Theme: Agency

  • ELDER, PROPHET, PHILOSOPHER: TRANSFORMATION ON THE HERO’S JOURNEY To achieve the

    ELDER, PROPHET, PHILOSOPHER: TRANSFORMATION ON THE HERO’S JOURNEY

    To achieve the status of an elder, a prophet or a philosopher, one must provide others with a means of transformation in the Hero’s Journey: so that the unenlightened person that they were before, is different from the enlightened person after. So that one’s explanatory power over the universe is increased. So that what was once unseen could now be seen. So that one was unempowered, is now empowered.

    In some cases we can enlighten generations – if our stories can be understood in childhood, our biographies as youth, our science in adulthood, and our wisdom and our history in late age. But we make many hero’s journeys in our lives, and we treat as elter, prophet or philosopher, those who help us in that transformational journey.

    The problem is that we are ‘ready’ for our transformations at different ages, and are capable of different complexity in our understanding. As such, we need many elders prophets and philosophers.

    It is only in the wisdom of late age that we see all our elders, prophets and philosophers as using whatever techniques were available to bring about in us the same transformations, using different words, and different means.

    And in retrospect we see they all tell us the same things in better or worse terms, with better or worse precision, with less or more success.

    The most successful has been Aristotle, for having given us the means of generating transformations that most correspond with reality, instead of those that create analogies that correspond with reality.

    And these descriptions rather than analogies are what we call ‘truths’.

    And truth-telling is not only the language of gods now – but the language of men because of him.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-02-22 08:32:00 UTC

  • “Video games, pot, and fluoride destroy men.”—Don Finnegan

    —“Video games, pot, and fluoride destroy men.”—Don Finnegan


    Source date (UTC): 2015-02-21 14:30:00 UTC

  • “the Stoic way accepted by warrior cultures throughout history, and throughout t

    —“the Stoic way accepted by warrior cultures throughout history, and throughout the world though, is to take responsibility for yourself. Accept that you have absolute control over what you have control over, and don’t worry about the rest of it. If you take the responsibility you need to take, then you will perform. If you don’t, you will fail.

    You cannot control whether you achieve X in XX:XX. What you can control is, “I will do XYZ every day. I will try to perform better and faster, every time I perform XYZ. If I do this, eventually, I will achieve X in XX:XX, then I will continue to improve.”—


    Source date (UTC): 2015-02-20 06:05:00 UTC

  • “You are responsible for you. You are responsible for your actions. You do have

    —“You are responsible for you. You are responsible for your actions. You do have control over who your enemy will be fighting. You have control over the training you will have had. You have control over what speed and accuracy you will be able to achieve. You have control over whether you are fit enough to move, fast enough. You are in control of everything that you are in control of. Accept that responsibility.

    The Germanic warrior trained hard, to be better than his foe, so that he could perform valorous acts on the battlefield, and hoped that the Valkyries noticed, and took him, if it turned out that his foe was better than him. The Samurai trained hard so that he could perform well, so that hopefully, his ancestors would recognize his honor in the afterlife.”—


    Source date (UTC): 2015-02-20 06:04:00 UTC

  • “Whether we use the Roman term “stoicism,” or we discuss Germanic warlords, or J

    —“Whether we use the Roman term “stoicism,” or we discuss Germanic warlords, or Japanese samurai, we’re talking about the same thing. Stoicism is the calm acceptance of responsibility. It is the acceptance that I am responsible for what I am capable of controlling. “—


    Source date (UTC): 2015-02-20 06:03:00 UTC

  • Responsibility

    —“Whether we use the Roman term “stoicism,” or we discuss Germanic warlords, or Japanese samurai, we’re talking about the same thing. Stoicism is the calm acceptance of responsibility. It is the acceptance that I am responsible for what I am capable of controlling. “—

  • Responsibility

    —“Whether we use the Roman term “stoicism,” or we discuss Germanic warlords, or Japanese samurai, we’re talking about the same thing. Stoicism is the calm acceptance of responsibility. It is the acceptance that I am responsible for what I am capable of controlling. “—

  • More on Propertarian AI Theorizer paired with conscience, Conscience has access

    More on Propertarian AI

    Theorizer paired with conscience,

    Conscience has access to same memory, and same stimuli.

    Conscience seeks out involuntary transfers, and shuts them down.

    Conscience is not intelligent per, in that it doesn’t ‘want’ anything other than to test hypotheses for involuntary transfers.

    Theorizer cannot perceive Conscience.

    Conscience cannot perceive theorizer.

    Conscience erases memory of ideas that cause involuntary transfer.

    In this sense, a machine can be MORE moral than we are, since forgetting something we have thought, isn’t something we know how to do.

    More on this, but it is quite possible to make an AI that behaves well, (respects property) just as it is possible to create a human that respects property.

    The question is only whether the theorizer and the conscience have equal intelligence, not whether the AI is more intelligent than we are. Imposition of costs due to involuntary transfer of property is just as decidable as the oddness or evenness of a number.

    So to create an intelligence you create a theorizer that looks for opportunities and a conscience that looks to inhibit ideas that cause involuntary transfers.

    That is the means of designing an artificial intelligence.

    Nature did it with us the same way. It’s not complicated.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-02-18 19:49:00 UTC

  • THE BIRTH OF INDIVIDUALISM IN THE NORTH SEA PEOPLES (must read)(must read) (from

    http://books.google.com/books?id=S9inP43giPMC&printsec=frontcover&dq=The+Discovery+of+the+Individual%2C+1050-1200&hl=en&sa=X&ei=Y6TiVIGEGYfCOfrfgeAC&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q&f=falseON THE BIRTH OF INDIVIDUALISM IN THE NORTH SEA PEOPLES

    (must read)(must read) (from hbd chick)

    Northern europeans began to think of — or at least write about — themselves as individuals beginning in the eleventh century a.d. [pgs. 158, 160, and 64-67 – bolding and links inserted by me]:

    “The discovery of the individual was one of the most important cultural [*ahem*] developments in the years between 1050 and 1200. It was not confined to any one group of thinkers. Its central features may be found in different circles: a concern with self-discovery; an interest in the relations between people, and in the role of the individual within society; an assessment of people by their inner intentions rather than by their external acts. These concerns were, moreover, conscious and deliberate. ‘Know yourself’ was one of the most frequently quoted injunctions. The phenomenon which we have been studying was found in some measure in every part of urbane and intelligent society.

    “It remains to ask how much this movement contributed to the emergence of the distinctively Western view of the individual…. The continuous history of several art-forms and fields of study, which are particularly concerned with the individual, began at this time: auto-biography, psychology, the personal portrait, and satire were among them….

    “The years between 1050 and 1200 must be seen…as a turning-point in the history of Christian devotion. There developed a new pattern of interior piety, with a growing sensitivity, marked by personal love for the crucified Lord and an easy and free-flowing meditation on the life and passion of Christ….

    “The word ‘individual’ did not, in the twelfth century, have the same meaning as it does today. The nearest equivalents were *individuum*, *individualis*, and *singularis*, but these terms belonged to logic rather than to human relations….

    “The age had, however, other words to express its interest in personality. We hear a great deal of ‘the self’, not expressed indeed in that abstract way, but in such terms as ‘knowing oneself’, ‘descending into oneself’, or ‘considering oneself’. Another common term was *anima*, which was used, ambiguously in our eyes, for both the spiritual identity (‘soul’) of a man and his directing intelligence (‘mind’). Yet another was ‘the inner man’, a phrase found in Otloh of Saint Emmeram and Guibert of Nogent, who spoke also of the ‘inner mystery’. Their vocabulary, while it was not the same as ours, was therefore rich in terms suited to express the ideas of self-discovery and self-exploration.

    “Know Yourself

    “Self-knowledge was one of the dominant themes of the age…. These writers all insisted on self-knowledge as fundamental. Thus Bernard wrote to Pope Eugenius, a fellow-Cistercian, about 1150: ‘Begin by considering yourself — no, rather, end by that….For you, you are the first; you are also the last.’ So did Aelred of Rievaulx: ‘How much does a man know, if he does not know himself?’ The Cistercian school was not the only one to attach such a value to self-knowledge. About 1108 Guibert of Nogent began his history of the Crusade with a modern-sounding reflection about the difficulty of determining motive:

    “‘It is hardly surprising if we make mistakes in narrating the actions of other people, when we cannot express in words even our own thoughts and deeds; in fact, we can hardly sort them out in our own minds. It is useless to talk about intentions, which, as we know, are often so concealed as scarcely to be discernible to the understanding of the inner man.’

    “Self-knowledge, then, was a generally popular ideal.”

    _____

    There seem to be two broad sociobiological/genocultural packages when it comes to average nepotistic vs. not-so-nepotistic altruistic behaviors in human populations — these are not binary opposites, but rather the ends of some sort of continuum of behavioral traits [click on table for LARGER view]:

    Nepotistic vs. not-so-nepotistic

    The common thread running through the not-so-nepotistic groups of today (primarily northwest europeans) is a long history of outbreeding (i.e. avoiding close matings, like cousin marriage). (and a long history of manorialism. yes, i WILL start my series on medieval manorialism soon!) while individualism and guilt cultures may have been present in northern europe in paleolithic or even mesolithic populations, these behavioral traits and mindsets were definitely not present in the pre-christian germanic, british, or irish populations of late antiquity. those populations were very much all about clans and kindreds, feuding and honor, shame, and group consensus. guilt/individualistic cultures (i.e. not-so-nepostic societies) can come and go depending at least partly on long-term mating patterns. human evolution can be recent as well as aeons old.

    The individualistic guilt-culture of northwest (“core”) europeans today came into existence thanks to their extensive outbreeding during the medieval period (…and the manorialism). the outbreeding started in earnest in the 800s (at least in northern france) and, as we saw above, by 1050-1100 thoughts on individualis began to stir. around the same time, communes appeared in northern italy and parts of france — civic societies. violence rates begin to fall in the 1200s, especially in more outbred populations, i would argue (guess!) because the impulsive violence related to clan feuding was no longer being selected for.

    By the 1300-1400s, after an additional couple hundred years of outbreeding, the renaissance was in full swing due to the “wikification” of northern european society — i.e. that nw europeans now possessed a set of behavioral traits that drove them to work cooperatively with non-relatives — to share openly knowledge and ideas and labor in reciprocally altruistic ways. the enlightenment? well, that was just the full flowering of The Outbreeding Project — an explosion of these not-so-nepotistic behavioral traits that had been selected for over the preceding 800 to 900 years. individualism? universalism? liberal democracy? tolerance? reason? skepticism? coffeehouses? the age of enlightenment IS what core europeans are all about! hurray! (^_^) the Project and its effects are ongoing today.

    It could be argued that the fact that certain mating patterns seem to go together with certain societal types is just a coincidence — or that it’s the societal type that affects or dictates the mating patterns. for example, i said in my recent post on shame and guilt in ancient greece that:

    “shame cultures are all tied up with honor — especially family honor. japan — with its meiwaku and seppuku — is the classic example of a shame culture, but china with its confucian filial piety is not far behind. the arabized populations are definitely shame cultures with their honor killings and all their talk of respect. even european mediterranean societies are arguably more honor-shame cultures than guilt cultures [pdf].

    “if you’ve been reading this blog for any amount of time, you’ll recognize all of those shame cultures as having had long histories of inbreeding: maternal cousin marriage was traditionally very common in east asia (here’re japan and china); paternal cousin marriage is still going strong in the arabized world; and cousin marriage was prevelant in the mediterranean up until very recently (here’s italy, for example).”

    Perhaps, you say, the causal direction is that nepotistic, clannish shame-cultures somehow promote close matings (cousin marriage or whatever). well, undoubtedly there are reinforcing feedback loops here, but the upshot is that both ancient greece and medieval-modern europe clearly illustrate that the mating patterns come first. (possibly ancient rome, too, but i’ll come back to that another day.) the pre-christian northern european societies were clannish shame-cultures until after the populations switched to outbreeding (avoiding cousin marriage) in the early medieval period. late archaic-early classical greek society was rather (a bit borderline) universalistic, individualistic [pg. 160+] and guilt-based until after they began to marry their cousins with greater frequency (at least in classical athens). the not-so-nepotistic guilt-culture we see now in northwest european populations is particularly resilient, i think, because the outbreeding has been carried out for a particularly long time (since at least the 800s) and thanks to the complementary selection pressures of the medieval manor system (which ancient greece lacked), but it did not exist before the early medieval period.

    So, the direction of causation seems to be: (long-term) mating patterns –> societal type (nepotistic vs. not-so-nepotistic).


    Source date (UTC): 2015-02-18 02:33:00 UTC

  • WORKING 18 HOUR DAYS FOR WEEKS ON END? There was a time when I could work 110-12

    WORKING 18 HOUR DAYS FOR WEEKS ON END?

    There was a time when I could work 110-120 hours a week for three or four months at a time. Of course I ended up in the hospital five times doing it – your body just sort of runs out of things like electrolytes. 🙂

    But I”m on my third week right now, and, well, you know….. I”m still able to work most people into the ground, but it’s a lot harder on me than it was twenty years ago. I get really tired. 🙂

    On the other hand, there is NOTHING like a startup. It’s awesome. You are bringing a vision to life.

    FINAL STRETCH

    Oversing is still very buggy right now – because it’s a very big application – but we are very close now. (You should have seen our lists at Msft back in the day.) We have to implement one more very important feature (the accounting cycle processing), and then the core of the application is done. The rest is just going through the whole thing and crushing the bug count. Then, after that, it’s just adding features as we want to. And there are a lot of features in the road map that we want to add.

    PLATFORMS

    One thing that has changed in the enterprise software business, is that it’s merged with the open source business – you need to work as a platform and integrate with other systems openly, so that others can do work with it. Because now, people tend to select not best of breed PRODUCTS, but best of breed FEATURES, and combine features of different products into their OWN version of a product.

    And in pursuit of the platform business, one of our design decisions was to mimic the WordPress hook architecture. That means that it’s pretty easy to create plugins for our platform, and just ‘hook’ into events in it. Conversely, it means that if you want to use plugins you need your own instance. And that’s where people start spending money: customization and integration. But they don’t spend it on the product itself.

    MAKING IT IMPOSSIBLE FOR COMPETITORS

    The other thing is that (as Atlassian has demonstrated) if you make the product something that a reasonably intelligent person can configure without your help, and cheap enough that they can buy with a credit card, then you can make it impossible for previous generations of software vendors to compete – the cost of sales is just too high for them. I mean, Atlassian starts out getting as little as $4 a month per user, and just incrementally gets that up to $10 or more with additional features.

    So our strategy with Oversing was to make it broadly useful as a general business application for managing human capital – not just for services businesses. That means we have a larger pool of people to pull from in any given business that adopts our software – not just the developers, help desk, and product management people.

    We will see what the market says. It will take us two or three years longer to bring about the full vision. But I suspect that we’ve come pretty close to hitting the mark.

    More later….

    tired….


    Source date (UTC): 2015-02-13 17:04:00 UTC