Theme: Agency

  • Curt Doolittle updated his status. THREE AXIS OF COGNITIVE SPECIATION (core conc

    Curt Doolittle updated his status.

    THREE AXIS OF COGNITIVE SPECIATION
    (core concept that simplifies propertarianism)

    There are only so many evolutionary venues available for human speciation given our adaptation after the development of language is largely cognitive:

    (a) neoteny(or its reversal) (b) gender dimorphism (or its reversal)

    Now, dimorphism generally refers to externally visible structural differences, however we have significant internal structural differences (neurological) as well as structural differences in neurochemistry (velocity and incentives).

    Ideal human adaptivity requires increasing neoteny, and increasing dimorphism (specialization).

    So some groups are more evolutionarily advanced than others.

    We must then adapt to our in group distributions. That produces cultural and strategic specialization.

    But in the end we are largely varying and SPECIATING along the gender, neotonic, and distributional axis.

    x—> gender
    y—> neoteny
    z—> distribution

    <Truth/Moral <— superiority—-inferiority—>False/Immoral>


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-17 15:55:48 UTC

  • THREE AXIS OF COGNITIVE SPECIATION (core concept that simplifies propertarianism

    THREE AXIS OF COGNITIVE SPECIATION

    (core concept that simplifies propertarianism)

    There are only so many evolutionary venues available for human speciation given our adaptation after the development of language is largely cognitive:

    (a) neoteny(or its reversal) (b) gender dimorphism (or its reversal)

    Now, dimorphism generally refers to externally visible structural differences, however we have significant internal structural differences (neurological) as well as structural differences in neurochemistry (velocity and incentives).

    Ideal human adaptivity requires increasing neoteny, and increasing dimorphism (specialization).

    So some groups are more evolutionarily advanced than others.

    We must then adapt to our in group distributions. That produces cultural and strategic specialization.

    But in the end we are largely varying and SPECIATING along the gender, neotonic, and distributional axis.

    x—> gender

    y—> neoteny

    z—> distribution

    <Truth/Moral <— superiority—-inferiority—>False/Immoral>


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-17 11:55:00 UTC

  • “The nanny state is discouraged, even prevented, from raising adults. They need

    —“The nanny state is discouraged, even prevented, from raising adults. They need lifelong children who need their parenting.”— A Friend


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-17 10:41:00 UTC

  • THE STRATEGIC VALUE OF LATENESS. (ON PUTIN BEING LATE) Believe it or not, it is

    THE STRATEGIC VALUE OF LATENESS.

    (ON PUTIN BEING LATE)

    Believe it or not, it is the single best operational security tactic you can make, because very few if any of us can remain on high stress alert for an hour without demonstrating avoidance behavior.

    It also guarrantees your time is not wasted by the organizers and staff of the meeting.

    It also guarantees that you have people’s attention when you arrive.

    It also exhausts peoples excitement in hoping to get your attention.

    It also buys you time to rehearse key points with your team without planning a session to rehearse key points with your team. I always role play meetings with staff before hand.

    I have practiced strategic lateness and voting with my feet if a meeting is ineffectual my whole life.

    While it does demonstrate power (value), its not an ego thing. It’s just what you learn after years of observation of people’s behavior.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-16 21:41:00 UTC

  • Curt Doolittle updated his status. ARETÉ: ARYAN ETHICS: “THAT MAN MAY SURPASS H

    Curt Doolittle updated his status.

    ARETÉ: ARYAN ETHICS: “THAT MAN MAY SURPASS HIMSELF”
    by Daniel Gurpide
    (wonderful. gave me chills)

    The tragic urge to self-overcoming (transcendence) may be identified as the only way man and his presence in the world may be ennobled, and this was the primary element of traditional Aryan ethics. It is what the ancient Greeks called areté, the quest for excellence: the act of living up to one’s full potential.

    For Aristotle, the doctrine of areté included the following virtues: andreia (courage), dikaiosyne (justice), and sophrosyne (self-restraint). In Greek mythology, Sophrosyne was a Greek goddess. She was the spirit of moderation, self-control, temperance, restraint, and discretion. She was considered to be one of the good spirits that escaped from Pandora’s box and fled to Olympus after Pandora opened the lid. The complex meaning of sophrosyne, so important to the ancients, is very difficult to convey in English. It is perhaps best expressed by the two most famous sayings of the Oracle of Delphi: ‘nothing in excess’ and ‘know thyself.’

    Since Propertarianism recovers and transfigures the founding myths of Indo-European culture, when it comes to specifying its particular tenets such features as the following might be listed: an eminently aristocratic conception of the human individual; the importance of honour (‘shame’ rather than ‘sin’); a heroic attitude towards life’s challenges; the exaltation and sacralisation of the world, beauty, the body, strength, and health; the rejection of any ‘worlds beyond’; and the inseparability of morality and aesthetics.

    The highest value for an Aryan ethics undoubtedly lies not in a form of ‘justice’ whose purpose is essentially interpreted as flattening the social order in the name of equality, but in all that may allow man to surpass himself. Since to consider the implications of life’s basic framework as unjust would be palpably absurd, such classic antitheses as noble vs. base, courageous vs. cowardly, honourable vs. dishonourable, beautiful vs. deformed, sick vs. healthy come to replace the antitheses operative in a morality based on the concept of sin: good vs. evil, humble vs. vainglorious, submissive vs. proud, weak vs. arrogant, modest vs. boastful.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-15 13:08:49 UTC

  • I was taught a very simple reduction: —“Aryan man seeks to leave the world imp

    I was taught a very simple reduction:

    —“Aryan man seeks to leave the world improved for having lived in it, and to be remembered for it – and therefore immortal.”—


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-15 10:01:00 UTC

  • ARETÉ: ARYAN ETHICS: “THAT MAN MAY SURPASS HIMSELF” by Daniel Gurpide (wonderful

    ARETÉ: ARYAN ETHICS: “THAT MAN MAY SURPASS HIMSELF”

    by Daniel Gurpide

    (wonderful. gave me chills)

    The tragic urge to self-overcoming (transcendence) may be identified as the only way man and his presence in the world may be ennobled, and this was the primary element of traditional Aryan ethics. It is what the ancient Greeks called areté, the quest for excellence: the act of living up to one’s full potential.

    For Aristotle, the doctrine of areté included the following virtues: andreia (courage), dikaiosyne (justice), and sophrosyne (self-restraint). In Greek mythology, Sophrosyne was a Greek goddess. She was the spirit of moderation, self-control, temperance, restraint, and discretion. She was considered to be one of the good spirits that escaped from Pandora’s box and fled to Olympus after Pandora opened the lid. The complex meaning of sophrosyne, so important to the ancients, is very difficult to convey in English. It is perhaps best expressed by the two most famous sayings of the Oracle of Delphi: ‘nothing in excess’ and ‘know thyself.’

    Since Propertarianism recovers and transfigures the founding myths of Indo-European culture, when it comes to specifying its particular tenets such features as the following might be listed: an eminently aristocratic conception of the human individual; the importance of honour (‘shame’ rather than ‘sin’); a heroic attitude towards life’s challenges; the exaltation and sacralisation of the world, beauty, the body, strength, and health; the rejection of any ‘worlds beyond’; and the inseparability of morality and aesthetics.

    The highest value for an Aryan ethics undoubtedly lies not in a form of ‘justice’ whose purpose is essentially interpreted as flattening the social order in the name of equality, but in all that may allow man to surpass himself. Since to consider the implications of life’s basic framework as unjust would be palpably absurd, such classic antitheses as noble vs. base, courageous vs. cowardly, honourable vs. dishonourable, beautiful vs. deformed, sick vs. healthy come to replace the antitheses operative in a morality based on the concept of sin: good vs. evil, humble vs. vainglorious, submissive vs. proud, weak vs. arrogant, modest vs. boastful.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-15 09:08:00 UTC

  • Areté: Aryan Ethics: “that Man May Surpass Himself”

    ARETÉ: ARYAN ETHICS: “THAT MAN MAY SURPASS HIMSELF” by Daniel Gurpide (wonderful. gave me chills) The tragic urge to self-overcoming (transcendence) may be identified as the only way man and his presence in the world may be ennobled, and this was the primary element of traditional Aryan ethics. It is what the ancient Greeks called areté, the quest for excellence: the act of living up to one’s full potential. For Aristotle, the doctrine of areté included the following virtues: andreia (courage), dikaiosyne (justice), and sophrosyne (self-restraint). In Greek mythology, Sophrosyne was a Greek goddess. She was the spirit of moderation, self-control, temperance, restraint, and discretion. She was considered to be one of the good spirits that escaped from Pandora’s box and fled to Olympus after Pandora opened the lid. The complex meaning of sophrosyne, so important to the ancients, is very difficult to convey in English. It is perhaps best expressed by the two most famous sayings of the Oracle of Delphi: ‘nothing in excess’ and ‘know thyself.’ Since Propertarianism recovers and transfigures the founding myths of Indo-European culture, when it comes to specifying its particular tenets such features as the following might be listed: an eminently aristocratic conception of the human individual; the importance of honour (‘shame’ rather than ‘sin’); a heroic attitude towards life’s challenges; the exaltation and sacralisation of the world, beauty, the body, strength, and health; the rejection of any ‘worlds beyond’; and the inseparability of morality and aesthetics. The highest value for an Aryan ethics undoubtedly lies not in a form of ‘justice’ whose purpose is essentially interpreted as flattening the social order in the name of equality, but in all that may allow man to surpass himself. Since to consider the implications of life’s basic framework as unjust would be palpably absurd, such classic antitheses as noble vs. base, courageous vs. cowardly, honourable vs. dishonourable, beautiful vs. deformed, sick vs. healthy come to replace the antitheses operative in a morality based on the concept of sin: good vs. evil, humble vs. vainglorious, submissive vs. proud, weak vs. arrogant, modest vs. boastful.

  • Areté: Aryan Ethics: “that Man May Surpass Himself”

    ARETÉ: ARYAN ETHICS: “THAT MAN MAY SURPASS HIMSELF” by Daniel Gurpide (wonderful. gave me chills) The tragic urge to self-overcoming (transcendence) may be identified as the only way man and his presence in the world may be ennobled, and this was the primary element of traditional Aryan ethics. It is what the ancient Greeks called areté, the quest for excellence: the act of living up to one’s full potential. For Aristotle, the doctrine of areté included the following virtues: andreia (courage), dikaiosyne (justice), and sophrosyne (self-restraint). In Greek mythology, Sophrosyne was a Greek goddess. She was the spirit of moderation, self-control, temperance, restraint, and discretion. She was considered to be one of the good spirits that escaped from Pandora’s box and fled to Olympus after Pandora opened the lid. The complex meaning of sophrosyne, so important to the ancients, is very difficult to convey in English. It is perhaps best expressed by the two most famous sayings of the Oracle of Delphi: ‘nothing in excess’ and ‘know thyself.’ Since Propertarianism recovers and transfigures the founding myths of Indo-European culture, when it comes to specifying its particular tenets such features as the following might be listed: an eminently aristocratic conception of the human individual; the importance of honour (‘shame’ rather than ‘sin’); a heroic attitude towards life’s challenges; the exaltation and sacralisation of the world, beauty, the body, strength, and health; the rejection of any ‘worlds beyond’; and the inseparability of morality and aesthetics. The highest value for an Aryan ethics undoubtedly lies not in a form of ‘justice’ whose purpose is essentially interpreted as flattening the social order in the name of equality, but in all that may allow man to surpass himself. Since to consider the implications of life’s basic framework as unjust would be palpably absurd, such classic antitheses as noble vs. base, courageous vs. cowardly, honourable vs. dishonourable, beautiful vs. deformed, sick vs. healthy come to replace the antitheses operative in a morality based on the concept of sin: good vs. evil, humble vs. vainglorious, submissive vs. proud, weak vs. arrogant, modest vs. boastful.

  • Curt Doolittle updated his status. FULFILLING YOUR NEEDS The reason you want a n

    Curt Doolittle updated his status.

    FULFILLING YOUR NEEDS
    The reason you want a narrative and an ideology is so that you can feel in a group and in control in a world where you have none. But the only control you have is over your understanding of that world and your interpretation of that world. So narratives are inhibitors not enablers.

    Propertarianism (Natural Law) will absolutely positively provide you with a consistent, correspondent, and coherent science, grammar, and logic with which to understand describe and interact with the world.

    Stoicism (Self authoring in goals and virtues) will absolutely positively provide you with the mindfulness to control your interpretation of that world.

    Restoration of our historical civilization to sovereignty, reciprocity, duty, truth, and markets in all aspects of life will allow us to achieve our individual interests within the limits of available knowledge and resources, as well as defend ourselves from primitive competitors, and if necessary conquer and govern them, and if left no other choice, to eliminate them.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-14 16:02:44 UTC