Author: Curt Doolittle

  • CULTURAL OBSERVATIONS One thing I love about my life here is having ‘servants’.

    CULTURAL OBSERVATIONS

    One thing I love about my life here is having ‘servants’. Full time cook, housekeeper etc. I have no car, and it costs less than a cheap car payment. But they are never really comfortable around you. I just treat them like family. But they’re always nervous. Very strange culture here. In the states, it’s more like it was in our medieval history: you know, you send your kids to work for the cousins across town who need help with the kids or with the farm or something. And you’re sort of family who gets paid a bit plus room and board (mostly just you get fed). Not the same here. Serfdom.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-11-10 07:35:00 UTC

  • Curt Doolittle shared a post

    Curt Doolittle shared a post.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-11-10 07:30:00 UTC

  • OVERSING UPDATE: WHY DID WE CHOOSE THE TECHNOLOGIES THAT WE DID?

    OVERSING UPDATE: WHY DID WE CHOOSE THE TECHNOLOGIES THAT WE DID?


    Source date (UTC): 2014-11-10 07:29:00 UTC

  • (WordPress + Barley Editor [edit in place functionality] – my life is complete.)

    (WordPress + Barley Editor [edit in place functionality] – my life is complete.)


    Source date (UTC): 2014-11-10 07:24:00 UTC

  • (lost my computer glasses and that’s gotta get fixed ’cause I can’t see what I’m

    (lost my computer glasses and that’s gotta get fixed ’cause I can’t see what I’m typing and so I can’t correct what I’m typing even more than usual… lol)


    Source date (UTC): 2014-11-10 06:42:00 UTC

  • ART, INNOVATION, AND WORK. I had a professor of film: Gary, who was then, about

    ART, INNOVATION, AND WORK.

    I had a professor of film: Gary, who was then, about my age now, when I was say, 19. And at 19 my spatial dominance was still so high that it was very difficult for me to express myself – or understand how anyone could ‘be so dumb’ that the same observations were not obvious. (nerd). IT wasn’t until five or six years later that I understood the depth of difference in human abilities was not in test-taking but in what was even possible for each of us to conceive of – that we are all concept-blind, just as we can be tone-deaf, color-blind, inarticulate, or fumbling and accident prone. And late in life I have come to understand that we are also morally blind – that our genes determine the weights of our moral biases so significantly, that we cannot imagine the moral biases of those who cooperate-compete with us.

    Anyway, Gary was giving me a lecture on my thoughts as an artist : “why do you want to make art?” Which I understand now, was not a question but a criticism of my treatment of art as a craft, rather than a sacred institution as it was to him.

    I said I think something very close to “Because it is fun, it is interesting, and it seems to be endlessly interesting.” Which of course, was not obedient and sacred enough of an answer to give him. So he replied “Please come back and tell me when it becomes work’. By which he meant – you will only be making art when it is work. The rest is just playing.

    Well, I have a few thoughts about that now that I have reached his age – I think that it’s work if you operate on the edge of our abilities. And if you operate on the edge of your abilities you will be both happy, and perceive the experience we call ‘work’ (struggle). But this is another equalitarian trap. The fact is that if you can provide an innovation for friends and family, local consumption, your nation, your civilization or man. innovate for all mankind. And your ability to work at the limit of your ability on and serve each of those markets is determined by your innate abilities – much more so than your experience of ‘work’.

    For athletes, even amateur athletes – say, runners for example – perform at their limits because it makes them feel good. Some of us perform at our intellectual limits because we feel good doing so. Others of us perform at our intellectual limits because if we don’t, then WE SUFFER.

    And for those of us who feel good at our limits, or suffer if we do not – the act of creating – of innovation – IS NEVER WORK. It is just exercise we must perform in order to feel good.

    I sold out of my business because it was work and was harming my health. I practice my art because it is exercise that makes me feel good.

    So, Gary, my question is – now that I know the answer (that it is never work to create art if one is able to create art for a market within his talents) – I also know the source of your question: that you were unable to create art of the scale you desired, and had to ‘work’ because you lacked the talent to reach the market you desired.

    To ‘stretch’ or ‘reach’ is to work at the limits of your capacity, instead of working at the limits of your confidence. To work at the limit of your ability in the service of a market that you can serve – innovate for – is merely a matter of trial and error. But if you presume a market that you cannot serve, then you will never, and can never, be happy.

    Work the ladder. Serve the greatest market you feel you can, and serve it well. Everything beyond that is seeking to lie to yourself: to serve yourself without adequately serving others in exchange. Once you serve a market well, then exceed that market by all means.

    But dreams of glory instead of acts of market satisfaction are just fantasies to avoid reality – to avoid work at finding where one no longer must work – but experience joy. It is certainly a crime to lie. But it is equally a crime to lie to yourself.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Propertarian Institute

    Kiev Ukraine.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-11-10 05:15:00 UTC

  • THE GREATEST DEBT WE OWE SCIENCE (important piece) The discipline of science fun

    THE GREATEST DEBT WE OWE SCIENCE

    (important piece)

    The discipline of science functions well and we respect it because it is the one in which we lie the least, prefer the least, and are biased toward outcomes the least.

    But then again, the discipline of science merely forces us to tell the truth.

    And we tell the truth in science because in science only truth has value to others.

    The problem is, that in the rest of life, the value of telling the truth to others decreases rapidly.

    There is no ‘ scientific method ‘, only the method of teaching ourselves to speak the truth by speaking truthfully. So the scientific method is misnamed – it is the moral method, which science evolved for its own purposes, precisely because only in science is truth of greater value than deception.

    So it is the result of incentives that science produced the moral method that we mistakenly call the scientific method – but that method is applicable to all human thought speech and action, in all fields of human experience.

    I have been struggling with making the point that the scientific method is consistent – identical -, in all walks of life, in all disciplines, in all matters of our existence – in every discourse and debate. And that there is nothing particularly interesting about science versus technology versus business, versus law = or any other area of life. The moral method remains constant. We may value different inputs and outputs of using this method, but that method remains consistent no matter what aspect of human cooperation we apply it in.

    That is because there is no difference between moral thought speech and action in any other area of life.

    Scientists discovered how to think, speak and act morally.

    Everything else was a consequence of that discovery.

    That is the greatest debt that we owe science.

    TRUTH TELLING MATTERS – And there is but one means of speaking truthfully: operationally.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Propertarian Institute

    Kiev, Ukraine


    Source date (UTC): 2014-11-10 03:07:00 UTC

  • PHILOSOPHICAL MATURITY – Childhood: Socialism – nurture and we all hold promise.

    PHILOSOPHICAL MATURITY

    – Childhood: Socialism – nurture and we all hold promise.

    – Coming of age: Libertarianism – seek liberty and we will evolve

    – Adulthood: Aristocracy – protect us from the wicked and we shall flourish

    – Old age: Conservatism – skepticism, show me first – because all men are fools.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Propertarian Institute

    Kiev, Ukraine

    (wrote it as humor but I think it might be true)


    Source date (UTC): 2014-11-10 02:45:00 UTC

  • um… I wold have been surprised if I didn’t, because I AM an art history major.

    http://www.quizfreak.com/can-you-name-the-10-most-famous-paintings-in-history/index1.htmlyeah… um… I wold have been surprised if I didn’t, because I AM an art history major. But then, its about the easiest test you could assemble, ever.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-11-09 15:40:00 UTC

  • dysfunction is what happens when you combine high testosterone with extremely *l

    —-dysfunction is what happens when you combine high testosterone with extremely *low* average IQ. When you combine the former with high IQ, you get fighter pilots, S.E.A.L.s, and athletes WITHOUT long felony rapsheets.—-

    ouch sailer at it again


    Source date (UTC): 2014-11-09 15:33:00 UTC