Source: Twitter X

  • I have a more than vague understanding of the state of knowledge in most fields.

    I have a more than vague understanding of the state of knowledge in most fields. It is possible to possess this understanding. It is just time consuming. And in part because filtering wisdom from folly, truth from falsehood, and honesty from lies is so problematic until one reaches the tipping point where we grasp enough to at entertain the ideas that have potential and those that do not.
    In my study of human ignorance, error, bias, and deceit, I’ve discovered that knowledge of how humans err (which might be the purpose of studying philosophy) has universal utility, wheras the study of any given discipline has only particular utility.
    In other words the siloing of the academy has been a catastrophe.

    You might not realize it but our work on the natural law creates a framework for all knowledge, and a system for testing all claims whether scientific or not.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-10 16:40:28 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833546089695481860

  • @jfmaquine I might frame your thesis a bit more generally, but it’s correct. Alt

    @jfmaquine
    I might frame your thesis a bit more generally, but it’s correct. Although I would like to answer the core question of just why anyone pays attention at all to german philosophy, and instead, why not pay attention to what germans actually do, and discover why they do it – because codifying the latter, just as the anglos codified theirs in the american constitution (albeit insufficiently) would be a net asset for mankind. Germans and Japanese, despite their differences in culture, do both prioritize the commons and produce high trust commons of lower conflict than other states, and do so without lying (as much) about it.

    Because I’m a product of Hayek and Popper myself, I especially liked this paragraph:

    –“Note: Popper explained that since Scholasticism, the University has adopted Essentialism and explained why ”the development of thought has remained in an arrested state of empty verbiage”.
    He also explained that there is a hidden truth in the foundation of the university that both methods of reading reality must cohabit but this [leads] to a constant conflict [within the university] that needs to be resolved. [So] He advocated that science [empiricism, neutrality, commensurability, testifiability] take over the university with the nominalist method.
    The opposite of his wish happened, and the humanities have taken over the university, [using] the essentialist method to read reality.
    This is the non-spoken part of the causes of the Student revolution in the 1960s and the rise of Post-modernism.
    he peace was broken much sooner if we read Julien Benda’s ”The Treason of the intellectuals” which he put around 1870, at least.
    The treason is the end of impartiality that was required to keep the peace in the university and among intellectuals.”–

    But reading that bit reminds me of a topic conversation I share with my friend Rudyard Lynch @whatifalthist fairly regularly. And that is that most of us attempt to explain history from the point of view of some observer with some desire born of the observations and judgement’s he’s made of the world.
    From my point of view, (science, economics, law, government, group strategy) I take the position of aristocracy – ultimate responsibility for outcomes over time – while Rudyard that of the clerisy – responsibility for the experience of the people in time. These are both historical and necessary points of view, the study of any conflict between, explains to us more about human nature and condition than either does alone.

    So a third position is that of the observer the people who write vs the people who work, the people who manage them, and the people who rule – and the natural conflict between the sexes and classes given the vast differences in instinct and intuition between the sexes and the more vast differences in ability between the classes. And I think that is the position you’re communicating from. And that’s because in the debate between the idealists (plato) and realists (aristotle) philosophy is more accessible and satisfying than empiricism science economics and law.

    As such comparative POV within a civilization is more useful than any singular POV within a civilization. Just as popper was only partly right with epistemology: darwinian falsification is in fact half of the epistemoc process, and yes, all logic is falsificationary not justificationary – we only know survival. As such the only solution to epistemology is the satisfaction of both empiricism (falsification) and construction (falsification) – a catastrophe of philosophical failure in the 19th to early 20th as babbage failed to systematize his thoughts, computation (operationalism) failed to displace mathematics (verbalism), followed by the failure of the intuitionists, operationalists, and operationsists left open the door for pseudoscience of cantor(infinities), bohr (just calculate), and even einstein (spacetime), which spread to all fields. And was only incrementally rescued by Turing and the computational revolution, Watson-Crick, the Cognitive Scientists, and the present demonstrations of the AI community at the same time as the admission of seventy years of failure by the Physicists. We are just less aware of the similar failures of pseudoscience in law (Rez, Kelsen, Dworkin, Rawls) for the same reasons. (Which is the pseudoscience I work to overcome).

    –“Overall, an understanding of the ancients – their philosophy, their quarrel, and the problems they tried to solve – is of the utmost importance.”–

    Well, I would say that comparative civilization better answers that question, because starting with the premise that the conflict is a problem rather than an equilibrium that causes continuous discovery and innovation might be a mistake. Instead we might think of everyone in each civilization struggling to perform some sort of evolutionary computation of ‘better than this’ given the physical, social, institutional, economic, and cognitive resources available to them. This POV leads us to view our history as discovery within premises for which we can only approach an optimum instead of a battle between truth and error.

    And secondly, comparative civ helps us discover the limits within which we are all struggling:
    There are only three choices of human interaction: cooperation(Trade), Parasitism(conflict), Avoidance(boycott).
    There are only three tools of human influence: Cooperation(Trade/Boycott), Force(Defense/Offense), Seduction (Inclusion/Exclusion).
    There are only three primary institutions of coercion: Law (Trade), State (Force), Faith(seduction).
    The order of the development of those institutions produces a path dependency where the first is strongest, the second less so and the third is weak or fails.
    The First institution determines the velocity of innovation and adaptation of your population: Law (Fast), State (Slow), Faith (Slowest).
    And worse, every civilization, given it’s territory, resources, competitors, demographics, and relationship between warriors and peasants, develops an unconscious set of metaphysical presumptions that are internally consistent even if not externally correspondent – so that they can cooperate on large scales with in a civilization.
    This set of premises if sufficiently survival evolves into a group evolutionary strategy that the group is unconscious of. Cultures, religions, states, traditions, and values are produced incrementally on top of those presumptions, further rigidifying them.

    Ergo, all people work within a framework they are unconscious of. And within institutions and habits and traditions populated by those with incentives to persist those institutions, habits ,and traditions, who resist all possible change at all possible times, causing incremental calcification until some crisis forces a change despite all the established interests of those people.

    So, just as christianity destroyed the western ancient world, and islam destroyed the ancient civilizations (seven of them), the new wave of ‘religions’ is attempting once again to destroy the present world – and succeeding wholeheartedly might I add.

    So my question is, again, why the interst in Kant and Hegel? Or for goodness sake Heidegger? What is the difference between the open debate and discourse of the anglo empirical and the closed internal piety of the german phenomenological?

    I mean, I’m not suggesting we burn their books, but other than studying philosophy and theology as largely a history of failures by middle and lower classes, then what is the point of it at all?

    The uncomfortable conclusion of a study of history is that the progressives were not all wrong, and that the fundamental problem for mankind is the asymmetry of biological vs cognitive, scientific and technological evolution, and the tendency to regress toward the mean during periods of prosperity – a process which leads to collapse.

    Looking forward to more of your prose. 😉

    CD

    Reply addressees: @jfmaquine @SRCHicks


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-10 16:36:13 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833545020843909125

  • (NLI) My partner in anti-crime so to speak, Brandon Hayes, who is president of o

    (NLI)
    My partner in anti-crime so to speak, Brandon Hayes, who is president of our Institute, really is quite a genius. But it’s not an abstract genius – it’s eminently practical. It’s so practical that, the man has figured out how to live what is the equivalent of being retired for much of his adult life – focusing on the quality of life, of family in particular, and of putting effort into our organization and mission to restore civilization.

    (I live a thankful life. And in part because I have the most awesome friends.) 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-10 15:42:09 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833531416069484544

  • RT @jfmaquine: The historical role Kant and Hegel played I’m a slow worker 😉 bu

    RT @jfmaquine: The historical role Kant and Hegel played

    I’m a slow worker 😉 but @curtdoolittle and @SRCHicks here it comes. page by page…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-10 15:31:49 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833528813394985235

  • RT @joe__touring: @BretWeinstein When you look under the hood and see how little

    RT @joe__touring: @BretWeinstein When you look under the hood and see how little is actually able to be recycled, it becomes clear that tru…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-10 15:26:02 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833527359552852420

  • RT @TyrantsMuse: By definition, each part of a straight line has to occupy a nov

    RT @TyrantsMuse: By definition, each part of a straight line has to occupy a novel position in a dimension

    At 1D, it’s a line

    At 2D, it’s…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-10 15:24:21 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833526937857486854

  • RT @ThomasSowell: What “multiculturalism” boils down to is that you can praise a

    RT @ThomasSowell: What “multiculturalism” boils down to is that you can praise any culture in the world except Western culture—and you cann…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-10 15:23:07 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833526624526209328

  • She’s got it down. ;). Making a brand out of it. 😉

    She’s got it down. ;). Making a brand out of it. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-10 12:58:32 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833490238611636662

    Reply addressees: @NoahRevoy

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833459632951443863

  • Both statements are false. Trump is pragmatic about the inequality of government

    Both statements are false.
    Trump is pragmatic about the inequality of governments and people and preserves his negotiating position with foreign leaders.
    Harris is, even more so than Hillary, a Leninist who like all leftists seeks only empty verbalisms to justify seizure of…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-10 10:36:29 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833454493804970453

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833217475468521535

  • Yes. And have done so

    Yes. And have done so.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-10 10:31:53 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833453335560454397

    Reply addressees: @ItsJustinRhodes

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833218814697238900