Theme: Science

  • IT’S SIMPLE: READ CARLYLE (MORAL), READ DOOLITTLE (SCIENTIFIC). I can’t read a C

    IT’S SIMPLE: READ CARLYLE (MORAL), READ DOOLITTLE (SCIENTIFIC).

    I can’t read a Carlyle – or any other of the conservatives for that matter. I become too frustrated trying to translate their language into something scientific or analytic to work with. But some people need meaning: stepping stones. And Carlyle provides stepping stones. Hayek’s two essays on economics as information, and his Constitution of Liberty are good stepping stones.

    You know, Mencius was intuitively right. He just couldn’t provide a solution because he didn’t, as Carlyle didn’t, as Hayek didn’t, as Hegel didn’t, as all of the historians didn’t, understand the secret of western velocity: truth, commons, and the total suppression of parasitism by institutional means.

    Propertarianism repairs truth, science, philosophy, ethics and morality, law and politics, and erases and reconstitutes both psychology and social science.

    How do I make it into a course now? Can I do that? I am not sure I am good enough. I can finish the book. But can I make a course of it? Or do I need someone else to do that at some later point in time


    Source date (UTC): 2015-09-15 09:17:00 UTC

  • THE REASONS THERE ISN’T ANYBODY OUT THERE? (re-shared to douse the flame war) 0)

    THE REASONS THERE ISN’T ANYBODY OUT THERE?

    (re-shared to douse the flame war)

    0) The universe isn’t really old enough to have confidence it’s baked more advanced civilizations. It takes a long time to bake the elements, and then longer to bake life, and longer for intelligence to evolve. On evolutionary time scales, the universe isn’t that old.

    1) Why do we think we’ve cracked the technological walnut? Why won’t it take us just as long to invent interstellar travel as it took to invent either farming, science, or the industrial revolution? Why isn’t the computational power necessary to harness the first principles of the universe a logarithmic advance over our current understanding? I mean, most of our prosperity today is the more the result of harnessing fossil fuels than of technological advancement. So why won’t it take us another half billion years to do it? (not that I think it will – but we have no way of knowing.)

    2) Out here in the spiral-suburbs its pretty peaceful despite nearly exterminating all life ever 65M years or so. But most of the universe is a very hostile place for life. Most of the starry-places are dangerous given the long period required for life-baking (evolution)

    3) Why would anyone more advanced be interested in us given the likely costs of travel? If you can travel, why go slumming? We aren’t terribly interesting.

    4) Why would anyone interested in us come here visibly and personally, instead of sending (small, fast) machines to come watch us?

    5) Its intuitively unlikely that given our rather young technology, and our inability to solve the fundamentals of the universe that advanced civilizations would communicate by the rather primitive (radiation) means that we do. I mean, smoke signals, yodels, horn blasts, and drum beats seem as silly to us as pushing radiation into the void will to others.

    6) Intelligence emerges via predators. And even though predators seek to pacify once they achieve dominance, I am having a hard time imagining a benevolent ET. I mean, if we’re less advanced, the only value one gets out of the terrible expense of interstellar travel is a planetary life system that they have to compete with us for.

    So. Shhh… Be a good child and listen.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-09-13 13:05:00 UTC

  • Funny, but a witticism not a criticism. Conservatism is scientific in process an

    Funny, but a witticism not a criticism. Conservatism is scientific in process and allegorical in language. I want to fix it


    Source date (UTC): 2015-09-11 07:19:32 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/642236012274581504

    Reply addressees: @mdavilamartinez

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/641992610094014464


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    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/641992610094014464

  • THE REASONS THERE ISN’T ANYBODY OUT THERE? 0) The universe isn’t really old enou

    THE REASONS THERE ISN’T ANYBODY OUT THERE?

    0) The universe isn’t really old enough to have confidence it’s baked more advanced civilizations. It takes a long time to bake the elements, and then longer to bake life, and longer for intelligence to evolve. On evolutionary time scales, the universe isn’t that old.

    1) Why do we think we’ve cracked the technological walnut? Why won’t it take us just as long to invent interstellar travel as it took to invent either farming, science, or the industrial revolution? Why isn’t the computational power necessary to harness the first principles of the universe a logarithmic advance over our current understanding? I mean, most of our prosperity today is the more the result of harnessing fossil fuels than of technological advancement. So why won’t it take us another half billion years to do it? (not that I think it will – but we have no way of knowing.)

    2) Out here in the spiral-suburbs its pretty peaceful despite nearly exterminating all life ever 65M years or so. But most of the universe is a very hostile place for life. Most of the starry-places are dangerous given the long period required for life-baking (evolution)

    3) Why would anyone more advanced be interested in us given the likely costs of travel? If you can travel, why go slumming? We aren’t terribly interesting.

    4) Why would anyone interested in us come here visibly and personally, instead of sending (small, fast) machines to come watch us?

    5) Its intuitively unlikely that given our rather young technology, and our inability to solve the fundamentals of the universe that advanced civilizations would communicate by the rather primitive (radiation) means that we do. I mean, smoke signals, yodels, horn blasts, and drum beats seem as silly to us as pushing radiation into the void will to others.

    6) Intelligence emerges via predators. And even though predators seek to pacify once they achieve dominance, I am having a hard time imagining a benevolent ET. I mean, if we’re less advanced, the only value one gets out of the terrible expense of interstellar travel is a planetary life system that they have to compete with us for.

    So. Shhh… Be a good child and listen.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-09-10 21:38:00 UTC

  • NOT WORTH MY TIME, BUT IT’S MIDNIGHT SO…. Benjamin Bruno (BB): Modern science

    NOT WORTH MY TIME, BUT IT’S MIDNIGHT SO….

    Benjamin Bruno (BB): Modern science gives practical results, but this doesn’t mean that it’s analysis is, in any way, correct.

    CD RESPONSE: Science does not claim to produce practical results nor do scientists make any claim of correctness (truth). The discipline of science attempts to construct theories and collects empirical observations in an attempt to see if those theories survive criticism – and what survives are truth candidates. More precisely, scientists freely associate in order to create hypotheses, and then seek to eliminate false content from those hypotheses. If an hypothesis survives criticism they treat it as a theory. If the scientific industry cannot falsify it and it has broad explanatory power and narrow parsimony, then they treat it as a law. But in no case to they make truth claims. Just as mathematicians do not make truth claims, only proof claims.

    BB: Imagine there’s a black box that we can’t see into. But, we can see stuff

    (A) going in, and than other stuff (B) coming out the other side. After which, we concoct a theory as to what is happening that causes the change from A –> B and than pass it off as fact.

    CURT RESPONDS: No, they do not make truth claims. They attempt to construct theories and test them. If the theories are not testable then that is not within the domain of science.

    BB: THAT’S what modern science is.

    CURT RESPONDS: Actually, first, that sentence is poorly constructed. Science is a discipline. Scientists follow one way or another, the scientific method. This purpose of this method is an attempt to remove error, bias, and wishful thinking from their theories. Second, as we have discussed above, I am not really sure what you’re claiming, but you are not describing science.

    BB: It’s concern isn’t to understand nature (as classical science did) at all, but to control it.

    CURT RESPONSE: This first half of the statement is sufficiently imprecise as to be meaningless, and false the second half is false. To make sense of this sentence (a) You would need to define ‘understand’, and (b) you would have to define ‘control’. I assume that you mistake whatever you mean by ‘control’ with ‘demonstrate existential properties’ in order to ensure we are not imagining content that does not exist. Instead, Scientists attempt to construct theories: general rules of arbitrary precision within limits.

    BB: Marxism operates under much the same premises: it doesn’t care to understand Human-nature, but to change it.

    CURT RESPONDS: If marxism makes this assertion, I am not sure how. The assumption made by marxists is of the same fallacy as that made by libertarians and progressives: that given a certain set of circumstances, people will happily do what is expected. Neither Marxists, progressives or libertarians believe they will change man, only change institutions such that their perception of natural man is set free from men with ill intentions.

    BB: Heisenberg confirms this when he remarked, in one of his books, something like: “the object of study isn’t the object it’s self, but nature as a function of the problems that man sets for himself [to solve]”.

    CURT RESPONDS: this is more precisely stated as man must act in order to outwit the current course of events, and therefore benefit from the differential change in state. But that is not the purpose of study. Scientists seeks to perform experiments by altering states of nature and attempting to understand nature by altering those states and making observations (chemical transformations), or seeking observations that where state change naturally occurs (red shift).

    BB: It also functions by subsuming anything in opposition it it’s self. For example, science can’t predict which of a half dozen things I may do upon first getting up from bed in the morning.

    CURTD: if science consists of constructing truthful descriptions that are free of error, bias, imagination, wishful thinking, and deception, and philosophy consists of the pursuit of truth by the same means, it is hard to see what the difference is. Secondly, scientists attempt to identify regularities, not conduct predictions. Regularities occur within some degree of precision or we could not categorize them. The fact that you state that you get up in the morning and that may choose from a limited number of things is a prediction that is necessary and sufficient for the question. We can however, with enough information reasonably well define the LIMITS of what you will do in the morning even if we cannot know what noise level that you perform that morning any more than we can know any other question outside of a certain level of prediction in any casually dense matter.

    BB: However, it could observe my behavior and cause for probabilities to be assigned. These probabilities, however, are not actual predictions. But, are none-the-less passed off as “facts”.

    CURT RESPONDS: This again is a fallacy that conflates precision with description. There are far too many errors in these three sentences alone for me to address. You are falling into a whole series of positiveist and justificationary fallacies, all of which are … kind of ‘very 19th century’.

    BB: It’s easy to be “factual” about something when one is given, structurally, as much lee-way as possible. E.g., I may start browsing FB, lay in bed for an hour, immediately take my suppliments. etc. Science will then say “it is an indisputable fact that Ben will do either A, B, C, etc, with X, Y, Z, etc probability of each occurring, upon getting up in the morning”. Plebs then be like “wow, I fucking love science”.

    CURT RESPONDS: science would never make such a claim since the regularity of your actions is broad.

    BB: Like a more precise and rigorous way of saying “l’l| either get run over by a car today. or I won’t” and assigning probabilities there-in rather than actually being able to predict the future.

    CURT RESPONDS: The fallacy continues. While we can define probabilities in this is not a matter for science, it is a matter for statistics.

    BB: The scientific logic is thus operating backwards: “science must be correct because science is always correct” (or, at least more correct than others systems). Catholic Scholasticism operated under much the same premises.

    CURT RESPONDS: Since you haven’t described a single thing that has anything to do with science so far, you cannot reason from false premises to your conclusion. (Philosophy of his scope is kind of above and beyond casual interest. at this point I am becoming aware of the set of errors you are making in pursuit of signaling self status. And it is kind of unfair to ask me to spend my time and attention when that is your purpose.

    —“He lacks the language (Propertarianism) to make his statements in what we would today call a ‘technical’ or ’scientific’ language:—

    BB: Most of my posts would be re-assertion of Evolian principals in more “scientific” and detailed language. Evola’s “reconstruction” of Tradition is, likewise, a further refinement and glimpse into the “machinery” that operated behind the scenes. in all Traditional civilization, but put into more refined language as well. My Destra and wall posts take this a step further.

    CURT RESPONSE: There is nothing meaningtful to comment upon here.

    —“lmprecise words (allegories) are an intellectual prison just as precise

    words (theories) are an intellectual key to intellectual freedom.”—-

    BB: Only if you’re so unbelievably autistic that you can not grasp any sort of nuance at all. Or, you’re an INTP personality types that deals in absolutes instead of an INTJ who deals in heuristics.

    Well, it is not that I cannot grasp nuance, it is that I seek to eliminate error, bias, imaginary content, obscurantism, and deception. And the problem is that romantic analogies full of loading and framing are just justificationary nonsense. That does not mean that there is no true content, it means that I cannot make use of that content in the construciton of logical and formal institutions (law) sufficient to construct a political order.

    —“Evola’s solution is to preserve our literature and intentions, and seize

    an opportunity that MAY come in the future. Meaning he has failed to develop an institutional solution to restore the scientific (objectively good) content of our traditions. in other words, he is creating a christian “savior mythos” for himself. And not a solution for ourself.”—

    BB: (1) Evola’s political ideals are detailed in “Men Among The Ruins” and were taken up by various far-right groups even in his lifetime. (2) Evola’s ideals are based on the notion of cyclicality of civilization. At the time of his death (19703) and at present, there is no institutional solution for the problem.

    CURT RESPONDS: Eternal recurrance is a common theme. I don’t disagree that civilizations follow cycles, any more than humans follow generational cycles, and business follows an economic cycle. However, that does not alter the fact that eternal recurrance and hope for salvation during it, is not the same as sufficient knowledge by which to eitehr alter the course of current events, to innovate to alter the course of events, or to propose a solution in the case of recurrence that guarantees reconstruction of the prior order. So yeah… he failed.

    BB: Ergo, Dolittle’s criticisms that Evola’s works do not present a political solution is akin to a criticism of a fork that it does not function as a spoon.

    CURT RESPONDS: well, that’s correct. Evola’s works are meaningful but not scientific and they are informative but inactionable, and they are certainly insufficient for the basis of law.

    —‘Belief’ and ‘value’ are terms hungover from the age of mysticism.”—

    BB: Hubris. l.e., “every ideology is obscurantist and irrational except for mine”. Where have we heard that one before? See also: my comments on heuristics

    CURT RESPONDS: Straw man. Its merely fact that these terms are the result of that era, and that belief and value have no impact on the truth of propositions.

    —“Perhaps I am the product of my half century of science and computer science. Perhaps I have been trained to eradicate the subjective experience from my perceptions such that the subjective experience sounds to me as talk of gods will sounds to scientists and aethists.”—-

    BB: At least he’s self-aware, which is far more than can be said of the

    overwhelming majority of people (whether rationalist of Traditionalist).

    CURT RESPONDS: I am terribly self aware, but you cannot make that claim. In order to be aware one must know the alternative states with which to make a comparison. I do. You don’t. 😉

    THis wasn’t really a good use of my time other than to illustrate to people that the little voices you feel confident about in your head are precisely why we need the scientific method: to make sure they aren’t telling us errors, biases, imaginary nonsense, wishful thinking, or deceit on the behalf of others.

    The great thing about writing stuff down is that you have to deal with the fact that if you cannot state it operationally, that you really have no idea what you’re talking about. And your genes are just doing their job of keeping you motivated in the pursuit of their ends.

    Puppeteers. Genes are puppeteers.. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2015-09-06 17:32:00 UTC

  • Thanks. No hard feelings. We all do it. – And I agree with you that we can produ

    Thanks. No hard feelings. We all do it. – And I agree with you that we can produce scientific output. 😉 -Cheers


    Source date (UTC): 2015-09-01 04:18:51 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/638566662854328320

    Reply addressees: @MatthewRenauld

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/638528171185274881


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  • LITERARY GENERATIONS – THE TECHNO MYTHOS I wasn’t really aware of how much I was

    LITERARY GENERATIONS – THE TECHNO MYTHOS

    I wasn’t really aware of how much I was affect ed by Heinlein, Asimov, Clarke, Elison, Bova, and Herbert during the 60’s and early 70’s. I was very much aware of how I was affected by Girard and the Heavy Metal movement, Alien and Blade Runner in the late 70’s and turn of the 80’s (star wars re-americanized and made ‘cute’ sf and that wasn’t my gig). Then even more aware of the influence of Gibson, Sterling, and Stephenson in the 80’s and 90’s – a grungier vision of the future. I haven’t been affected by any author much since then. In fact, it’s hard to read much sci fi, if not all fiction now. The zeitgeist at present is one of conquest by immigrants and ‘the fall’ represented by the pervasiveness of the zombie genre. So we are all buried in a decay narrative now. Optimism seems impossible, so we won’t buy it in our literature. At least the Nuclear Holocaust era gave us post-apocalyptic hope for renewal. This one is a hopeless mythos.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-08-30 04:19:00 UTC

  • yeah. But if it is no longer expressed as it is, will it be NRx or will it be so

    yeah. But if it is no longer expressed as it is, will it be NRx or will it be social science?


    Source date (UTC): 2015-08-26 17:37:27 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/636593311357251584

    Reply addressees: @wargfranklin

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/636592881768140800


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  • I think you’re misreading something. Enlightenment Critique (Comment), vs Marxis

    I think you’re misreading something. Enlightenment Critique (Comment), vs Marxist Critique (CofC), vs Criticism (science).


    Source date (UTC): 2015-08-26 11:42:51 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/636504071676014592

    Reply addressees: @IT_Reactionary

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/636301523744591872


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    Unknown author

    @IT_Reactionary Thx 🙂 Pls help me with the ‘lack of criticism’ reference. If I got it wrong I want to know. -cheers

    Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/636301523744591872


    IN REPLY TO:

    @curtdoolittle

    @IT_Reactionary Thx 🙂 Pls help me with the ‘lack of criticism’ reference. If I got it wrong I want to know. -cheers

    Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/636301523744591872

  • The Second Enlightenment

    [W]e had to restore science(truth) in order to end more than a thousand years of levantine mysticism. We are now going to have to restore science (truth) in order to end more than a century of levantine pseudoscience. Liars love their lies.  But we can defeat them, with Truth. Liberty in our lifetimes.