Author: Curt Doolittle

  • OK. GEEK HELP WANTED. MAC BUYING DECISION QUESTION. Upgrade HW or Buy New? I use

    OK. GEEK HELP WANTED. MAC BUYING DECISION QUESTION.

    Upgrade HW or Buy New?

    I use two Macbook Pro’s. A 17″ and a 15″ from mid 2010. (I take good care of my equipment.) Both have 8GB of RAM and 500GB HD’s. The 15″ looks brand new. The 17″ has little a bit of wear (one little dent on the side) from life in my backpack; and the battery is going and needs to be replaced. But for all intents and purposes they are adequate machines for a guy who basically writes for a living. (Albeit, I have 50 browser instances open at any given time.) And yes, I use both at the same time. Almost always.

    The last release of OSX was optimized for SSD’s and drive performance has been an issue for me. I was going to upgrade BOTH of the laptops to 500GB or 1TB SSD’s, and replace the battery in the 17″. That’s just over $1.3K in cost.

    The new Macbook Pro 15″ comes with the Retina display, 16GB of RAM, an SSD, and battery life is on the order of 8 hours. And it’s about $3K.

    So, given that I am wired to these machines full time: do I go for the Retina display, the extra RAM, the performance and the battery life, and spend another $1.6k – and then use a new one, and the 15″, and leave my 17″ at the office. Or do I just save myself some cash and and upgrade machines from 2010 because they’re largely adequate for what I do?


    Source date (UTC): 2014-04-16 09:06:00 UTC

  • (whining.)(travel) 1) Why is it that every restaurant and shop in London plays m

    (whining.)(travel)

    1) Why is it that every restaurant and shop in London plays music so loudly that conversation, or even thought, is impossible? If I want to go to a dance club I will. It is ruining my trip. Aspies and chaotic overstimulation do not go well together. (Today I’m buying ear plugs.)

    2) Service is economically Peter-Principled everywhere. The help is useless. Another artifact of the state’s abuse of credit.

    3) The clothing selection in Kiev is better. Everything on Regent St is just a minor variation on The Gap. I can’t get Saville Row and Polo in Kiev but I can get everything else in greater variety.

    4) I forgot how bad the food is here. Potatoes should NOT taste like cardboard.

    5) It is so GOOD to hear English spoken and to see ‘my people’. 🙂 Sigh.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-04-16 04:44:00 UTC

  • THE VALUE OF PERFORMATIVE TRUTH (cross posted for archival purposes) The scope o

    THE VALUE OF PERFORMATIVE TRUTH

    (cross posted for archival purposes)

    The scope of problems [performative truth] solves is awe inspiring actually.

    But if I want to (and must) morally forbid (outlaw) deception whether intentional (obscurantism) or accidental (platonism) I must show in every field where either intentional deception or accidental platonism is used, that all such uses are contrivances to obscure either a failure to understand (philosophy), an efficient utilitarianism (the verb to-be in language, and the conflation of number and function in mathematics), an analogistic pseudoscientific error ( infinity ) a necessary form of pedagogy (myth and religion). And a dozen others.

    This does not mean that we cannot use the verb to-be, conflate numbers with functions, use infinity in calculations for the purpose of obtaining scale independence, or tell children fairy tales as a guide to moral norms.

    It means that in philosophy we must know the difference between knowledge of construction and the testability of that knowledge, and the linguistic, conceptual, and procedural ‘hacks’ (contrivances) that allow us to stuff vast concepts through our minds which can only construct analogies within a few second window, and only out of a limited number of steps.

    My problem isn’t the problem or the solution. I know the problem and the solution. My problem is understanding multitude of contrivances that we have constructed in all the fields so that I can cover all the applications such that there is no escaping the conclusion.

    I don’t really like criticizing CR (or Popper) because it’s the best solution we have. But it is precisely because it is the closest to correct that it is the best candidate for reformation with the least amount of work.

    —-

    OK… I had to sleep on it. But I figured it out.

    Performative Truth + The “Epistemic Method” (or the instrumental method, previously known as the scientific method) , in which the discipline of scientific inquiry places a premium on some outputs and discounts other outputs. By weighting different outputs we tailor the general rule (process) to the problem we wish to address. This accurately describes what humans do as a general rule. The process is universal because the problem is consistent across all domains of inquiry. However we weigh different outputs according to our needs. And as in any discipline we tend to ‘privatize’ the language within that discipline.

    There is a supply and demand chart in there waiting to be drawn…. I have to figure out how that would look.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-04-15 21:17:00 UTC

  • UNFORTUNATELY, PSEUDOSCIENTIFIC LANGUAGE IS REALLY USEFUL. 😉 (cross posted for

    UNFORTUNATELY, PSEUDOSCIENTIFIC LANGUAGE IS REALLY USEFUL. 😉

    (cross posted for archival purposes)

    The question is whether “truth” in the context of Critical Rationalism is an analogy or not. I posit that it’s analogistic language just like nearly all uses of ‘truth’. The only action that can exist is attestation. And nothing can be said to be ‘true’ independent of someone’s cognition.

    I’m trying to eliminate pseudoscientific language. Because pseudoscientific language is unethical and immoral. It may be efficient. It may be useful. It may even in some cases be conceptually necessary.

    All disciplines rely upon such contrivances for the sake of brevity and ease.

    These contrivances my be utilitarian, but that is different from saying that they are ‘true’.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-04-15 21:15:00 UTC

  • THE RIGHT MEME: LAW AND ORDER VERSUS CRIMINAL CORRUPTION –“Yes, Russian spets-n

    THE RIGHT MEME: LAW AND ORDER VERSUS CRIMINAL CORRUPTION

    –“Yes, Russian spets-naz are involved but the other layer is the huge network of criminal corruption trying to save itself or at least gain leverage. That’s why it is important not to see this just as “Russian vs. Ukrainian”–that is only one dimension and doesn’t capture the complexity of what is going on. One way to look at this is that this is the extension of the Maidan to the East. It’s the great front in the battle against criminal corruption. This moment was inevitable. As we now know, Yanukovych’s son has for years been supplementing the low pay of the security services and militia in Donetsk with envelopes of cash. They essentially privatized the security services. But that doesn’t make them reliable in the heat of battle. It’s also why the solution is not as easy and straightforward as it may seem–it’s not a simple military operation.

    People are going to have to liberate themselves. And that’s not a bad thing. In Kramatorsk last night, the green men occupied the militia, got drunk, got bored and left. How do you think people in Slaviansk are feeling today? The mayor fled. The local city administration workers were forced to gather and were instructed that “they are now working for them”. What great joy have the armed men brought to their lives? And who can the armed men trust in Slaviansk? This is the problem with occupation. Pretty soon every resident of Slaviansk will start looking like a ‘Banderite”.

    The Russian spets-naz are the most lethal and dangerous–but they don’t want to be captured and will try to elude direct confrontation at all costs. The green men, the Crimean blow-hards (sorry for the vulgarity) aren’t nearly as formidable and the local criminal thugs for hire are in it for the money. It’s not a winning formula, especially if the locals begin to fight back, as they seem to be doing. What happened in Zaporizhzhia was instructive, the “pro-Russian” protesters turned out to be mostly members of a local criminal gang, paid to stir up trouble. People came out by the thousands to surround them. It’s no secret that people are organizing and arming themselves in the East in pro-Ukrainian partisan groups.

    The battle line is less “Russian” vs. “Ukrainian”–it’s criminal corruption vs. hope for law and order. That is the narrative that should find the greatest resonance. To complicate things further–I think the real target is Dnipropetrovsk. The third layer in all of this is the longstanding war between the Donetskie and the Dnipropetrovskie. But the difference there is that Dnipropetrovsk actually makes money and their guys are less afraid of the EU, as opposed to Donetsk.”–

    RUSSIA IS A SOCIETY OF CRIMINAL CORRUPTION. UKRAINE WANTS TO BE FREE OF CRIMINAL CORRUPTION.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-04-15 18:17:00 UTC

  • *Best Idea I’ve Heard Today* Disarm every federal agency except the the US Marsh

    *Best Idea I’ve Heard Today*

    Disarm every federal agency except the the US Marshals. Require all US Marshall’s have law degrees. Require all US Marshall’s carry insurance. Separate investigatory power from enforcement power.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-04-15 08:39:00 UTC

  • WE ARE MORALLY BLIND, LIMITED IN OUR PERCEPTIONS AND MEMORY, AND SEVERELY IN OUR

    WE ARE MORALLY BLIND, LIMITED IN OUR PERCEPTIONS AND MEMORY, AND SEVERELY IN OUR REASON. THE LAST THING WE SHOULD DO IS CONSTRUCT LARGE RISK-PRONE INTENTIONALLY MANAGED STATES.

    I have to accept the evidence, but I do not like it.

    I would like very much to believe that we grasp the world as it is. And it appears that, at least with the help of instrumentalism (logic and science), we can grasp the physical world with a high degree of accuracy – at least, sufficiently to make use of it for our purposes.

    The cooperative world of human beings consists of inconstant relations, we desperately try to reduce to an ideal type, a stereotype, a single simple rule, a universal value. But it is more complex than the physical world that consists of constant relations. For that reason we may be limited to a logic of cooperation and every prohibited from a mathematics of cooperation – except at the highest levels.

    The data is conclusive: we are far more morally blind than I had expected. Our moral and ethical intuitions are genetically weighted but our moral biases evolve and are emergent – still invariant. Our metaphysical assumptions (assumptions about the way the world functions) are far more unconscious and unalterable than I’d expected. And very, very, very few of us are capable of working hard to modify those assumptions. (The process of which I am at this moment writing about.)

    Libertarians can speak of morality in it’s logical language: economics. But that is partly because libertarians are both severely affected by moral blindness, less dependent upon others for information and decision making, and less vulnerable to deception. Libertarians not only are blind to morality, but discount it because it’s not useful to them.

    Our language, common protocol that it is, fools us into a sense of similarity.

    Progressives are interesting in that the world appears simple to them, and is simple to them computationally, because like any form single-variable calculation, it is in fact much simpler to reason with. But they are also the most morally blind demographic: progressives dysgenically and anti-socially apply their moral simplicity to all matters – like the mother of a serial killer who believes her son is merely misunderstood, and incapable of the crime. That analogy is all one needs to understand the moral blindness of progressives.

    Conservatives have the worst computational problem. They weigh all of the moral instincts about the same. Which means that they must contend with seven or more different weights and values that must be compared at any given time – something that the single-axis human capacity for reason cannot possibly manage, and abandons to the wind. So conservatives speak in moral language. Partly because it is simply too complicated to speak in any other. And largely because we have only recently understood these underlying intuitions. While Machiavelli, Hume, Pareto, Durkheim and others have attempted to derive the answers, only in the past twenty years with the help of science, anthropology and experimental psychology, have we been able to understand them.

    We humans speak to justify our genes. That is about all.

    The very last thing that we should try to engage in, is the politics of anything larger than an extended and homogenous family.

    The market – in this case, a market of communities (states) – is the only possible means of computing and calculating the future by scientific means.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-04-15 06:51:00 UTC

  • THE SLAYING OF HEROES, GODS, AND SACRED COWS: INTUITIONISTS VERSUS SCIENTISTS It

    THE SLAYING OF HEROES, GODS, AND SACRED COWS: INTUITIONISTS VERSUS SCIENTISTS

    It is not something that people forgive you for. Thank you for. Appreciate you for. Or like you for.

    They may at some point accept the death of that which they previously held dear. And they may politely accept your insight.

    But it is quite uncommon that they embrace it.

    One can easily separate scientists seeking the truth from intuitionists seeking justification, by their reaction to the death of their paradigm.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-04-15 06:38:00 UTC

  • CONSERVATIVE + LIBERTARIAN + PROGRESSIVE : ETHICS AND INSTITUTIONS Conservatives

    CONSERVATIVE + LIBERTARIAN + PROGRESSIVE : ETHICS AND INSTITUTIONS

    Conservatives are right on morality, right on social capital, and wrong on institutions.

    Libertarians are right on institutions, right on economics and wrong on morality.

    Progressives are wrong on … literally everything.

    Rothbardianism was a tragedy.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-04-14 13:00:00 UTC

  • RULE OF LAW: IRS ABUSE, JUSTICE DEPARTMENT ABUSE I worked for the justice depart

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/realspin/2014/04/14/how-obamas-justice-department-selectively-blocks-mergers-by-republican-ceos/NO RULE OF LAW: IRS ABUSE, JUSTICE DEPARTMENT ABUSE

    I worked for the justice department for a very short time. It was so immoral that I couldn’t stand it.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-04-14 12:53:00 UTC