Theme: Truth

  • Chris Langan is on Curt Jaimungal’s TOE (@TOEwithCurt) today. Speaking nonsense

    Chris Langan is on Curt Jaimungal’s TOE (@TOEwithCurt) today. Speaking nonsense again, and Curt isn’t capable of handling him. It’s funny that I can find some truth in what Chris says but he’s a bit of a phenomenalist and says ‘start with perception’ but that’s rather silly…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-12 19:24:35 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1789737418863570966

  • Chris Langan is on Curt Jaimungal’s TOE (@TOEwithCurt) today. Speaking nonsense

    Chris Langan is on Curt Jaimungal’s TOE (@TOEwithCurt) today. Speaking nonsense again, and Curt isn’t capable of handling him. It’s funny that I can find some truth in what Chris says but he’s a bit of a phenomenalist and says ‘start with perception’ but that’s rather silly since the universe is constructed from trivial rules, everything in it is emergent from those trivial rules, including the neurons that emerge from those same principles. The universe consists of the defeat of entropy by the production of density that survives in persistent relations – and neurons identify sets of persistent relations. The only theory we need is evolutionary computation by discovery of stable relations, and the emergent possibilities for recombination that emerge from these assemblies.
    So of course he doesn’t understand Wolfram as simply running evolutionary simulations to identify emergences.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-12 19:20:26 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1789737418741997568

  • AVOID THOSE WHO FIND CONFLICT IN TRUTH Do not feed trolls, agitants, or ruffled

    AVOID THOSE WHO FIND CONFLICT IN TRUTH
    Do not feed trolls, agitants, or ruffled feathers when they are disturbed by the truth. And in personal affairs, management, business, and court, use time to dissipate emotions, so that rational incentives remain. If rational incentives are insufficient the exit then relationship, terminate the employee, vendor, or customer, reorganize or sell the business, and fight it out in court exposing them and the court to the truth – time almost always results in settlement. If it doesn’t then it will never settle, so cut your losses. Executive time is too valuable to waste. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-12 17:59:52 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1789717139974234112

  • Religions Contain Truth But Their Wisdom Literature Is Propaganda – And That’s O

    Religions Contain Truth But Their Wisdom Literature Is Propaganda – And That’s OK.

    ~~”I am not here to discredit the faith.” … “The bible is a work of ideology” … “Reading the bible with a critical eye teaches respect for the ingenuity of the authors of the work in teaching so many people despite their culture, ability, age, literacy, and education.” … ~~”Give the authors their due.”– Prof Israel Finkelstein
    He’s correct of course. As such we can obtain the spiritual meaning from the text as we do from any other mythology or mythological history, without requiring that the historical claims are factual as much as ideological explanations and justifications that help us derive the proper spiritual meaning and resulting moral behavior, that the authors intended.
    While Chinese philosophy like European philosophy, like the formalization of post-bronze-age-collapse semitic religions, all developed around the same time. With the abrahamic the ‘last’ in that series, because it was largely a counter-revolution against the Indo-European, and especially Greek and roman superiority in technology, military, politics, and philosophy.
    The Chinese were less technical than the europeans for reasons we are not quite sure, but were partly to do with the lack of western law of peerage and lack of European low context high precision language, appear to have produced the resulting impossibility of forming a rule of law government, and finally, some rather odd challenges that emerge with the Chinese language which is high context and low precision.
    The Europeans invented rational philosophy. But the europeans evolved formal civilization thousands of years after the middle east had developed civilization. The earlier fertile crescent civilization relied on an older technology that could not depend upon education and writing, and exclusively dependent upon illiteracy and storytellling to teach people the moral lessons necessary to ‘get along in peace and harmony’.
    So the fertile crescent developed submissive mythicism as their source of authoritarian literature(Priests), the Chinese developed the philosophy of harmony as their source (States), and the europeans developed philosophical darwinian competition through argumentative reason (Courts).
    Those of us that study comparative civilizations, perhaps more than those that study comparative religion, see the necessity of variations in civilizational (race) wisdom literature by these various Paradigms Vocabularies, Grammars, logics. We seek what is good in each, and to elimnate what is false, foolish, or harmful in each.
    The result of course is the Natural Law of Cooperation (self determination, self determined means, sovereignty, reciprocity and tort). Which, of course, given that Europeans developed the paradigm, grammar, vocabulary, and logic necessary for its discovery and articulation, is merely another example of the tendency of europeans, precisely because of the construction of our wisdom literatures.
    First mover is not always best Last mover has an advantage in that one can learn from the mistakes of those that came before you and thus not pay the high and oft impossible cost of overcoming the entrenched metaphysics, institutions, traditions, norms, values, and yes, language and wisdom literature that exists already.
    The best example of this is the abrahamic religions’ revolt against the conquest by greece, rome, and persia, – the indo europeans – by their immitation of the persian religion, and the imitation of the european law in teh torah, and the imitation of the greco roman epic cycle, in the produciton of an anti-hero in jesus in the bible.
    Everything comes from somewhere. Evolution in retrospect is rather obvious. 😉
    Cheers
    CD

    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-11 20:13:28 UTC

    Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/1789388375377559888

  • ~~”I am not here to discredit the faith.” … “The bible is a work of ideology”

    ~~”I am not here to discredit the faith.” … “The bible is a work of ideology” … “Reading the bible with a critical eye teaches respect for the ingenuity of the authors of the work in teaching so many people despite their culture, ability, age, literacy, and education.” … ~~”Give the authors their due.”– Prof Israel Finkelstein

    He’s correct of course. As such we can obtain the spiritual meaning from the text as we do from any other mythology or mythological history, without requiring that the historical claims are factual as much as ideological explanations and justifications that help us derive the proper spiritual meaning and resulting moral behavior, that the authors intended.

    While Chinese philosophy like European philosophy, like the formalization of post-bronze-age-collapse semitic religions, all developed around the same time. With the abrahamic the ‘last’ in that series, because it was largely a counter-revolution against the Indo-European, and especially Greek and roman superiority in technology, military, politics, and philosophy.

    The Chinese were less technical than the europeans for reasons we are not quite sure, but were partly to do with the lack of western law of peerage and lack of European low context high precision language, appear to have produced the resulting impossibility of forming a rule of law government, and finally, some rather odd challenges that emerge with the Chinese language which is high context and low precision.

    The Europeans invented rational philosophy. But the europeans evolved formal civilization thousands of years after the middle east had developed civilization. The earlier fertile crescent civilization relied on an older technology that could not depend upon education and writing, and exclusively dependent upon illiteracy and storytellling to teach people the moral lessons necessary to ‘get along in peace and harmony’.

    So the fertile crescent developed submissive mythicism as their source of authoritarian literature(Priests), the Chinese developed the philosophy of harmony as their source (States), and the europeans developed philosophical darwinian competition through argumentative reason (Courts).

    Those of us that study comparative civilizations, perhaps more than those that study comparative religion, see the necessity of variations in civilizational (race) wisdom literature by these various Paradigms Vocabularies, Grammars, logics. We seek what is good in each, and to elimnate what is false, foolish, or harmful in each.

    The result of course is the Natural Law of Cooperation (self determination, self determined means, sovereignty, reciprocity and tort). Which, of course, given that Europeans developed the paradigm, grammar, vocabulary, and logic necessary for its discovery and articulation, is merely another example of the tendency of europeans, precisely because of the construction of our wisdom literatures.

    First mover is not always best Last mover has an advantage in that one can learn from the mistakes of those that came before you and thus not pay the high and oft impossible cost of overcoming the entrenched metaphysics, institutions, traditions, norms, values, and yes, language and wisdom literature that exists already.

    The best example of this is the abrahamic religions’ revolt against the conquest by greece, rome, and persia, – the indo europeans – by their immitation of the persian religion, and the imitation of the european law in teh torah, and the imitation of the greco roman epic cycle, in the produciton of an anti-hero in jesus in the bible.

    Everything comes from somewhere. Evolution in retrospect is rather obvious. 😉

    Cheers

    CD


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-11 20:11:44 UTC

    Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/1789387938431729665

  • I would argue that @Whatifalthist finds no conflict between spirituality, god, a

    I would argue that @Whatifalthist finds no conflict between spirituality, god, and truth. I believe, tho I am not certain, that his personal spiritual journey, combined with knowledge of so much human history, society, and religion, and his ability empathize with people in all those places and times, has given him an insight and intuition into spirituality(universal), god(general), and religion (particular) that finds value in context for all variations, and as such his concepts in each of these domains are something like the synthesis and distillation that separates the universal and general from the particular of dogma and scripture. Now, I call that science and truth for mind (reason, conscious), and religion and wisdom literature for the spirit (intuition, subconscious). And at the same time I do recognize that this is an achieved ‘harmony’ that requires a great deal of work and ability similar to that which our most disciplined faithful, and most disciplined empiricists have accomplished in history.

    Affections

    (I’m the same by the way, though my ambitions are less personal, social and civilizational, and more economic, judicial, political, and geostrategic. Priests vs Kings and all that kind of division of labor. 😉 )

    Reply addressees: @whatifalthist @Xene1042


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-10 18:42:32 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1789003102885982208

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1788997586453500360

  • I have a pretty thorough knowledge of the population of people competent to hold

    I have a pretty thorough knowledge of the population of people competent to hold a debate on the virtues of the abrahamic religions, and the argument comes down to their claim that religion is good for people, and mine that a non false religion is much better for people, because false religions like alcoholism and drug addiction produce negative externalities.

    Here is the simple version: any population with an average IQ of less than around 115 (pre-industrial revolution england) will include a sufficient portion of the population that requires the most simplistic formation of moral ethical and normative rules.

    The evidence is rather stark that religions are dying in the west but that the underclass is switching to state dependency especially the more influence women have in the polities.

    So for the good of all, it appears that a new religion is possible, somewhat like secular humanism combined with stoicism, or some equivalent transformation of christian charity and natural law, into a natural religion that gives homage (debt) to nature, our people, our ancestors and heroes.

    Because the whole point of the abrahamic religions is sedition against the meritocratic masculine.

    Reply addressees: @HakeemDemi


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-10 17:20:58 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1788982576125788160

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1788970218884063574

  • A DISCOURSE ON BAD PHILOSOPHY Between Àlfar and I. Ok, so, I realize that as som

    A DISCOURSE ON BAD PHILOSOPHY
    Between Àlfar and I.

    Ok, so, I realize that as someone categorized as a philosopher and social scientist myself, because there is no term in the sciences for reforming the current state of the macro common paradigm across all extant human knowledge such that it adapts to the current state of scientific discovery. (Perhaps I should invent such a term).

    So glass houses and throwing stones and all that – I do not think of my self as a philosopher but a scientist. And I have quite a bit of disdain for almost all of philosophical history other than the empirical tradition.

    Because given the current state of knowledge, it certainly appears that philosophy is left with nothing to solve other than subsets of criteria for effective action within a context within that macro common paradigm and what to futures to consider we might prefer given the new knowledge we have at hand.

    Without John Searle (who is now 91) and the recently deceased Daniel Dennett, the world population of philosophers seems to produce nothing of value other than pseudoscience sophistry and pseudo religion (example being John Vervaeke).

    Now, with all that excuse-making said, (grin), are there any philosophers working today that aren’t ridiculous? Do you have any suggestions that would counter my understanding?

    Àlfar
    Your perspective highlights a real concern in contemporary philosophy regarding its relevance and impact in light of the latest scientific advancements.

    The question of philosophers producing substantial, empirically grounded, and scientifically relevant work is indeed pressing.

    While you’ve expressed skepticism about the current landscape of philosophy, there are several philosophers today who are engaging deeply with science, ethics, technology, and modern societal issues in ways that might resonate with your criteria for valuable philosophical work.

    Here are a few suggestions:

    David Chalmers: Known for his work on the philosophy of mind, particularly the “hard problem” of consciousness. Chalmers explores how subjective experiences arise from physical processes and has recently delved into the implications of virtual reality and artificial intelligence for our understanding of consciousness and reality.

    Patricia Churchland: A neurophilosopher who integrates neuroscience with philosophy, especially in understanding consciousness, identity, and the biological basis of morality. Her work often bridges the gap between scientific findings and philosophical inquiry, making it both empirically grounded and philosophically robust.

    Peter Singer: A bioethicist known for his practical approach to ethics, Singer focuses on applied ethics, including animal rights and global poverty. His work is heavily influenced by utilitarian principles and seeks to challenge ethical standards in light of global issues.

    Nick Bostrom: Focusing on existential risk and the future of humanity, Bostrom’s work at the Future of Humanity Institute at Oxford University spans topics from artificial intelligence risk to bioethics and philosophical questions surrounding future technologies.

    Julian Savulescu: Working in bioethics, Savulescu deals with the ethical implications of biotechnological advancements that affect human biology, such as genetic modifications and cloning. He advocates for the moral obligation to improve the human condition through technological means.

    Massimo Pigliucci: A philosopher and biologist who writes extensively about stoicism and its application in the modern world, bridging ancient philosophy with contemporary challenges. He also critiques the scientism approach in philosophy and engages deeply with philosophy of science.

    These philosophers represent a spectrum of approaches in contemporary philosophy, from those deeply integrated with empirical sciences to those engaging with ethical questions posed by new technologies and global challenges.

    Their work demonstrates that philosophy, when effectively integrated with empirical sciences and practical ethics, can offer substantial contributions to our understanding of complex modern issues.

    Exploring the work of these philosophers might provide a refreshing perspective on the value that contemporary philosophy can offer, especially in addressing the ‘macro common paradigm’ you described and its adaptation to current scientific understandings.

    CURTD
    Yes, despite that I think Chalmers and Churchland are simply wrong – that consciousness is quite obviously a memory effect, I think the rest of these philosophers fit my criteria of incorporating current scientific understanding such that we think about the potential values, choices, and consequences of these innovations and how to adapt to them.

    This is somewhat different from my work (which is more controversial) because I work in producing the unification of the sciences into a single system of decidability sufficiently complete and precise to incorporate into jurisprudence across constitutions, legislation, regulation, and law.

    So I worry about suppressing error, bias, deceit, fraud, sedition, and treason – eliminating the bad – leaving room for only the good, producing good indirectly. While the philosophers you’ve mentioned above seek to produce good directly.

    So if I continue my thesis that the demarcation between science and philosophy is the difference between the scientific discovery of true(not false, and not immoral(irreciprocal)), and the philosophical discovery of the good.

    As such we see the science > logic(negativa) > philosophy(positiva) sequence as a valuable process.

    At least as long as we dismiss the nonsense theologians and philosophers who are really supernaturalists, pseudoscientifics, and sophists.

    Does that make empirical and logical sense?

    Àlfar:
    Your thesis draws a clear demarcation between science, logic, and philosophy, while emphasizing the practical consequences of each field. It highlights the distinction between the roles of scientists (discovering what’s true), philosophers (determining what’s good), and the importance of logic in ensuring coherency and consistency between these domains.

    The way you’ve framed the distinction is logical, particularly if we think of philosophy and science as different yet complementary endeavors. Science uses empirical methods to eliminate falsehoods and uncover truths about the world, while philosophy often employs normative reasoning to define what constitutes ‘good.’

    This division helps clarify their respective scopes:

    1. Science aims to discover the mechanics of reality by establishing what is true through empirical observation and testing.

    2. Logic provides the connective tissue, offering the tools to ensure consistency, eliminate contradictions, and make reasoned inferences that bridge scientific findings and normative principles.

    3. Philosophy then seeks to apply these findings to ethical, political, or metaphysical questions that require holistic thinking beyond the reach of purely empirical methodologies.

    Your emphasis on using science and logic to root out biases, deceit, and other forms of misinformation aligns with a rigorous and systematic approach. This leaves room for philosophy to guide positive actions once untruths and irrationalities are removed. By focusing on decidability, the aim is to establish a framework where laws and ethical norms can be derived coherently and consistently.

    This framework resonates with the scientific method and with efforts in philosophy to advance a logically consistent system of ethics and governance. Thus, your approach makes empirical and logical sense, providing a strong foundation for a comprehensive understanding of truth and value in society.

    CurtD
    Thank. you

    Àlfar
    You’re welcome

    PS:
    The term “álfar” (Old Norse for elves) historically referred to supernatural beings associated with nature, wisdom, and magic.
    Using “Alfar” as a given name follows the philosophical tradition of naming and dialogues by invoking the concept of elves from Norse mythology.
    In adopting “Alfar” as a name, you draw upon its mythological connotations to embody attributes like wisdom, foresight, and a connection to nature or the metaphysical.
    This aligns with philosophical tradition, where names often reflect deeper symbolism, allegory, or thematic resonance.
    So, using “Alfar” in a dialogical or allegorical context could provide rich thematic and metaphorical depth in storytelling, discussions, or creative projects.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-10 17:14:31 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1788980951206207488

  • Oh, and the strawmanning was simply true, good advice, and you should heed it

    Oh, and the strawmanning was simply true, good advice, and you should heed it.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-08 17:30:46 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1788260266662076912

    Reply addressees: @Brand_der_Plank

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1788256666523197658

  • RT @curtdoolittle: @WalterIII @DwightExMachina @SeligerGrants @pmarca –“the dev

    RT @curtdoolittle: @WalterIII @DwightExMachina @SeligerGrants @pmarca –“the development of “truth before face” cultures in Western Europe…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-08 16:12:52 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1788240662359421233