Author: Curt Doolittle

  • Q: Curt: “Do you have any thoughts about Michael Saylor (MicroStrategy)?”– It d

    –Q: Curt: “Do you have any thoughts about Michael Saylor (MicroStrategy)?”–

    It depends on what you’re asking me. I have an informal and a formal answer.

    INFORMAL ANSWER
    1) While his public persona and speech are inflationary, and his motives one of self interest, I can’t claim he’s other than optimistically honest despite his inflationary speech, rather than intentionally or unintentionally deceptive.
    2) If I were to invest BTC I would happily put at least half of my holdings in his organization – not because of his salesmanship per se, but because I don’t believe there is any malfeasance going on, and now that not just the institutional investors but governments are treating BTC as a stable reserve I see nothing but a deterministically optimistic future with periodic withdrawals and advances, and my estimates for BTC price stabilization say that there is a long way to go.
    3) In other words, his ‘marketing’ might be inflationary but it is not contradictory to likely predictive future outcomes.

    FORMAL ANALYSIS (FROM NLI)

    Normie Version
    Michael Saylor presents himself as a champion of personal freedom and long-term thinking through Bitcoin. But if we examine his behavior through the lens of operational truth, reciprocity, and institutional responsibility, we get a more accurate picture:

    Academic Version
    Michael Saylor, is an epistemically inflationary entrepreneur whose rhetoric packages speculative asymmetric gain as moral truth. While he performs reciprocity in market terms, he fails operational tests of decidability and testifiability, and promotes an illusion of systemic sovereignty without institutional warrant. His actions contribute to evolutionary computation by accelerating monetary experimentation, but his discourse remains parasitic upon ambiguity, and fails to satisfy the demands of decidability or reciprocity in moral, legal, or institutional dimensions.

    1. What He Says vs What He Does
    What he says:
    – Bitcoin is “digital energy” and a path to personal sovereignty.
    – Fiat money is broken, and Bitcoin is the solution.
    – Holding Bitcoin is a moral and strategic imperative.
    What he does:
    – Uses his company, MicroStrategy, to buy billions in Bitcoin, aligning his personal and corporate interests with the price.
    – Gains enormous public influence by mixing investment advice with philosophical claims.
    – Benefits financially and reputationally from market hype and belief in his narrative.
    – Takeaway: His words and actions mostly align, but he packages investment speculation as a moral crusade—creating belief to serve both public cause and private gain.

    2. Does His Argument Hold Up to Scrutiny?
    Operational test:
    – He uses powerful metaphors, but doesn’t define terms like “digital energy” in any measurable or testable way.
    – He offers no rule set, no framework for decision-making, and no way to falsify his claims.
    Reciprocity test:
    – Market-wise, he’s reciprocal: he buys what others can buy, and takes risks.
    – But rhetorically, he’s not: his claims are exaggerated, unaccountable, and can’t be challenged using shared standards.
    – Takeaway: His public narrative fails the tests of clarity, accountability, and reciprocity. It motivates people, but doesn’t equip them to judge or decide for themselves.

    3. What Role Does He Play in the Big Picture?
    – He’s not building institutions or rules—he’s telling a story that encourages people to speculate.
    – He speeds up the experiment of monetary decentralization, which can be good—but without offering safety nets, protections, or dispute resolution.
    – His influence adds energy to the system, but also risk, volatility, and confusion.
    – Takeaway: He’s an accelerant—driving change without building the structure needed to stabilize it.

    4. Moral and Civilizational Contribution
    – He draws on American values of liberty, property, and rebellion—but without offering the duties, rules, or institutions that make liberty sustainable.
    He acts like a cross between a prophet and a salesman: inspiring but not accountable.
    – Takeaway: He offers a compelling narrative but not a system. His contribution is to spread belief—not to build trust.

    Final Verdict
    Michael Saylor is a skilled communicator and bold investor who presents speculation as truth and risk as sovereignty. While his market behavior is reciprocal, his rhetoric is not. He contributes to change but not to order. He inspires belief but does not offer decidable knowledge. He is part of the evolutionary process—but not of its long-term solution.


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-09 21:20:46 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920952106686742550

  • “Why are all the scientists specialized? why aren’t there any generalist scienti

    –“Why are all the scientists specialized? why aren’t there any generalist scientists? What if there’s like a unifying paradigm that only makes sense if you understand all the pieces? What journal would you even publish it in, how would you get peer review from across the spectrum?”–@DefenderOfBasic

    Great question.

    Our organization (and me in particular) work on the unification of the sciences, universal commensurability, and the hierarchical expression of evolutionary computation.

    The reason no such thing exists is because (a) it’s not possible to put a dissertation committee together for such a study (I tried). (b) the program takes (took us) too long part time from 1990 full time from 2009. (c) there is little opportunity for gradual publication. (d) the methodology for unification is outside of the domain of the sciences (it requires understanding of the foundations of mathematics, computation, grammars (linguistic semantics), cognitive science, physics, genetics, behavioral economics, and law – and the methodology is operationalism, object oriented analysis and design (simulation), including relational calculus. (e) So no one in the academic mill can take the time to master that may fields (my career allowed me to), and I was able to retire in my 40s to work on this project full time.

    So the academy is not organized for, does not have the funding system for, cannot allow the time for, nor does it possess the epistemology for, nor does it possess the methodology for production of the unification of the sciences – or what E. O. Wilson called “Consilience”.

    And what journal would we submit papers to? Who could understand it? Who has the base of knowledge to do so?

    To make matters worse in the academy, the non STEM sciences try to solve for good before they solve for true and possible. This is partly why cognitive science replaced psychology and certainly why ‘economic imperialism’ has dominated the social sciences such that the other social sciences are buried in the replication crisis with more than half of papers absolute nonsense.

    Our organization understands this. We are writing books. At least four volumes. The first should be out this year. The books you care about are volume twi (measurement) and three (logic). Two is almost done, needing final edit. Three is about halfway. Four is application to law, constitution, government, and policy. If you’re curious volume one explains the crisis of the age of which this particular problem is one of the issues addressed.

    So your frustration is legitimate. Well founded. And as Kuhn said, the academy advances with Tombstones. So I expect it’s going to take either an intentional reform of the academy (which may happen because of its pending economics) or decades of painful realization of their failure before your intuition that ‘something is wrong’ is corrected.

    Thanks for opening the discussion on this topic.

    Cheers
    CD

    Reply addressees: @DefenderOfBasic


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-09 20:12:22 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920934893116420096

  • “Why are all the scientists specialized? why aren’t there any generalist scienti

    –“Why are all the scientists specialized? why aren’t there any generalist scientists? What if there’s like a unifying paradigm that only makes sense if you understand all the pieces? What journal would you even publish it in, how would you get peer review from across the spectrum?”–
    @DefenderOfBasic

    Great question.

    Our organization (and me in particular) work on the unification of the sciences, universal commensurability, and the hierarchical expression of evolutionary computation.

    The reason no such thing exists is because (a) it’s not possible to put a dissertation committee together for such a study (I tried). (b) the program takes (took us) too long part time from 1990 full time from 2009. (c) there is little opportunity for gradual publication. (d) the methodology for unification is outside of the domain of the sciences (it requires understanding of the foundations of mathematics, computation, grammars (linguistic semantics), cognitive science, physics, genetics, behavioral economics, and law – and the methodology is operationalism, object oriented analysis and design (simulation), including relational calculus. (e) So no one in the academic mill can take the time to master that may fields (my career allowed me to), and I was able to retire in my 40s to work on this project full time.

    So the academy is not organized for, does not have the funding system for, cannot allow the time for, nor does it possess the epistemology for, nor does it possess the methodology for production of the unification of the sciences – or what E. O. Wilson called “Consilience”.

    And what journal would we submit papers to? Who could understand it? Who has the base of knowledge to do so?

    To make matters worse in the academy, the non STEM sciences try to solve for good before they solve for true and possible. This is partly why cognitive science replaced psychology and certainly why ‘economic imperialism’ has dominated the social sciences such that the other social sciences are buried in the replication crisis with more than half of papers absolute nonsense.

    Our organization understands this. We are writing books. At least four volumes. The first should be out this year. The books you care about are volume twi (measurement) and three (logic). Two is almost done, needing final edit. Three is about halfway. Four is application to law, constitution, government, and policy. If you’re curious volume one explains the crisis of the age of which this particular problem is one of the issues addressed.

    So your frustration is legitimate. Well founded. And as Kuhn said, the academy advances with Tombstones. So I expect it’s going to take either an intentional reform of the academy (which may happen because of its pending economics) or decades of painful realization of their failure before your intuition that ‘something is wrong’ is corrected.

    Thanks for opening the discussion on this topic.

    Cheers
    CD


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-09 20:12:22 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920934893363888305

  • (nonsense) It’s a beautiful sunny day today, with rare clear skies in the northw

    (nonsense)
    It’s a beautiful sunny day today, with rare clear skies in the northwest. And it’s a friday.

    Do you suppose a six pack of Coronas with lime will improve my work on Volume 1, or not? Because, well, I’m a scientist. I’d like to run that experiment. It’s the only way to be sure. 😉

    Your professional advice is welcome. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-09 19:54:32 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920930406079361316

  • (Diary) Luckily my desk is in front of a large window that opens on a suburban s

    (Diary)
    Luckily my desk is in front of a large window that opens on a suburban street. I look out at your usual northwest neighborhood of pine trees and 1980s designed houses.
    And, I get to see all the neighborhood walk their dogs (everyone must have at least one around here if…


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-09 19:43:26 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920927610072428574

  • (Diary) Luckily my desk is in front of a large window that opens on a suburban s

    (Diary)
    Luckily my desk is in front of a large window that opens on a suburban street. I look out at your usual northwest neighborhood of pine trees and 1980s designed houses.
    And, I get to see all the neighborhood walk their dogs (everyone must have at least one around here if not two. There are legions of them.).
    But … I feel this mischievous urge to cat call-and whistle followed by shouting out that they have an awesome dog.
    I am sure this would cause me the right kind of reputation around here – lunatic. 😉
    Unfortunately, this is a rental. So I have to suppress my mischievous behaviors.
    Sigh.
    Life’s little lost opportunities for joy. 😉
    Cheers


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-09 19:43:26 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920927610072428574

  • (Diary) Luckily my desk is in front of a large window that opens on a suburban s

    (Diary)
    Luckily my desk is in front of a large window that opens on a suburban street. I look out at your usual northwest neighborhood of pine trees and 1980s designed houses.
    And, I get to see all the neighborhood walk their dogs (everyone must have at least one around here if not two. There are legions of them.).
    But … I feel this mischievous urge to cat call-and whistle followed by shouting out that they have an awesome dog.
    I am sure this would cause me the right kind of reputation around here – lunatic. 😉
    Unfortunately, this is a rental. So I have to suppress my mischievous behaviors.
    Sigh.
    Life’s little lost opportunities for joy. 😉
    Cheers


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-09 19:43:25 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920927609959182341

  • RT @JessePeltan: If God wanted us to build Type 1 Civilization, he would have: 1

    RT @JessePeltan: If God wanted us to build Type 1 Civilization, he would have:

    1. put a giant fusion reactor in the sky
    (emitting blackbod…


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-09 19:36:59 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920925991012089936

  • QUESTIONS OF ACCOUNTABILITY UNDER MORALITY –“Curt: Are we correct to equate mor

    QUESTIONS OF ACCOUNTABILITY UNDER MORALITY

    –“Curt: Are we correct to equate morality with the ability to operate well under certain rulesets?”–

    Great question.

    1) definition of moral. In my research, immorality is universal: do not impose costs upon the demonstrate interests of others either directly or by externality. This is in fact the universal human test of morality by producing a test of what is immoral.

    2) humans think and function in terms of imitation. So we tend to express the ‘not immoral’ action as the moral obligation. In other words while morality is a negativa expression, we convey morality by positiva examples. This has the side benefit of not teaching people what is immoral, and propagating immorality. 😉

    3) So moral display word and deed, being the opposite of immoral, is reducible to demand for sovereignty in demonstrated interests and reciprocity in display word and deed, where reciprocity must be satisfied by both direct and seen and indirect and unseen.

    4) However, (a) civilizations and cultures differ in their degree of development so they differ in what constitutes demonstrated interest. More advanced cultures and civilizations include a greater scope of potential interests and less advanced cultures and civilizations include a lower scope. The principle difference for example is between european responsibility for the defense of the commons and the middle eastern (semitic) pursuit of externalizing costs of privatizing gains of the commons. Or the chinese total irresponsibility for the commons (“don’t stick your head up”) such that children can be run over or people abducted or crimes committed while legions of observers pretend it’s not happening. Iin the west we even consider information a commons. So we speak in truth before face, In the east, one practices face before truth (what the woke movement wants), in the middle east they practice facelessness – it’s still honorable to like and cheat and steal on behalf of your family or clan. In africa it’s amplified into face-blindness where the idea this is ‘wrong’ is equated with being caught and punished but no moral obligation exists.

    5) Ergo each civilization (a) has evolved some group strategy due to climate, resources, geography, competitors, and what we are prohibited from discussing: degree of neotenic evolution usually measured by median IQ. (b) Has reached some degree of development, where the collectivity or atomicity of property rights combined with the success of rule of law at the suppression of free riding, rents, parasitism and corruption, combined with median IQ are a perfect measure of economic cultural scientific, and artistic velocity. (c) And as such the competition between group strategy, path dependency of their institutional development, potential individual agency (property), collective rents, collective corruption, rule of law, and truth before face creates a dynamic where what is not immoral and is therefore either amoral (ok) or moral (good) *AND* is insured by rule of law, and enforced by laws, causes variation in moral tradition, norm, institution, and codification. In other words, different groups have different moral portfolios (investments) that allow that group in its demographics, geography, climate, resources, amidst competitors to cooperate sufficiently to survive. So there are always variations in group demand for cooperation on terms suitable to each group.

    6) The sexes have polar opposite moral instincts whose reconciliation can only be achieved through trade: female consumption in time (demand), and male capitalization over time(supply). Trade(exchange) is produced, first through sex, second through familial insurance, and third through social insurance, and fourth through political and institutional insurance. So there are always variations between individuals producing ingroup DEMAND for cooperation on terms suitable to sex, class, and ability (IQ, personality, fitness) and age.

    7) So individuals, cultures (ethnicities), civilizations(races) produce a universal prohibition on imposition of costs upon the demonstrated interests of others. But they vary in the scope and complexity demonstrated interests, atomicity of interests, truth in negotiation, degree of insurance, and means of insurance (personal, familial, tribal, or institutional).

    8) However, that doesn’t mean morality is relative such that we cannot absolutely judge the moral from the amoral from the immoral. We can. We can merely investigate who imposed a costs on the demonstrated interests of others regardless of the cultures, norms, traditions, institutions, and degree of development of the populations.

    9) That’s what natural law means. It’s why international law, at least under the dominance of teh anglosphere, has converged on natural law.

    –“the man in the Chinese Room is translating Chinese without understanding a word of it, are these people simply exhibiting moral behaviors without actually acting for moral reasons?”–

    If I told you that very few of us understand what we do as other than imitation of what works and threat of what doesn’t that would be true. I mean, I work in operationalizing most of human thought in every discipline and I’m convinced almost no one knows what they’re talking about. They’re just doing the best they can within some domain within which generations have produced enough of a system of measurement that they can discuss that domain with some semblance of reason. ;). (Yeah, I’m overstating it a bit for the purpose of conveying the idea, but ONLY A BIT. 😉 )

    –“After all, there are people who take an action for a reason they believe to be moral which produces a suboptimal outcome for them. Do we lump these two groups together?”–

    If I lie by intent vs I fail to perform due diligence such that I speak a falsehood, what is the performative difference? In both cases I have conveyed a falsehood which has imposed a harm on the knowledge of the audience. This is why in tort law your intention is irrelevant. If you caused a harm even involuntarily by a failure of due diligence (manslaughter while driving for example, or your tree falling on your neighbors house) then you are liable.
    In law we separate (a) responsibility (cause) from (b) (liability) and (c) restitution (compensation) from punishment (DIscipline, training), from prevention (prevention of imitators, often by making an example of you. — ouch).
    Ergo we do not expect infants and children, but we do expect teens, we do expect maturity, and we do expect adults to be capable of due diligence sufficient for the burden of responsibility for their actions. And the truth is we do compensate at least in court for ‘stupidity’ meaning a lack of intelligence. In my work I have unfortunately become all to familiar with how quickly IQ declines under about 105. And that means for most of the world, that 91% of the population – at least – is below 105. Hence the folly of the anglo enlightenment’s promise of an aristocracy of everyone. That is proximally possible in 1790 when the english IQ was probably an average of 115, and only 1/4 of the population was below 105, and only .04% was below 90. But most of the world is in the low 80s or lower.
    As such what do we expect of different civilizations (races) cultures (ethnicities) classes (genetic load) and sexes? We see the evidence through enlightenment fantasy and christian morality.
    As such why is free speech not freedom of due diligent speech, at least, requiring freedom of assertions in speech, meaning freedom of claims of truth and goodness, falsehood and badness to be subject to warranty of due diligence? (for most of history women didn’t count because of their inability to speak the truth without education and training. Which we still see in false accusations and magical thinking and claims of oppression etc.)
    Ergo we have failed to maintain, because the left has undermined our laws, the common law requirement that when we speak in public it is testimony and therefore testifiable. This was done by the left. On purpose. and justified by the postmodernists and feminists.

    I hope this answers your question.
    Cheers
    CD

    Reply addressees: @basedc1 @sbkaufman


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-09 19:16:14 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920920766511804418

  • QUESTIONS OF ACCOUNTABILITY UNDER MORALITY –“Curt: Are we correct to equate mor

    QUESTIONS OF ACCOUNTABILITY UNDER MORALITY

    –“Curt: Are we correct to equate morality with the ability to operate well under certain rulesets?”–

    Great question.

    1) definition of moral. In my research, immorality is universal: do not impose costs upon the demonstrate interests of others either directly or by externality. This is in fact the universal human test of morality by producing a test of what is immoral.

    2) humans think and function in terms of imitation. So we tend to express the ‘not immoral’ action as the moral obligation. In other words while morality is a negativa expression, we convey morality by positiva examples. This has the side benefit of not teaching people what is immoral, and propagating immorality. 😉

    3) So moral display word and deed, being the opposite of immoral, is reducible to demand for sovereignty in demonstrated interests and reciprocity in display word and deed, where reciprocity must be satisfied by both direct and seen and indirect and unseen.

    4) However, (a) civilizations and cultures differ in their degree of development so they differ in what constitutes demonstrated interest. More advanced cultures and civilizations include a greater scope of potential interests and less advanced cultures and civilizations include a lower scope. The principle difference for example is between european responsibility for the defense of the commons and the middle eastern (semitic) pursuit of externalizing costs of privatizing gains of the commons. Or the chinese total irresponsibility for the commons (“don’t stick your head up”) such that children can be run over or people abducted or crimes committed while legions of observers pretend it’s not happening. Iin the west we even consider information a commons. So we speak in truth before face, In the east, one practices face before truth (what the woke movement wants), in the middle east they practice facelessness – it’s still honorable to like and cheat and steal on behalf of your family or clan. In africa it’s amplified into face-blindness where the idea this is ‘wrong’ is equated with being caught and punished but no moral obligation exists.

    5) Ergo each civilization (a) has evolved some group strategy due to climate, resources, geography, competitors, and what we are prohibited from discussing: degree of neotenic evolution usually measured by median IQ. (b) Has reached some degree of development, where the collectivity or atomicity of property rights combined with the success of rule of law at the suppression of free riding, rents, parasitism and corruption, combined with median IQ are a perfect measure of economic cultural scientific, and artistic velocity. (c) And as such the competition between group strategy, path dependency of their institutional development, potential individual agency (property), collective rents, collective corruption, rule of law, and truth before face creates a dynamic where what is not immoral and is therefore either amoral (ok) or moral (good) *AND* is insured by rule of law, and enforced by laws, causes variation in moral tradition, norm, institution, and codification. In other words, different groups have different moral portfolios (investments) that allow that group in its demographics, geography, climate, resources, amidst competitors to cooperate sufficiently to survive. So there are always variations in group demand for cooperation on terms suitable to each group.

    6) The sexes have polar opposite moral instincts whose reconciliation can only be achieved through trade: female consumption in time (demand), and male capitalization over time(supply). Trade(exchange) is produced, first through sex, second through familial insurance, and third through social insurance, and fourth through political and institutional insurance. So there are always variations between individuals producing ingroup DEMAND for cooperation on terms suitable to sex, class, and ability (IQ, personality, fitness) and age.

    7) So individuals, cultures (ethnicities), civilizations(races) produce a universal prohibition on imposition of costs upon the demonstrated interests of others. But they vary in the scope and complexity demonstrated interests, atomicity of interests, truth in negotiation, degree of insurance, and means of insurance (personal, familial, tribal, or institutional).

    8) However, that doesn’t mean morality is relative such that we cannot absolutely judge the moral from the amoral from the immoral. We can. We can merely investigate who imposed a costs on the demonstrated interests of others regardless of the cultures, norms, traditions, institutions, and degree of development of the populations.

    9) That’s what natural law means. It’s why international law, at least under the dominance of teh anglosphere, has converged on natural law.

    –“the man in the Chinese Room is translating Chinese without understanding a word of it, are these people simply exhibiting moral behaviors without actually acting for moral reasons?”–

    If I told you that very few of us understand what we do as other than imitation of what works and threat of what doesn’t that would be true. I mean, I work in operationalizing most of human thought in every discipline and I’m convinced almost no one knows what they’re talking about. They’re just doing the best they can within some domain within which generations have produced enough of a system of measurement that they can discuss that domain with some semblance of reason. ;). (Yeah, I’m overstating it a bit for the purpose of conveying the idea, but ONLY A BIT. 😉 )

    –“After all, there are people who take an action for a reason they believe to be moral which produces a suboptimal outcome for them. Do we lump these two groups together?”–

    If I lie by intent vs I fail to perform due diligence such that I speak a falsehood, what is the performative difference? In both cases I have conveyed a falsehood which has imposed a harm on the knowledge of the audience. This is why in tort law your intention is irrelevant. If you caused a harm even involuntarily by a failure of due diligence (manslaughter while driving for example, or your tree falling on your neighbors house) then you are liable.
    In law we separate (a) responsibility (cause) from (b) (liability) and (c) restitution (compensation) from punishment (DIscipline, training), from prevention (prevention of imitators, often by making an example of you. — ouch).
    Ergo we do not expect infants and children, but we do expect teens, we do expect maturity, and we do expect adults to be capable of due diligence sufficient for the burden of responsibility for their actions. And the truth is we do compensate at least in court for ‘stupidity’ meaning a lack of intelligence. In my work I have unfortunately become all to familiar with how quickly IQ declines under about 105. And that means for most of the world, that 91% of the population – at least – is below 105. Hence the folly of the anglo enlightenment’s promise of an aristocracy of everyone. That is proximally possible in 1790 when the english IQ was probably an average of 115, and only 1/4 of the population was below 105, and only .04% was below 90. But most of the world is in the low 80s or lower.
    As such what do we expect of different civilizations (races) cultures (ethnicities) classes (genetic load) and sexes? We see the evidence through enlightenment fantasy and christian morality.
    As such why is free speech not freedom of due diligent speech, at least, requiring freedom of assertions in speech, meaning freedom of claims of truth and goodness, falsehood and badness to be subject to warranty of due diligence? (for most of history women didn’t count because of their inability to speak the truth without education and training. Which we still see in false accusations and magical thinking and claims of oppression etc.)
    Ergo we have failed to maintain, because the left has undermined our laws, the common law requirement that when we speak in public it is testimony and therefore testifiable. This was done by the left. On purpose. and justified by the postmodernists and feminists.

    I hope this answers your question.
    Cheers
    CD


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-09 19:16:14 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920920767119978856