sure. Also possibly due to rather egregious consumption of alcohol and LSD. I mean, i watched him eat three SHEETS of blotter acid at a club in Westchester. Obviously I immediately found another way home… lol We didn’t see him for at least three days I think. (I am not into drugs.)

    I try to relate to the experience. I developed terrible panic attacks in my mid 20’s and it took a long time to figure out that it was caused by sleep deprivation from sleep apnea created by my food allergies. (I still have to be careful about allergens keeping me awake all night.) And I was very scared that something was seriously wrong with me at the time, and that affected my behavior significantly.

    There was this ridiculous desire of the psychological profession to attribute it to my abusive childhood. Which I had overcome largely by the time I was in college, and certainly by my mid twenties. But it turned out that I was sucking on adrenaline all night to stay in a state of half-sleep but never really resting. (I sleep with a plastic bite guard type thing that eliminates the problem assuming my weight doesn’t get out of hand.) And you know, sleep deprivation sucks. It causes visual and auditory interference. (It didn’t help that I was working like crazy). You can’t think straight at all, and out of nowhere you go from feeling ok, to tragically exhausted in an instant.

    So I can understand what it’s probably like for your entire mind and body to lose it for a bit. I know the feeling of wanting a vacation because my autistic OCD sort of does that to me regularly.

    Anyway, my roommate called me from the hospital having obviously mostly recovered already. “Curt, these people are crazier than I am! They keep asking me if I think I’m Jesus Christ! Please get me out of here!” His parents had sent him in after he was no longer being logical (although I didn’t think he was illogical – he was talking about harmonies on violins, so he must have been acting out of character during the conversation – a behavior which I had seen start to develop despite having moved out and in with my girlfriend by then.)

    I actually felt closer to ‘crazy’ when I got the cancer diagnosis. I just fell into depression and confusion for a long time. Everyone I know does to some degree. But we soldier onward. 🙂

    Anyway, my tragedies in life, other than my divorce, are all largely health related. In my view, I seem to accumulate trauma with each tragic event, and it adds some kind of mental weight that you have to drag around like Marley’s chains. But on the other hand each tragedy has given me CLARITY as to what is more important in life. And while I wish I learned that lesson without the tragedy and trauma, I am still happy to learn what is important in life:

    Friends, Family, Something Interesting To Do, A safe place to do what you want, and the Health and Resources to afford them.

    What isn’t important in life, is things. Which was hard for me to ‘get’. Signals being powerful influences upon us.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-12-23 05:36:00 UTC

  • Q&A: “WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE ALT RIGHT AUTHORS?” —“I know that myself and ot

    Q&A: “WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE ALT RIGHT AUTHORS?”

    —“I know that myself and others would be interested to read what you have to say about some big names on the alt right. I am assuming you are familiar with the work of the following: Jonathan Bowden, Guilliame Faye, Julius Evola, Alain DeBenoist.”—

    Chris, (all)

    Great Question Chris.

    We can communicate using different technologies. Some of these technologies are nonsense, some are meaningful, some are preferable or not, and some are decidable or not. I work with the DECIDABLE. As such while there might be justification and wisdom in literary authors they do not produce social science that can be expressed as decidable law in matters of dispute between people of different interests.

    The answer is that I consider all conservative work outside of law to be literary justification and perhaps intergenerational wisdom, but it’s not science or ‘true’ in the scientific sense, so I cannot use it.

    Part of this problem is caused by the concept of monopoly that has been with us since our days as tribal hunter gatherers. It was hard to teach people to use markets – humans thought they might be immoral, and some groups still do. It is just as hard to teach people market government rather than monopoly government.

    And these authors generally hold to monopoly thought. So they are of little or no use to me. Why? ‘Cause I know a lot of history. I don’t need it put into a moral narrative for me.

    Does that mean I wouldn’t recommend them? Not at all.

    The way to learn any subject is to find a Cliff Notes or Spark Notes version of the subject so that you can learn by association with what experiences you possess. I tell mothers and teachers that the best way to introduce a subject is through a children’s story or myth or fairy tale, then a biography, then a history, then SCIENCE. We need a path from our extant knowledge based upon experience, and new knowledge based upon layers of analogy to experience.

    These authors provide an intuitionistic and experiential framing of the world which we can then use to recognize that a scientific statement provides explanatory power. So these authors are a gateway for most people. (although not me sorry to say).

    I see the history of conservative and libertarian thought as an attempt at rational restatement of religious and cultural history, because they failed to discover the science behind their cultural and institutional evolution.

    Since we have that science, now, and science has emerged as the universal language of attempted truth speaking, then I prefer to work with the science, rather than be distracted by what I consider largely literary justification mixed with fancy – even if there is truth there.

    But that doesn’t mean there is no value in pedagogical evolution. There is. I just don’t consider it subject for debate or discussion because it’s not debatable, because it’s not scientific – it’s merely illustrative. And for the purpose of pedagogy illustration may be necessary prior to learning the science.

    (As for Bowden he didn’t write anything that I would consider meaningful. My interest in him is novel curiosity: why did he have his nervous breakdown? Why do so many deep thinkers have them? Does it place unnatural stress on the mind and body to continually engage in interpeting reality by some model or other? A ‘model’ is a bit of an obscurant non-ooperational term. But it means that we have produced a set of general rules from construction of properties, categories, relations, commensurability, decidability and explanatory power. We might call such a model ‘a frame’ depending upon its level of completeness. )

    I hope this helps.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Philosophy of Aristocracy

    The Propertarian Institute

    Kiev,


    Source date (UTC): 2015-12-23 05:07:00 UTC