Author: Curt Doolittle

  • Choice Words: Recent Quotes

    [Q]uotes —“In practice it appears that choosing secular multiculturalism amounts to choosing fundamentalist Islam.”— Eli Harman —“A force applied to the end of a lever has many times the lifting power of the same force applied near the fulcrum. Generalizing, the same degree of change in a root cause brings many more consequences than the same degree of change in a derivative.”— Michael Philip —“You can very much ignore the truth, but it will lead to disastrous consequences, because your perception of the truth has no bearing on the actual truth.”— Tristan Powers (imperfect language but it does the job. smile emoticon – cd) —“The truth can hurt or tickle, it can be bitter or sweet, it can draw thunderous applause or furious rebuke. But it can’t be ignored.”— Shaun Moss —“Both the US as status quo Power and US as revolutionary Power tend to encourage history-fails. A status quo Power has a tendency to live in an eternal now. A revolutionary Power has a tendency to fixate on its own framing of social patterns and desirable outcomes. Add to that American exceptionalism, and you have a recipe for serial history-fails. As has been particularly obvious in US interventions in the Middle East.”—michael phillip —“The US is at once both a revolutionary and a status quo Power. It is a revolutionary Power in the straightforward sense that it is the only contemporary state seriously trying to export its revolution, apart from the Islamic Republic of Iran. It is also a revolutionary Power in a somewhat more subtle sense, in that it produces so much of the technology that continues to transform the world. Which puts the US in a similar situation during its Pax Americana, as Britain during the Pax Britannica: being the premier source of transforming technology while trying to foster international stability. But the US is also a status quo Power, in that the current arrangement of world affairs suits its interests–as the major economic, financial, trading and military Power. It tends to act as the central manager of the international system–its performance as such is very much affected by its own interests, because that’s what Powers do. But precisely because the US has a bigger stake in international stability than any other polity, it tends to be more active in trying to maintain that stability.”— Michael Phillip —“Thought experiments have done yeoman’s work in philosophy ever since the tale of the ring of Gyges in Plato’s Republic. There clearly is a place for them in testing our moral intuitions, yet they have been taken too far down the trolley track in contemporary ethical theory. At issue here is modality: the meaning of the possible for making sense of ethical life. Let me suggest two modes of the possible. One is the merely conceivable, which involves science fiction elements or extraordinarily rare circumstances, things that are not logically impossible or outright violations of the laws of nature. The other mode is the genuinely plausible, scenarios that are either actually possible (because they have happened) or feasible given a reasonable construal of existing realities. I would like to narrow the use of hypothetical to the latter set of plausible cases and coin a new term, hyperthetical, for the merely conceivable.”— Michael Philip Excellent reframing. I would suggest you take my approach of a minimum three points to make an argumentative line, and follow your own sentence structure: 1-Conceivable, 2-Plausible, and 3-Feasible. (I am going to steal it. thanks. ) “—Early in Mein Kampf Adolf Hitler writes that a man under 30 must not – or, ought not to – involve himself in politics. I cannot say that I disagree (although at 17 years the idea seemed rather dated and ageist). Those who deem themselves fit to rule must not only master the great contemporary debates of their time but must have a deep understanding of the conflicting political hagiographies, wedge points and sacred cows.”— Ayelam Valentine Agaliba.

  • The other thing I want to address in the stickiness of prices, is that all that

    The other thing I want to address in the stickiness of prices, is that all that happens when prices increase is that it attracts lots of additional rent seekers within the organization and without. Most people wait for opportunity to demand more and wait for a moment of good fortune to demand it, lest their refusal be considered immoral. Yet when prices reverse they display moral indignation that the previous increase in a time of exception has now become the new minimum that they tolerate.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-11-15 14:35:00 UTC

  • Um. Here. I’ll help you: You MAJOR in something EMPIRICAL because that’s the dem

    Um. Here. I’ll help you: You MAJOR in something EMPIRICAL because that’s the demarcation between repeating high school and paying for university. You Minor in philosophy so that you remain skeptical of man and his empiricism – including yourself. And you take classes in things you might wanna do.

    Not the other way ’round. Ever.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-11-15 13:30:00 UTC

  • going to translate “well it depends” into scientific language many Austrians are

    http://wpo.st/–Zn0I’m going to translate “well it depends” into scientific language many Austrians are familiar with: We can identify economic laws, but only at a level of arbitrary precision insufficient for subsequent prediction. The reason being that while in the aggregate, such laws are visible in data we collect, the problem remains that there exist no constant relations in economics since each event in economics is a unique representation of a set of complex conditions forever invisible to us due to immeasurable causal density.

    Rather than say all that, we just say ‘well it depends’.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-11-15 13:24:00 UTC

  • Curt Doolittle shared a post

    Curt Doolittle shared a post.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-11-15 13:10:00 UTC

  • TEST IF YOU’RE A GENTLEMAN? I do not rescue spiders – living in Seattle broke th

    TEST IF YOU’RE A GENTLEMAN?

    I do not rescue spiders – living in Seattle broke that habit. I will very infrequently dry my hair when in hurry, needs cutting, or if it’s cold. And I will compliment a woman’s performance to my closest friends even if it isn’t true – it ends inquiry in advance. Otherwise the list has nothing objectionable.

    ( BTW: Besides sailing a boat and riding a horse, I can also sew and tailor in a pinch, change a tire, fire any gun, bandage a wound, write a contract, and give a bit of money to the little old babushka’s on the street. The list isn’t long enough. 😉 )

    http://www.countrylife.co.uk/features/the-39-steps-to-being-a-gentleman-78780


    Source date (UTC): 2015-11-15 12:52:00 UTC

  • WHY ARE PRICES STICKY? 1) Any change that forces reordering of the PSST (network

    WHY ARE PRICES STICKY?

    1) Any change that forces reordering of the PSST (network of production) is a transaction cost that all seek to avoid, and avoid more so when risk increase from declining price pressure. People hold out. The entire chain gets more efficient. And they only switch when it’s no longer possible. This is just what people do. Particularly if relationships are involved. The more complex the relations the worse it is.

    2) The individual who lives with little savings and high cashflow demands interprets changing jobs as the highest transaction cost other than divorce or devastating illness.

    3) An entire organization can come apart if you reduce pay, because it affects the entire network of responsibilities of each person.

    4) As the marginal value of talent has increased, and the marginal value of fixed capital has decreased, the influence of shocks on talent places higher risk to the organization- people are very difficult to replace but the best are the first to leave.

    5) Net is that the side effect of little savings and higher consumption at high velocity, is stickier everything and worse adjustment to shocks.

    Here in the ‘less advantaged world’ it’s not a problem. Oversupply of labor. Everyone is overqualified for everything. Lack of credit keeps everyone poor. Lack of credit because the government cannot be trusted not to appropriate anything and everything.

    -Curt


    Source date (UTC): 2015-11-15 12:32:00 UTC

  • Not sure I care about men who click. I care about those who will fight, and more

    Not sure I care about men who click. I care about those who will fight, and more about those who will kill. Selling excuses to the effeminate for clicks equates attention with action. It’s meaningless. If you wont fight and kill you’re a free rider. It’s that simple.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-11-15 11:53:00 UTC

  • TRANSITIONS IN THE WORKPLACE (worth repeating) 1700’s-1800’s, imitation of the m

    TRANSITIONS IN THE WORKPLACE

    (worth repeating)

    1700’s-1800’s, imitation of the military order in business (command and control) driven by british men doing service, getting some money, and going into business in the colonies.

    1920-1980 the bureaucratic order of management via socialism, as the family is replaced by professional management.

    1980+ the entrepreneurial movement and JIT. (the great purge) the middle managers are fired en mass, and the governments abandon socialism per se.

    1990+ the team model brought to america from japan where it was brought in from japan.

    2000+ the agile movement into technology brings JIT to Agile(iterations) and Kanban(streams) so that higher operational tempo prevents large errors by using many small changes, requiring lower held inventory. side effect is greater social and interpersonal commitment.

    2010+ the social movement into business:

    2016+ the agile and social movement spread to the entire business.

    WHY: the transition from pure slave labor under the military order, to bureaucracy under the socialist order, to entrepreneurialism and teams, to the purely professional order.

    Same happens to organization sizes and durations. Companies rely less on fixed capital and more on tech and talent. Companies get smaller and more specialized.

    Careers move from lifetimes to decades.

    Now arguable we are in seven year cycles of both.

    So when you say ‘social’ all it means is that people practice more ‘discretion’ in the workplace because they do increasingly dynamic or custom or small-run work, and less repetition of the same process (and if they do, they get paid peanuts).

    Theoretical limit is we’re all unmarried, all unemployed, and all part time contractors, and companies all make small bits for each other.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-11-15 10:25:00 UTC

  • HAVE HIGHER EXPECTATIONS OF OURSELVES. THEY DO TOO. (via Roman) Time to change e

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NhadYJKZ0V0WE HAVE HIGHER EXPECTATIONS OF OURSELVES. THEY DO TOO.

    (via Roman)

    Time to change everyone’s perspective.

    Ramz Paul just hit this one out of the park.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-11-15 10:11:00 UTC