Source: Facebook

  • MIKHAIL VOLOSHIN ON BELIEF —“BELIEF, IN THE THIRD PERSON: The verb “to believe

    MIKHAIL VOLOSHIN ON BELIEF

    —“BELIEF, IN THE THIRD PERSON:

    The verb “to believe” makes sense when (and only when) used in the third person. “Christians believe that the resurrection happened,” for example. Or, “AGW alarmists believe that increasing atmospheric CO2 levels will result in a hyperlinear increase in global temperature.”

    BELIEF MEANS COUNTER-FACTUAL

    By its nature, “to believe” implies counterfactuality. If the speaker wishes to convey that the contents of a subject’s mind are in accordance with reality, the speaker doesn’t use the word “believe”. The more natural words then would be “know” or “realize” or “understand”. I.e. “The West has known since at least Aristotle that the Earth is round.” To say, “The West has believed…” rather than, “The West has known…” implies that this “believed” assertion is incorrect, i.e. counterfactual — at least from the POV of the knowledge base of the speaker.

    BELIEF, IN THE SECOND PERSON: CONDESCENSION

    To use “believe” in the second person is inherently condescending — to say to someone, “You believe X,” implies that you *don’t* hold X to be true, and think your listener holds or espouses a counterfactual belief.

    BELIEF, IN THE FIRST PERSON: REDUNDANT

    To use “believe” in the first person is, at best, redundant. It is functionally equivalent to say, “I believe it’s raining,” “I know it’s raining,” and “It’s raining.” In colloquial conversation, people use the modifier “I believe” as a sort of hedge against the accuracy of their own statements. I.e. in practice, “I believe it’s raining,” would indicate that the speaker recognizes the possibility that it might in fact *not* be raining — that is, “I believe X”, ironically, means that the speaker in fact *does not* believe X, or at least not fully.

    At worst, using “to believe” in the first person begs for an instance of Moore’s Paradox, and indicates a serious case of doublethink. “I believe that people can be born the wrong gender, and I also believe that gender is a social construct. Stop questioning my beliefs!” Moore *believed* that no person could sustain a recognition of the counterfactuality of their own beliefs; Moore had apparently never met any actual human beings.”— Mikhail Voloshin


    Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 12:40:00 UTC

  • NEW FEATURES IN OVERSING. Don’t remember if I’ve talked about it, but we’ve adde

    NEW FEATURES IN OVERSING.

    Don’t remember if I’ve talked about it, but we’ve added freelancer market features to Oversing. This means that freelancers can join, you can put tasks, jobs, projects, into the marketplace and ask for bids or proposals on them. People can submit proposals, including their own task list, story collection or project plan. And then book time, expenses, and issue invoices, and make payments within the interface, just by creating each kind of task.

    It’s pretty awsome.

    It’s more awesome if we can ship it. lol


    Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 12:35:00 UTC

  • BELIEF AND INACTION, TRUTH AND DEMONSTRATED ACTION So, when you say you ‘believe

    BELIEF AND INACTION, TRUTH AND DEMONSTRATED ACTION

    So, when you say you ‘believe’ in something magical, like ghosts, or fairies, or angels, that’s the correct use of the term.

    But instead, you can state a preference or dislike, agree or disagree, understand or not understand, or judge or opine something is false, might be true, or true. And the gold standard of course is do you demonstrate your judgment or opinion, understanding or not, agreement or disagreement, and preference or dislike?

    Because what we say is loaded with signals – even to ourselves. Our actions are evidence that either agrees or disagrees with our statements.


    Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 12:26:00 UTC

  • Argh. We get a solid customer for Oversing, and the investors pull the plug on t

    Argh. We get a solid customer for Oversing, and the investors pull the plug on the company. This has not been a good month for our business. It’s been a pretty bad summer really. lol

    So damned close. But close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades. 🙂

    We know we’re too early. We have too many nits left.


    Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 12:11:00 UTC

  • Curt Doolittle shared a post

    Curt Doolittle shared a post.


    Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 10:16:00 UTC

  • You ‘believe’ in magical things. Belief is an archaic word

    You ‘believe’ in magical things. Belief is an archaic word.


    Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 10:15:00 UTC

  • We aren’t organized. They weren’t organized really. It’s a conspiracy of common

    We aren’t organized. They weren’t organized really. It’s a conspiracy of common interest and intellectual evolution in a period of change.

    We just riff off each other. They riffed off each other. I think the major difference I see in our movement is that we compliment each other on making solid arguments. And we’re each other’s champions.

    But most importantly, we don’t use deceit and critique, we use truth and solutions.


    Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 06:15:00 UTC

  • is what you can do with Propertarianism: perfect, analytic, argument

    https://t.co/PUaFEltGolThis is what you can do with Propertarianism: perfect, analytic, argument.


    Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 05:30:00 UTC

  • #tlot #tcot #nrx #altright #NewRight

    http://twitter.com/curtdoolittle/status/763668539836358656/photo/1?utm_source=fb&utm_medium=fb&utm_campaign=curtdoolittle&utm_content=763668539836358656(flawless) #tlot #tcot #nrx #altright #NewRight https://t.co/94QKr1bUX1


    Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 05:29:00 UTC

  • (from elsewhere)(cute jab of the day) —“You’re not invited to the millennial h

    (from elsewhere)(cute jab of the day)

    —“You’re not invited to the millennial hug-box”—


    Source date (UTC): 2016-08-11 05:25:00 UTC