Theme: Measurement

  • Karl Brooks wins the Propertarian smart of the month award. 🙂 —– Experience

    Karl Brooks wins the Propertarian smart of the month award. 🙂

    —–

    Experience – Apprehending sensory or mental events.

    Thinking – The mental process of reviewing what one knows and integrating that knowledge to create new knowledge or to calculate a probable result.

    Reasoning – Using heuristics to aid thinking.

    Rationalism – The belief that deductive reasoning, starting from either a priori intuitive knowledge or an established premise, is the optimum heuristic for gaining new knowledge.

    Scientific Descriptions – Descriptions of results obtained through the operations known as the scientific method.

    Operational Definitions – Defining discreet actions and results, labeling them with a unique name, and arranging them in a specific order. A cumulative process where each ordered set is also labeled with a unique name. Used to assemble complex constructions which demonstrate an empirically constructed truth, or identify component failure leading to falsification, of a specific ordered set.

    Analytic Rationalism – Existence exists. (Ok, that’s just a stab at it. Don’t know about this one, I know the difference between and analytic and synthetic proposition, but have not come across the term used with rationalism).

    Formal Logic – A specific language construction that allows inferences to be followed. The two branches I know of are syllogistic and symbolic. Here’s a syllogism I wrote about 10 years ago:

    God is truth

    Truth is love

    God is love.

    You’re scientism friends with love that one (heh)!

    Symbolic logic is the use of variables:

    A = B

    B = C

    A = C.

    Mathematics – Synthetic propositions expressed in symbolic logic.

    Arithmetic – Calculations using uniquely named components that have physical correspondence (real numbers).

    Naming – Unique identifying label.

    —-

    Karl Brooks (Rational numbers, not real numbers).


    Source date (UTC): 2014-08-04 04:37:00 UTC

  • IDEOLOGICAL SUPPLY LINES: A FRAMEWORK IS A NECESSARY SOLUTION TO LOGISTICS You s

    IDEOLOGICAL SUPPLY LINES: A FRAMEWORK IS A NECESSARY SOLUTION TO LOGISTICS

    You see I’m building an entire philosophical frame. From truth, metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, politics, and aesthetics, as well as the moral arguments for and against. And I’m giving people moral authority to put it into action.

    This is what our people need. And once they have it they will work autonomously to develop their own narratives, applications and arguments.

    I am very excited. It’s been a long journey.

    Let a thousand flowers bloom… 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-31 09:22:00 UTC

  • “SHOW ME” : A NICE TERM FOR “AN EXISTENCE PROOF” (more important than is obvious

    “SHOW ME” : A NICE TERM FOR “AN EXISTENCE PROOF”

    (more important than is obvious)

    1 – Show me the money. (Contract) Money as information.

    2 – Show me the property. (Morality) Property as information.

    3 – Show me the energy (Physics) Energy as information.

    4 – Show me the information. (Logic) Decidability as determined by information.

    The problem with apriorism is its analogistic: argument by syllogism. The problem with analytic philosophy: argument by sets. The virtue of operational philosophy: argument by information.

    ***Show me the information***

    (Getting very close on this one now. I can’t make it ring true for everyone yet, but I am getting pretty close. It will come to me.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-31 04:58:00 UTC

  • PROPERTARIANISM: DECIDABILITY VIA CALCULABILITY If moral a proposition can be ex

    PROPERTARIANISM: DECIDABILITY VIA CALCULABILITY

    If moral a proposition can be expressed in propertarian terms, the matter is metaphysically extant, and free of loading. It is also rationally decidable.

    This is an incredibly cool thing if you’re a philosopher. 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-31 04:17:00 UTC

  • I UNDERSTAND HOW THEY HAVE DONE IT – OVERLOADING (important sketch) A puzzle tha

    I UNDERSTAND HOW THEY HAVE DONE IT – OVERLOADING

    (important sketch)

    A puzzle that doesn’t fit together, but consists of many moral statements. Like any puzzle we heuristically fill in the gaps because we want to justify the moral statements – rather than object to the gaps because of illogical or immoral statements.

    It’s freaking genius. It’s brilliant. You just need to be a little better at verbal storytelling and it’s performing ‘suggestion’ on a grand scale. You need to be able to lie in greater numbers, and more frequently, then we can correct for the lies.

    They start with a metaphysical intuition to lie, and just use many, many, micro-narratives to overload us. Like a massive organized form of psychopathy.

    We are the most *objectively* moral people who most aggressively defend teh commons, and so we are vulnerable to overloading the same way we are programmable by religious narratives and myths. If we were not programmable by myths and religious narratives we would not be programmable by norms.

    Likewise, conservatives win elections using overloading, and so do progressives. Rathe than reason. Because reason is frail, but intuition is extremely powerful. They overload our reason while over-saturating our intuition.

    It’s not that he who is right wins. It’s he who talks most.

    Medial, like the church, is a vehicle for programming.

    And they programmed us with every pseudoscience possible.

    They created religion – the first lie. Then they created Pseudoscience – the second great system of lies.

    They used the same technique both times.

    LAW AND DEFENSE ARE DIFFERENT FROM LYING AND ADVOCACY

    Our system is purely defensive. We prevent against lies, leaving only truth. We prevent against free riding, leaving only production. The common law is not a form of advocacy, it is a form of defense. Liberty is not a commandment it’s a defense against creating tyrants, and it leaves freedom to innovate behind. Science is not a form of advocacy, it’s a form of correcting our interpretations of the world, and it leaves techniques and technology behind. Conservatism is not a means of advocacy, it’s scientific: if it works we will adopt it, but do not forcibly adopt that which hasn’t been demonstrated to work. We don’t tell people what to do, we tell people what not to do:

    It’s the job of the church (public intellectuals) to advocate for private action, but advocacy for public action is theft, and destroys the civic society.

    Political advocacy is lying. In fact, isn’t all political speech an attempted theft?

    The Nazarene was wrong, and Aethelred was right: you don’t do unto others as you would have done unto you. You do not unto others as they would not have done unto them.

    We had it right: church/academy/intelligentsia for advocacy, state for resolution of disputes, militia for prevention of power accumulation, and the civic society for action. There are no unemployed in the civic society. There is always civic work to be done.

    All so that we could steal the state from the aristocracy and use it to improve our economic standing, by using the state and the military to improve it. We opened Pandora’s box. And the new world funded it.

    ADVOCACY IS AGGRESSION, BECAUSE POSITIVE ACTION BY THE STATE CAN ONLY BE VIA AGGRESSION.

    We were the people who told the truth. We were conquered by the people who lied. For the N’th time.

    F__k.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-30 01:17:00 UTC

  • NEXT PROBLEM TO SOLVE: TABLE OF COMPARATIVE TRUTH So, now I have to work on comp

    NEXT PROBLEM TO SOLVE: TABLE OF COMPARATIVE TRUTH

    So, now I have to work on comparative “truth” in each civilization, by revisiting huntington and Fukuyama. But today, I’m spending the day with Macdonald again. Because while he has outlined the jewish strategy, I still must outline the anglo, german, and maybe islamic and Chinese strategies. I’d originally intended to tell the tale of the English, German and Jewish ‘cities’ but maybe I have to broaden it?

    Or do I just focus on the three important to the west, and give light treatment to the others. Strangely, because I studied chinese history in College, and because its an almost entirely military culture, I understand the Chinese strategy pretty clearly. Islam is fairly easy because it consists so thoroughly of a limited set of principles, tribalism, and inbreeding. I guess, german is the most simple. Because duty is not a hard concept to get across. It’s also martial.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-29 04:15:00 UTC

  • Knowing is an Experience, Not an Action

    [K]nowing is an experience. Constructing an existence, logical, or mathematical, proof is an action. We can demonstrate them. That is not to say that they are true, it is to say that they are proofs. If we have constructed proofs, we may err, but it is very hard to lie. And even if one does, err, we need not hold him accountable for his error. Speaking truthfully, constructing a proof, and possessing the ultimate truth are very different things. I can however speak truthfully, and I can construct an existence proof, and that is the most that I can do. I can know those things even if I cannot know if I possess the truth. So what does that do for me? I doesn’t tell me anything about whether I possess the ultimate truth, but it does allow me to speak truthfully to the best of my ability – and that is all that we can ask of anyone. Because it is all that is possible for anyone. Conversely, we must ask it of anyone who seeks to place an argument into the commons the result of which would subject others to harm.

  • Knowing is an Experience, Not an Action

    [K]nowing is an experience. Constructing an existence, logical, or mathematical, proof is an action. We can demonstrate them. That is not to say that they are true, it is to say that they are proofs. If we have constructed proofs, we may err, but it is very hard to lie. And even if one does, err, we need not hold him accountable for his error. Speaking truthfully, constructing a proof, and possessing the ultimate truth are very different things. I can however speak truthfully, and I can construct an existence proof, and that is the most that I can do. I can know those things even if I cannot know if I possess the truth. So what does that do for me? I doesn’t tell me anything about whether I possess the ultimate truth, but it does allow me to speak truthfully to the best of my ability – and that is all that we can ask of anyone. Because it is all that is possible for anyone. Conversely, we must ask it of anyone who seeks to place an argument into the commons the result of which would subject others to harm.

  • Truth Telling (Witness).

    [N]ow, let us say in scenario (a) you observe a traffic accident. In scenario (b) you are standing outside of a building and hear noises inside. In scenario (c) you report on a stress test you performed. In scenario (d) you propose a theory of the behavior of a set of gasses under pressure. In scenario (e) you propose a solution the explanation of a particular trade cycle. Giving witness in these cases, and in all cases, requires giving a sequential record of OBSERVATIONS, containing the information observed, without the addition of imaginary and hypothetical content. Now, why is it that we rely upon all sorts of physical **instrumentation**, to extend our perception, improve our memory, reduce that which we cannot perceive to an analogy to experience which is open to perception and **comparison**? Why is it that we rely upon all sorts of conceptual **instrumentation** to test our own thoughts and perceptions: experience, reason, math, and logic? Because our memories are reconstructed from fragments every time, and because it is extremely difficult for us to compartmentalize memories – our minds evolved to do just the opposite, which is why we can construct generalizations of similar phenomenon much better than we can (like chimps) remember past events. So truthful testimony is recitation of observation of differences which we call measures in terms which if repeated wold lead to the same conclusion. In other words, the operationalists in all fields failed, (Poincaré being first, Brouwer, Bridgman, Mises being the first in each specialty) for the same reason that I am having a bit of difficulty making this very important point: that we do not know if you speak the truth, and you do not know if you speak the truth, if you cannot convey your argument as an extant (real and possible) construction of physical and mental operations, producing changes (or not) in state according to independent scales (measures), which if repeated would produce the same result. Meaning: that operationalism is a MORAL AND ETHICAL constraint. And the assumption of moral and ethical conduct in fields of inquiry rapidly expanding beyond human scale, was an artifact of the past. Poincare, Brouwer, Bridgman and Mises were all trying to express in necessary terms that which was ethical and moral. Like ‘free speech’ at human scale (where the cost of speaking and publishing are high) the threat only emerged when the population involved and the problems involved expanded such that ‘honor’ (threat of outcast) was not sufficient a moral boundary. The same is true for political speech in mass market period after 1870, and accelerated with radio, television, and the internet: honor has no operational meaning because there is no peer group to ostracize anyone using norms. Instead, at scale, just as we require laws at scale, and the market at scale, or we require relativity at scale when the speed of light matters to the calculation versus the instantaneous perceptions we make use of at Newtonian scale, our political institutions, and moral and ethical institutions, lagged behind our technological means of publishing falsehoods. [W]e educated folk with our high mindedness (smart people bias) argue that the market corrects the truth over time. But this isn’t demonstrably true – and we have a lot of data to prove it. That is because negative information and lies spread faster than positive information and truths. The reason is that negative information that we can cheat with spreads faster than positive information that prevents us from cheating. It is much more expensive and lower incentive to produce truths and falsehoods because they are cheaper to construct and distribute faster. So just as in the market for goods and services, we see market failure, in the market for truth and fallacy we see market failure. People in both the market for goods and services and the market for truth and fallacy, commit fraud for personal gain. The small scale response, the human scale response (solution), is to rely upon an authority to set rules. The catallatic response (solution) is to define the conceptual commons as a community property, to which all of us are owners, and allow all individuals to bring suit against what we believe to be fraud. This does not require people who bear witness to speak the truth, which as we know from both popper and our examples above, is impossible, because causal density in all observations is a long exhausting chain. But it requires that we bear good witness. We cannot be held accountable for err if we bear true witness. If I have a sport camera and record an accident, that does not mean it is ‘true’ in the sense that all the causal information is present. It means that I can bear witness with it. And, that is speaking truthfully. (ALSO: I think it might be obvious now how theorizing can be intentionally performed as a means of distorting the truth, and furthermore for the purpose of outright lying. We cannot assume that the scientist much less the ordinary man, and certainly less, those who seek power to alter the state of affairs by other than market means, are honest. This is a fallacy that is embedded in the act of argument: we assume the other person is honest. Because in history, the only reason not to stick a pointy metal object into someone, is when, like family members, they are honest with you. ) Now, I try to refrain from throwing out my theory until I can support it pretty thoroughly. But at this point, it should be pretty clear from the above paragraphs that I have pretty much put the problem of the 20th century to bed. I didn’t realize the severity of impact that the cosmopolitans had on western civilization precisely because we did not understand the uniqueness of our truth-telling culture, or that we assume aristocratic truth from others, and that those who sought status in our culture also had to demonstrate aristocratic truth. But one can blame one’s aggressors (germans, french, jews) or one can blame one’s self (anglos) for failing to look into the mirror and solve the problem. I solved the problem. Too late maybe. But I solved it.

  • Truth Telling (Witness).

    [N]ow, let us say in scenario (a) you observe a traffic accident. In scenario (b) you are standing outside of a building and hear noises inside. In scenario (c) you report on a stress test you performed. In scenario (d) you propose a theory of the behavior of a set of gasses under pressure. In scenario (e) you propose a solution the explanation of a particular trade cycle. Giving witness in these cases, and in all cases, requires giving a sequential record of OBSERVATIONS, containing the information observed, without the addition of imaginary and hypothetical content. Now, why is it that we rely upon all sorts of physical **instrumentation**, to extend our perception, improve our memory, reduce that which we cannot perceive to an analogy to experience which is open to perception and **comparison**? Why is it that we rely upon all sorts of conceptual **instrumentation** to test our own thoughts and perceptions: experience, reason, math, and logic? Because our memories are reconstructed from fragments every time, and because it is extremely difficult for us to compartmentalize memories – our minds evolved to do just the opposite, which is why we can construct generalizations of similar phenomenon much better than we can (like chimps) remember past events. So truthful testimony is recitation of observation of differences which we call measures in terms which if repeated wold lead to the same conclusion. In other words, the operationalists in all fields failed, (Poincaré being first, Brouwer, Bridgman, Mises being the first in each specialty) for the same reason that I am having a bit of difficulty making this very important point: that we do not know if you speak the truth, and you do not know if you speak the truth, if you cannot convey your argument as an extant (real and possible) construction of physical and mental operations, producing changes (or not) in state according to independent scales (measures), which if repeated would produce the same result. Meaning: that operationalism is a MORAL AND ETHICAL constraint. And the assumption of moral and ethical conduct in fields of inquiry rapidly expanding beyond human scale, was an artifact of the past. Poincare, Brouwer, Bridgman and Mises were all trying to express in necessary terms that which was ethical and moral. Like ‘free speech’ at human scale (where the cost of speaking and publishing are high) the threat only emerged when the population involved and the problems involved expanded such that ‘honor’ (threat of outcast) was not sufficient a moral boundary. The same is true for political speech in mass market period after 1870, and accelerated with radio, television, and the internet: honor has no operational meaning because there is no peer group to ostracize anyone using norms. Instead, at scale, just as we require laws at scale, and the market at scale, or we require relativity at scale when the speed of light matters to the calculation versus the instantaneous perceptions we make use of at Newtonian scale, our political institutions, and moral and ethical institutions, lagged behind our technological means of publishing falsehoods. [W]e educated folk with our high mindedness (smart people bias) argue that the market corrects the truth over time. But this isn’t demonstrably true – and we have a lot of data to prove it. That is because negative information and lies spread faster than positive information and truths. The reason is that negative information that we can cheat with spreads faster than positive information that prevents us from cheating. It is much more expensive and lower incentive to produce truths and falsehoods because they are cheaper to construct and distribute faster. So just as in the market for goods and services, we see market failure, in the market for truth and fallacy we see market failure. People in both the market for goods and services and the market for truth and fallacy, commit fraud for personal gain. The small scale response, the human scale response (solution), is to rely upon an authority to set rules. The catallatic response (solution) is to define the conceptual commons as a community property, to which all of us are owners, and allow all individuals to bring suit against what we believe to be fraud. This does not require people who bear witness to speak the truth, which as we know from both popper and our examples above, is impossible, because causal density in all observations is a long exhausting chain. But it requires that we bear good witness. We cannot be held accountable for err if we bear true witness. If I have a sport camera and record an accident, that does not mean it is ‘true’ in the sense that all the causal information is present. It means that I can bear witness with it. And, that is speaking truthfully. (ALSO: I think it might be obvious now how theorizing can be intentionally performed as a means of distorting the truth, and furthermore for the purpose of outright lying. We cannot assume that the scientist much less the ordinary man, and certainly less, those who seek power to alter the state of affairs by other than market means, are honest. This is a fallacy that is embedded in the act of argument: we assume the other person is honest. Because in history, the only reason not to stick a pointy metal object into someone, is when, like family members, they are honest with you. ) Now, I try to refrain from throwing out my theory until I can support it pretty thoroughly. But at this point, it should be pretty clear from the above paragraphs that I have pretty much put the problem of the 20th century to bed. I didn’t realize the severity of impact that the cosmopolitans had on western civilization precisely because we did not understand the uniqueness of our truth-telling culture, or that we assume aristocratic truth from others, and that those who sought status in our culture also had to demonstrate aristocratic truth. But one can blame one’s aggressors (germans, french, jews) or one can blame one’s self (anglos) for failing to look into the mirror and solve the problem. I solved the problem. Too late maybe. But I solved it.