Source: Facebook

  • THE FORMAT OF DIFFERENT TYPES OF POSTS 1 ========================== THIS MEANS I

    THE FORMAT OF DIFFERENT TYPES OF POSTS

    1 ==========================

    THIS MEANS I WROTE IT FOR YOU TO READ AS AN ARGUMENT

    (this cues you to important stuff)

    And this is the body text here.

    –“this is quoting someone else”–

    ***this is quoting myself***

    … this

    … … is a

    … … … series that you might want to learn.

    2 ===========================

    this doesn’t have header so it’s just a record from elsewhere or quick thought or observation, or a work in progress.

    3 ===========================

    (this doesn’t have a header, is in parenthesis and in all lower case, which means it’s possibly something to ignore … because it’s not an argument.)

    4 ===========================

    (diary entry)

    this is something I wrote for myself that is unfiltered, and likely includes very personal feelings of my own, or on the state of my thinking, and not something that you will probably want to read unless the psychology that I operate under is of some interest to you or other.

    ===========================

    Closing:

    I work in public, partly to conduct experiments. I am personally open in public because this prevents people attributing psychological motivations to me that I don’t have. I create conflict in order to run tests. The purpose of running a test is to attempt to create a proof.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-25 11:27:00 UTC

  • THE STATE OF MATHEMATICAL ECONOMICS Understanding advanced mathematics of econom

    THE STATE OF MATHEMATICAL ECONOMICS

    Understanding advanced mathematics of economics and physics for ordinary people.

    The Mengerian revolution, which we call the Marginalist revolution, occurred when the people of the period applied calculus ( the mathematics of “relative motion”) to what had been largely a combination of accounting and algebra.

    20th century economics can be seen largely as an attempt to apply the mathematics of relative motion (constant change) from mathematics of constant categories that we use in perfectly constant axiomatic systems, and the relatively constant mathematics of physical systems, to the mathematics of inconstant categories that we find in economics – because things on the market have a multitude of subsequent yet interdependent uses that are determined by ever changing preferences, demands, availability, and shocks.

    Physics is a much harder problem than axiomatic mathematics. Economics is a much harder problem than mathematical physics, and before we head down this road (which I have been thinking about a long time) Sentience (the next dimension of complexity) is a much harder problem than economics.

    And there have been questions in the 20th century whether mathematics as we understand it can solve the hard problem of economics. But this is, as usual, a problem of misunderstanding the very simple nature of mathematics as the study of constant relations. Most human use of mathematics consists of the study of trivial constant relations such as quantities of objects, physical measurements. Or changes in state over time. Or relative motion in time. And this constitutes the four dimensions we can conceive of when discussing real world physical phenomenon. So in our simplistic view of mathematics, we think in terms of small numbers of causal relations. But, it does not reflect the number of POSSIBLE causal relations. In other words, we change from the position of observing change in state by things humans can observe and act upon, to a causal density higher than humans can observe and act upon, to a causal density such that every act of measurement distorts what humans can observe and act upon, by distorting the causality.

    One of our discoveries in mathematical physics, is that as things move along a trajectory, they are affected by high causal density, and change through many different states during that time period. Such that causal density is so high that it is very hard to reduce change in state of many dimensions of constant relations to a trivial value: meaning a measurement or state that we can predict. Instead we fine a range of output constant relations, which we call probabilistic. So that instead of a say, a point as a measurement, we fined a line, or a triangle, or a multi dimensional geometry that the resulting state will fit within.

    However, we can, with some work identify what we might call sums or aggregates (which are simple sets of relationships) but what higher mathematicians refer to as patterns, ‘symmetries’ or ‘geometries’. And these patterns refer to a set of constant relations in ‘space’ (on a coordinate system of sorts) that seem to emerge regardless of differences in the causes that produce them.

    These patterns, symmetries, or geometries reflect a set of constant relationships that are the product of inconstant causal operations. And when you refer to a ‘number’, a pattern, a symmetry, or a geometry, or what is called a non-euclidian geometry, we are merely talking about the number of dimensions of constant relations we are talking about, and using ‘space’ as the analogy that the human mind is able to grasp.

    Unfortunately, mathematics has not ‘reformed’ itself into operational language as have the physical sciences – and remains like the social sciences and philosophy a bastion of archaic language. But we can reduce this archaic language into meaningful operational terms as nothing more than sets of constant relations between measurements, consisting of a dimension per measurement, which we represent as a field (flat), euclidian geometry (possible geometry), or post Euclidian geometry (physically impossible but logically useful) geometry of constant relations.

    And more importantly, once we can identify these patterns, symmetries, or geometries that arise from complex causal density consisting of seemingly unrelated causal operations, we have found a constant by which to measure that which is causally dense but consequentially constant.

    So think of the current need for reform in economics to refer to and require a transition from the measurement of numeric (trivial) values, to the analysis of (non-trivial) consequent geometries.

    These constant states (geometries) constitute the aggregate operations in economies. The unintended but constant consequences of causally dense actions.

    Think of it like using fingers to make a shadow puppet. If you put a lot of people together between the light and the shadow, you can form the same pattern in the shadow despite very different combinations of fingers, hands, and arms. But because of the limits of the human anatomy, there are certain patterns more likely to emerge than others.

    Now imagine we do that in three dimensions. Now (if you can) four, and so on. At some point we can’t imagine these things. Because we have moved beyond what is possible to that which is only analogous to the possible: a set of constant relations in multiple dimensions.

    So economics then can evolve from the study of inputs and outputs without intermediary state which allows prediction, to the study of the consequence of inputs and the range of possible outputs that will likely produce predictability.

    in other words, it is possible to define constant relations in economics.

    And of course it is possible to define constant relations in sentience.

    The same is true for the operations possible by mankind. There are many possible, but there are only so many that produce a condition of natural law: reciprocity.

    Like I’ve said. Math isn’t complicated if you undrestand that it’s nothing more than saying “this stone represents one of our sheep”. And in doing so produce a constant relation. all we do is increase the quantity of constant relations we must measure. And from them deduce what we do not know, but is necessary because of those constant relations.

    Math is simple. That’s why it works for just about everything: we can define a correspondence with anything.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Propertarian Institute

    Kiev Ukraine


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-25 11:05:00 UTC

  • (from elsewhere) I mean, so many of the guys who come at me, do so for what are

    (from elsewhere)

    I mean, so many of the guys who come at me, do so for what are reducible to statements of loyalty to my tribe. Yet, if my tribe makes BAD STRATEGIC DECISIONS and I choose to make BETTER ones, am I disloyal to the tribe or simply doing the moral thing?

    There is no value in numbers that pursue the wrong strategy.

    I’ve been saying this to the WN audience for a couple years now. Rallying and ridiculing the left so that they lose the power of guilt was a brilliant and successful strategy., Poisoning the well on the internet and reversing their strategy upon them, was brilliant and successful.

    But once you’ve weakened your enemy you have to lead. And to lead you need solutions not criticisms.

    I work on solutions.

    And I get dumped on as being disloyal for not piling on behind a losing strategy.

    Ergo I see the WN movement instead of the secessionist and international nationalist movements, as harmful to the cause of nationalism.

    And (as usual honestly) I”m right.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-25 09:43:00 UTC

  • I counter signaled [fascists] for two reasons: 1) they were attacking me without

    I counter signaled [fascists] for two reasons: 1) they were attacking me without grasping what my arguments result in. 2) the separatist argument for nationalism will fail, and the universalist argument for separatism is succeeding world wide.

    I hate morons who waste my time. And there are three categories of those – one from each radical movement: the less intelligent left, the less intelligent libertarian and the less intelligent fascist.

    I counter signaled ‘being a bitch’, and I”ll continue to counter signal being a whiny bitch, because it’s the political equivalent of jerking off.

    Now I realize the less intelligent need to resort to the arguments they’re capable of when dealing with the opposition, but ‘punching right’ against MY WORK and me is demonstration that I’m correct: they’re stupid.

    You punch right at me, and I”ll punch back. It’s not complicated.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-25 09:35:00 UTC

  • This is hilarious!

    This is hilarious!


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-25 09:19:00 UTC

  • While I don’t really ‘teach’ so much as perform research online, teaching is a b

    While I don’t really ‘teach’ so much as perform research online, teaching is a byproduct of that research.

    One of the reasons I like “teaching” online is because people have time to contemplate in a way that they do not have time in the classroom. Furthermore they can choose what to contemplate, and when to contemplate it.

    One of the other reasons is the One Room Schoolhouse where people of all levels exist, and people can learn by observation, repetition, asking questions, making arguments, and teaching others.

    We can cover the same material from dozens of different directions.

    To some people this may seem inefficient. But is it? You can teach a hell of a lot of people this way. Versus a classroom? We have an enormous one room schoolhouse on the internet.

    We teach most humans the wrong way – not as a campfire, but as a job. Not through stories and problems but through stress. Not through repetition but through force.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-25 02:22:00 UTC

  • Someone (thankfully) brought up the difference between high context low precisio

    Someone (thankfully) brought up the difference between high context low precision languages and low context high precision languages.

    Is there a correlation between individual property rights and the degree of context and precision in language?

    do people defend their context as if it is property?

    If they do, then why?


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-25 02:11:00 UTC

  • Untitled

    https://www.quora.com/Should-propertarians-be-considered-libertarians-Why-or-why-not/answer/Curt-Doolittle?srid=u4Qv&share=8376e3db

    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-24 21:31:00 UTC

  • Question. Imagine a line, say, on the floor, then on the street, then in the sky

    Question. Imagine a line, say, on the floor, then on the street, then in the sky. And think about the properties of a line, so that you can describe it. Now, at what length does your definition of a line fail? what are the limits of a ‘line’?


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-24 19:46:00 UTC

  • Via negativa we construct the sovereignty of the aristocracy, the liberty of the

    Via negativa we construct the sovereignty of the aristocracy, the liberty of the burgher, the freedom of the craftsman, the subsidy of the mother.

    We eliminate the false and immoral and only the true and moral remain.

    It is by the decidable, non-discretionary, rule of judge discovered, natural, empirical, common law, that we incrementally discover means of parasitism that violate natural law, and then prohibit them, thereby informing others not to repeat those violations and insuring one another if they are repeated.

    We produce sovereignty, liberty, freedom, and subsidy through the incremental suppression of parasitism using the incremental discovery of applications of the one law of non-parasitism.

    We build a condition of liberty like a sculptor with his chisel removing stone to discover the figure beneath – not like an engineer who designs it or a clay or wax sculptor building it up in layers by design.

    In this way we do not require anyone to believe in the good, and they cannot disagree with the bad. This leaves us with no other choice for our survival than a market for ‘good’ actions.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-24 17:16:00 UTC