Author: Curt Doolittle

  • LIBERTY DECLINES WITH DENSITY —-“beyond a critical point within a finite space

    LIBERTY DECLINES WITH DENSITY

    —-“beyond a critical point within a finite space, freedom diminishes as numbers increase. This is as true of humans in the finite space of a planetary ecosystem as it is of gas molecules in a sealed flask. The human question is not how many can possibly survive within the system, but what kind of existence is possible for those who do survive.”—- Frank Herbert


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-06 03:09:00 UTC

  • ECONOMICS OF CONCURRENCY

    [C]oncurrency – e.g. multitasking – is hard, we all know that.

    In the following post I analyze the economics of concurrency, using the example of a layered conversation with two members, and many concurrent threads occurring in overlapping time intervals.

    (If you would think it a fun exercise, write up a comment about another topic of choice in multitasking – besides conversations, that is — and I’ll merge it into a generalized theory.  I already have that theory in the back of my head one way or another, and  social proof by induction is nice (beware the pun.) )


     

    Handling n+1 threads of conversation with another person concurrently requires:

    1. excellent working memory, to generate shared implicit context,
    2. excellent verbal intelligence, to generate shared explicit context for ambiguity mitigation,
    3. precision in phrasing,
    4. parsimony in phrasing,
    5. shared, similar, experiences,
    6. unshared, differing, experiences,
    7. similar time preference

    Fulfilling these seven requirements, it is possible to handle any amount of conversations at the same time, where the amount must not conflict with:

    a) your working memory limitations – most people can maintain five to nine different chunks of data at the same time quite well – to generate implicit shared context, or,
    b) the verbosity of speech you can mentally afford to invest in, to generate explicit shared context, or;
    c) the precision of speech you can mentally afford to invest in – from fluffy-emotive to precise-systemizing – or;
    d) the use of the absolute minimum amount of words necessary to convey your point precisely;

    and converges on having:

    e) experienced, and grown up with, overlapping and similar, as well as differing past life histories, and;
    f) overlapping future planning horizons, and;
    g) similarity in future time orientation.

    So you see, handling any amount of ongoing conversations with the same person is a matter of fulfilling those requirements, and not putting oneself under too many restrictions due to acting, and having acted, unconstructively.


     

    Now, the above part was about one quite specific use case. Can you think up more?

    Head tips to Bernard Spil for the idea and Curt Doolittle for review.

  • ECONOMICS OF CONCURRENCY

    [C]oncurrency – e.g. multitasking – is hard, we all know that.

    In the following post I analyze the economics of concurrency, using the example of a layered conversation with two members, and many concurrent threads occurring in overlapping time intervals.

    (If you would think it a fun exercise, write up a comment about another topic of choice in multitasking – besides conversations, that is — and I’ll merge it into a generalized theory.  I already have that theory in the back of my head one way or another, and  social proof by induction is nice (beware the pun.) )


     

    Handling n+1 threads of conversation with another person concurrently requires:

    1. excellent working memory, to generate shared implicit context,
    2. excellent verbal intelligence, to generate shared explicit context for ambiguity mitigation,
    3. precision in phrasing,
    4. parsimony in phrasing,
    5. shared, similar, experiences,
    6. unshared, differing, experiences,
    7. similar time preference

    Fulfilling these seven requirements, it is possible to handle any amount of conversations at the same time, where the amount must not conflict with:

    a) your working memory limitations – most people can maintain five to nine different chunks of data at the same time quite well – to generate implicit shared context, or,
    b) the verbosity of speech you can mentally afford to invest in, to generate explicit shared context, or;
    c) the precision of speech you can mentally afford to invest in – from fluffy-emotive to precise-systemizing – or;
    d) the use of the absolute minimum amount of words necessary to convey your point precisely;

    and converges on having:

    e) experienced, and grown up with, overlapping and similar, as well as differing past life histories, and;
    f) overlapping future planning horizons, and;
    g) similarity in future time orientation.

    So you see, handling any amount of ongoing conversations with the same person is a matter of fulfilling those requirements, and not putting oneself under too many restrictions due to acting, and having acted, unconstructively.


     

    Now, the above part was about one quite specific use case. Can you think up more?

    Head tips to Bernard Spil for the idea and Curt Doolittle for review.

  • it. All of it

    https://jaymans.wordpress.com/2015/07/04/demography-is-destiny/Read it. All of it.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-05 09:19:00 UTC

  • Michael Philip at his best

    Michael Philip at his best.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-05 02:00:00 UTC

  • GAWKER PROFITS 6M? So, it’s an interesting internet era statistic, that online m

    GAWKER PROFITS 6M?

    So, it’s an interesting internet era statistic, that online media can have so much presence and influence with so little money. I mean, it’s little more than a small business.

    Same for Drudge. Somewhere in the 10-15M range.

    Compare this to newspapers and television whose infrastructure and distribution costs are tremendous by comparison.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-04 03:36:00 UTC

  • I LOVE EVERYBODY It’s one thing to deny the differences in our distributions. It

    I LOVE EVERYBODY

    It’s one thing to deny the differences in our distributions. It’s one thing deny we vote in blocks. One thing to want to limit sacrifices to kin. But it’s something altogether different to fucking hate people. This is why I get frustrated with the right. We have lunatics and autistics in libertarianism, and they hate the abstract thing called the state. But the right has these lunatics that just hate other humans.

    Instead of saying ‘what is wrong with us that we fail to protect ourselves?’ they criticize others for satisfying their own strategies. THE PROBLEM IS US, NOT THEM. You wanna hate? Hate OUR people that did this. But don’t others for seeing the walled garden and wanting to live in it. That’s insane.

    I want to know how to protect my tribe from losing its competitive advantage: high trust and the commons. And I’m as kin-selection oriented as the next guy. And I don’t like immigrating MORE of the below 105 median peoples into a high trust society when I can see Mathusian limits to work on the horizon.

    But I don’t hate people. People are pretty stupid wetware machines that just follow breadcrumbs. I get frustrated like everyone else. I get angry like everyone else. But you know, the blame is the guy that’s looking at you in the mirror who isn’t out there shooting some politician in the head for what he or she has done. It’s not in the people wanting to live in our high trust society.

    Find a way not to leave the breadcrumbs.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-03 14:17:00 UTC

  • Untitled

    http://www.vox.com/2015/7/2/8884885/american-revolution-mistake


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-03 06:57:00 UTC

  • I’M IN THIS FIGHT, NOT JUST FOR MY TRIBE, BUT FOR ALL OF HUMANITY I don’t really

    I’M IN THIS FIGHT, NOT JUST FOR MY TRIBE, BUT FOR ALL OF HUMANITY

    I don’t really care about race. I acknowledge our differences, and I write about our differences as a small number of differences in cognitive distributions. But race and racism doesn’t help me or anyone else solve any material problem. I know the white nationalist movement uses my work, but I am just as happy if EVERY nationalist movement uses my work, because it will make all of us happier if we do. (Because we can use trade policy to offset our differences in distributions, and within any nation we can use the norms appropriate for our distributions.)

    But bitching about other people’s evolutionary strategies is just gossip. It means nothing. It doesn’t fix anything. It doesn’t provide a political solution to the problem of prosperity, kin selection, beneficial evolution, and the ultimate achievement of mankind.

    So my objective is to provide solutions. And those solutions should assist all of us regardless of our race and tribe. Because all our races and tribes are stuck on this planet together. And as such, we need a way of cooperating, even if that way of cooperating is to peaceably choose not to cooperate.

    And Truth is enough. If we eliminate deceit from the public discourse, and eliminate theft from the public trough, then that will force the outcome you probably desire.

    But I will not engage in racial gossip. I am just as interested in helping Africans, Asians, and Indonesians, achieve liberty and prosperity as I am my own people.

    We had enough of this damage done by the Enlightenment. And I just want to fix it for everyone.

    OK?

    Good. So I support nationalism. All of it. For everyone. Becuase the family defeats the corporation as a means of human reproductive cooperation.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-03 06:01:00 UTC