Theme: Science

  • Occam: The simplest explanation is usually – but not always – the correct one Sa

    Occam: The simplest explanation is usually – but not always – the correct one
    Sagan: Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence
    Hitchens: What can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence
    Hume: Causes must be sufficiently able to produce the effect assigned to them
    Popper: For a theory to be considered scientific, it must be possible to disprove or refute it
    Grice’s: Address what the speaker actually meant, instead of addressing the literal meaning of what they actually said
    Hanlon: Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by incompetence or stupidity
    Doolittle: If you can’t testify to it then you can’t claim it’s true.


    Source date (UTC): 2021-03-18 16:00:32 UTC

    Original post: https://gab.com/curtd/posts/105911630730888286

  • “Sense-making” is relative (a subset) like metaphysics, and rationality is absol

    “Sense-making” is relative (a subset) like metaphysics, and rationality is absolute (a complete set) like physics. This is a problem with ambiguity of the term ‘rational’ dependent on context. Their behavior is rational – for women(subset). It is not rational for a polity(set).


    Source date (UTC): 2021-03-11 15:27:32 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1370033655175843848

    Reply addressees: @WalterIII @Nigel_Farage

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1370031786231623686

  • Small add Brandon: Given [Formal, Physical, Behavioral, Cooperative, Evolutionar

    Small add Brandon:
    Given [Formal, Physical, Behavioral, Cooperative, Evolutionary] Laws
    Reciprocity satisfies all of them
    This isn’t philosophy.
    It’s physics
    Reciprocity = Calculation (consistency with the laws of nature)
    Irreciprocity = “Error” (theft, fraud, deceit)


    Source date (UTC): 2021-03-10 20:18:33 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1369744505050705925

    Reply addressees: @ThruTheHayes @jgreenhall

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1369743362425843713

  • 7) So this is probably one of the reasons why I have an easier time isolating in

    7) So this is probably one of the reasons why I have an easier time isolating intuition (aesthetics) with facts. I started with war, history science, and art, and only then politics, economics, and law.

    And this is the education of ARISTOCRACY: Rule. Not governance, but RULE.


    Source date (UTC): 2021-03-10 19:56:53 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1369739054955257862

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1369739053948665860


    IN REPLY TO:

    Unknown author

    6) So you learn about yourself, others, your people, civilizations, and all mankind through art and art criticism BEFORE you learn about economics, and politics, and norms traditions, and values. You learn through aesthetics. And in adversarial conditions where you can’t ‘cheat’.

    Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/1369739053948665860

  • NBC “DEBRIS” Sci Fi Show Feedback Absolutely love it. Thrilled. Terrified that l

    NBC “DEBRIS” Sci Fi Show Feedback

    Absolutely love it. Thrilled. Terrified that like most ‘tv for smart folk’ this will meet an early demise.

    I can see where they are taking the metanarrative of Debris and its analysis of mankind and it’s relatively novel and brilliant. But there is a difference between a script, the reveal-mystery plot, the various arcs, the characters that walk us through it … and the directing (which is ok, other than careless cardboard cutout treatment of extras), the production (good enough), the casting (below), and the acting (adequate) – although the clone-actor in the second episode is fabulous. And the promotion. Which was non-existent. I only found out about it because Russian tech nerds were talking about streaming it. Right now Russia is producing much better Sci-Fi than the west. Why? Sci Fi is naturally heroic. The western ‘commentariat’ has gone full anti-heroic, fulfilling the postmodern threat of destroying culture from within. But enough of that:

    Usual failures that I see in Debris:

    1) Casting working-class actors for upper-middle-class roles. Compare with x-files or firefly casting of the leads. This is partly a side effect of the steady ‘lower classing’ of the television industry seeking to resonate with the wrong audience while alienating all.

    2) Overplaying personal drama. These characters aren’t that interesting. This plot device keeps production costs down, tries to develop characters external to the plot instead of in concert with the plot. Compare with Law and Order. This is not an x-files/Law-and-order context, not an Expanse or Dark Matter context.

    3) The female lead is talented but not for this role. The male lead has proven himself in the industry and he can pull off the acting easily. But the director (or the script) is overplaying the american ordinary guy archetype vs brit that makes him AND the female lead competitive with the suspension of disbelief. Besides, anyone with experience with British culture knows that brit working class are even worse(trashier), not better than the American working class. While the actors work well together they don’t ‘sell’ the brit/us conflict.

    That said (given that I was trained as an art critic) the concept will fly. My suspicion is production is so far ahead, that the mistakes I’m seeing might burn out the audience before the second season can be greenlit and the writing, costume (et all),


    Source date (UTC): 2021-03-10 19:37:14 UTC

    Original post: https://gab.com/curtd/posts/105867184311635168

  • Max Tegmark Saves Me Work… 😉

    I found a video by Max Tegmark (MIT) that explains the math behind the Grammars. Not that I’ll get anywhere by showing formulae. But his slides explain what I’m trying to get across: that the pattern (grammar) is the same at every scale of the universe – including language. I use geometry as the ‘system of commensurability’ or the ‘system of measurement’ in P-Logic, Psychology, Behavior, Sociology, Group Strategy, and Law   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QnEtNC8eFso

  • I found a video by Max Tegmark (MIT) that explains the math behind the Grammars.

    I found a video by Max Tegmark (MIT) that explains the math behind the Grammars. Not that I’ll get anywhere by showing formulae. But his slides explain what I’m trying to get across: that the pattern (grammar) is the same at every scale of the universe – including language.


    Source date (UTC): 2021-03-10 16:26:54 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1369686209774186502

  • Think of theology(empathy)-science(systematizing) differently. Dense activation(

    Think of theology(empathy)-science(systematizing) differently. Dense activation(association) now vs Sparse activation (association) time. The difference is largely in empathy but also in intelligence – particularly religiosity over time. Theology is an unfortunate side effect.


    Source date (UTC): 2021-03-09 14:46:35 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1369298576870871042

  • On Bernardo Kastrup

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lAB21FAXCDE … He’s all over the place. If all he’s saying is ‘in the mind of man, all things are measured by the body, emotions, and mind of man” then that’s fine. If he’s saying that “all understanding must be computationally reducible to some linguistic sequence – well that’s true”. If he’s saying that operational (scientific) descriptions are necessary to eliminate ignorance, error, bias, and deceit, but that those descriptions are reductions of subjective experience then that’s true. If he’s saying that we correctly observe physical local reality sufficiently to act within it, but that we use narratives to predict (imagine) from that point then that’s true.

    … He’s using the problem of explaining Qualia (Phenomenal consciousness) as a precursor to consciousness. We can explain qualia. It’s not even difficult – now. It simply takes a great deal of knowledge. And no matter how we explain it, the language is always a reduction. His examples (centipede) are distractions from the argument, not an argument.
    … So all I see after enduring this sophistry is another continental (french and german, unscientific,) attempt to grant priority to experience in order to limit adaptation to the world, vs the anglo analytic (scientific) attempt to grant priority to the world so that we continue to maximize adaptation to the world. We must understand that Abrahamic (Jewish, Christian, and Muslim) thought was a set of counter-revolutions against European reason and Persian wisdom – both of which demanded (high trust) adaptation of the individual, the group, the society, the polity, and the civilization. A counter-revolution that resisted adaptation and created dark ages, ignorance, superstition, decline, and dysgenia. And that the European restoration of Aristotelianism by the Italians and English in particular produced the French, German, Jewish then Russian and world counter-revolution against science (testimonial truth) again. So there is no difference between the French and Rousseau model, the Kantian model, the Marxist-neo-Marxist-pomo-pc/woke model, the Hindu model, and the Buddhist, and less so Confucian model. Each is a counter-revolution to resist adaptation, evolution. When it was Europeans (at least European aristocracy) alone, that discovered tort law as its first institution, and from that developed legal primacy, empirical and technological thought, market institutions, and so Europeans MOST discovered, adapted to, and applied the laws of the universe: formal, physical, cooperative(natural), and evolutionary laws. And so European civ evolved fastest in bronze, iron, and steel ages. Offset by the bronze age collapse, the Abrahamic dark ages, and now the second Abrahamic dark ages. Man does not want to pay the cost of continuous adaptation. It’s stressful. Worse, what the human mind desires is relaxed auto-association, or reasoning, or rationalizing, which are all cheap and easy (philosophizing). Science, Technology, Economics, and War require COSTS. In exchange for the gains (discounts) of ‘civilization’ we need increasing incentives to adapt. So social orders seek an equilibrium of gains and costs that are increasingly temporal (short term). This leads to every social, economic, political (bureaucratic), military, and strategic problem we ever face.
    … By the end of the first hour he’s devolving into Critique (undermining), devolving into psychologizing, moralizing, and distraction(Dennet). My work is in testifiable truth and the prosecution of the art of lying.
    … Joscha Bach is more right than Dennet. Dennet is more right than Kastrup. (I’m more right than Bach.) And as far as I know the debate is over, and philosophy is limited to the determination of choice within the limits identified by science. And all else is lying. And in Kastrup’s case, it’s lying endemic in continental civilization, because (thanks largely to the catastrophe of the french revolution), napoleon destroyed, and the world war one anti-german forces completed the destruction of the restoration of European thought in the ‘Prussian model (territorial-Sparta) leaving only the anglo (naval-athens), and the result of their conflict leaving the American (Combined Arms-Roman) with the remains of their civilization, and in doing so, opening the door for the second Abrahamic revolt against European civilization by Gould, Boaz, Freud, Marx, Frankfurt, Postmodern, PC-Woke and the surviving (almost entirely ignored, and certainly uninfluential) continental sophists.
  • On Bernardo Kastrup

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lAB21FAXCDE … He’s all over the place. If all he’s saying is ‘in the mind of man, all things are measured by the body, emotions, and mind of man” then that’s fine. If he’s saying that “all understanding must be computationally reducible to some linguistic sequence – well that’s true”. If he’s saying that operational (scientific) descriptions are necessary to eliminate ignorance, error, bias, and deceit, but that those descriptions are reductions of subjective experience then that’s true. If he’s saying that we correctly observe physical local reality sufficiently to act within it, but that we use narratives to predict (imagine) from that point then that’s true.

    … He’s using the problem of explaining Qualia (Phenomenal consciousness) as a precursor to consciousness. We can explain qualia. It’s not even difficult – now. It simply takes a great deal of knowledge. And no matter how we explain it, the language is always a reduction. His examples (centipede) are distractions from the argument, not an argument.
    … So all I see after enduring this sophistry is another continental (french and german, unscientific,) attempt to grant priority to experience in order to limit adaptation to the world, vs the anglo analytic (scientific) attempt to grant priority to the world so that we continue to maximize adaptation to the world. We must understand that Abrahamic (Jewish, Christian, and Muslim) thought was a set of counter-revolutions against European reason and Persian wisdom – both of which demanded (high trust) adaptation of the individual, the group, the society, the polity, and the civilization. A counter-revolution that resisted adaptation and created dark ages, ignorance, superstition, decline, and dysgenia. And that the European restoration of Aristotelianism by the Italians and English in particular produced the French, German, Jewish then Russian and world counter-revolution against science (testimonial truth) again. So there is no difference between the French and Rousseau model, the Kantian model, the Marxist-neo-Marxist-pomo-pc/woke model, the Hindu model, and the Buddhist, and less so Confucian model. Each is a counter-revolution to resist adaptation, evolution. When it was Europeans (at least European aristocracy) alone, that discovered tort law as its first institution, and from that developed legal primacy, empirical and technological thought, market institutions, and so Europeans MOST discovered, adapted to, and applied the laws of the universe: formal, physical, cooperative(natural), and evolutionary laws. And so European civ evolved fastest in bronze, iron, and steel ages. Offset by the bronze age collapse, the Abrahamic dark ages, and now the second Abrahamic dark ages. Man does not want to pay the cost of continuous adaptation. It’s stressful. Worse, what the human mind desires is relaxed auto-association, or reasoning, or rationalizing, which are all cheap and easy (philosophizing). Science, Technology, Economics, and War require COSTS. In exchange for the gains (discounts) of ‘civilization’ we need increasing incentives to adapt. So social orders seek an equilibrium of gains and costs that are increasingly temporal (short term). This leads to every social, economic, political (bureaucratic), military, and strategic problem we ever face.
    … By the end of the first hour he’s devolving into Critique (undermining), devolving into psychologizing, moralizing, and distraction(Dennet). My work is in testifiable truth and the prosecution of the art of lying.
    … Joscha Bach is more right than Dennet. Dennet is more right than Kastrup. (I’m more right than Bach.) And as far as I know the debate is over, and philosophy is limited to the determination of choice within the limits identified by science. And all else is lying. And in Kastrup’s case, it’s lying endemic in continental civilization, because (thanks largely to the catastrophe of the french revolution), napoleon destroyed, and the world war one anti-german forces completed the destruction of the restoration of European thought in the ‘Prussian model (territorial-Sparta) leaving only the anglo (naval-athens), and the result of their conflict leaving the American (Combined Arms-Roman) with the remains of their civilization, and in doing so, opening the door for the second Abrahamic revolt against European civilization by Gould, Boaz, Freud, Marx, Frankfurt, Postmodern, PC-Woke and the surviving (almost entirely ignored, and certainly uninfluential) continental sophists.