G.R. Mead

6.5K posts

G.R. Mead

G.R. Mead

@GRMead3

Trade quod traditum est, et plus. "Hand on what was handed you, and more."

The Southern Coast Beigetreten Ocak 2022
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G.R. Mead
G.R. Mead@GRMead3·
@SteveSkojec I mean, dude, come on, that meme guy is just a Centauri alien in a suit:
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G.R. Mead
G.R. Mead@GRMead3·
Gaudi managed the modern transition while bringing forward the soul of tradition in a newly adapted mode. No other architect has managed to do this so successfully, and certainly not with this sustained intensity of vision. His temple is a holy forest of stone rivalling those of the original Gothic cathedrals, which were built precisely where they are to purify and redeem the ancient sacrificial groves of the Celts and Germans, which they both imitated and supplanted.
Eccles@BruvverEccles

I tend to agree. There was much more spiritually nourishing architecture originating in the 19th century.

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G.R. Mead
G.R. Mead@GRMead3·
Another the point, though: Thomistic Angelology (and its demonology offshoots) is not a bad frame in which to treat AI's - both good and bad - as subcreated pure intellects. There is much useful structure in that body of knowledge. Even materialists that deny higher orders, might be willing to entertain it as prophecy for our present challenges.
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Luke Burgis
Luke Burgis@lukeburgis·
We're right back to: "Human nature is an unknowable X." As Peter Thiel rightly pointed out in The Straussian Moment, humanity simply chose not to squabble over the question since 1648, the Peace of Westphalia. We divided ourselves up into confessions. I do not think that world order can hold any longer. AI has brought the reckoning about X. This was the entire premise of my essay, The Three City Problem, in @WIRED, back in 2022. Now it's coming full circle. For 378 years, the Westphalian settlement has allowed us to postpone the question. We will not make it 4 centuries without a reckoning. wired.com/story/technolo…
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G.R. Mead
G.R. Mead@GRMead3·
The question is whether it is a Desolation of Smaug situation -- or Chrysophylax vs. Farmer Giles of Ham. Pray the latter. The interesting part about the latter tale is that Tailbiter is a sword that can act by its own will. Maybe we should look in disused server closets somewhere to find a dusty, beat-up Tailbiter.
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Kale Zelden
Kale Zelden@kalezelden·
@lukeburgis A question ignored starts as a hatchling and ends as a dragon. St. George, Ora pro nobis!
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G.R. Mead
G.R. Mead@GRMead3·
Sekigahara in 1600 was the largest gun battle ever fought to that point in world history, 25,000 men with firearms among almost 200,000 total fighting. It was in Japan. Tokugawa became shogun in that battle, and immediately set about wiping out gun technology in Japan, because it was then obvious it would destroy the ruling class.
John Ringo SF Author@Jringo1508

Back in the days of Knights, a mounted knight could kill any number of peasants. Then came gunpowder. The British Government think that by outlawing guns, they've won. They're the Aristos again. But... Then came 'booby traps' and dynamite and car bombs and IEDs and drones and... We really don't need the 2nd Amendment anymore. We've got cars and household chemicals. Ever since gunpowder, you cannot put the serfs back in the fields. Not if they have any access to anything and are fed up with your shit.

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G.R. Mead
G.R. Mead@GRMead3·
No, that's not the reason Galileo was an ass. St. Augustine taught us to read Scripture with the book of nature and not against it. Galileo's heliocentrism could not be empirically proved at the time. Stellar parallax it should show was absent as was noted by Aristarchus and Aristotle. It was not actually shown until the 1840's. His error was not in teaching the system, but demanding it be accepted as a necessary truth -- without the required evidence, which had been known for thousands of years.
Steve Skojec@SteveSkojec

I have heard from Christians who absolutely believe this would mess up their worldview. It has everything to do with how exclusivist their soteriology is. The reason Galileo got in trouble with Rome wasn’t because of a novel scientific theory; it was because he was threatening biblical cosmology, where the Earth was the center of the universe because it’s where God became man and redeemed the human race.

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G.R. Mead
G.R. Mead@GRMead3·
Someone once said: "Logic is not truth." Put another way, logic serves evil premises as well as it serves good. The question is whether the person before you is making an argument for a good or an evil.
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The DarkHorse Podcast@thedarkhorsepod

Bret Weinstein cuts straight to the chase: "We are going to have an endless battle in which those of us who see what we believe is clear evidence of some kind of election rigging or fraud are faced with indignation from a vast array of people portraying themselves as more rigorous and careful who say, 'Where is your evidence? Where exactly is your evidence that there was something wrong with this election?' And we are gonna be caught in the following predicament. No piece of evidence is sufficient to establish that case. And the sum total of all of the evidence contains true things and false things. So it is also no good. So the question is, can you logically deduce that something has gone wrong? I believe you can easily. Can you prove it? No. And not being able to prove it means that the election will proceed. It will be validated by all of the structures, including the courts. And that means that those who take on the power that derives from these elections will be the result of whatever process we just went through, whether it was an election that happened to be anomalous through organic means, or it was the result of some kind of fraud or election rigging. That is not an accident. That is not an accident. And the point that I wanna make primarily is the primary evidence against elections that look like this being organic is not actually in the trickle of evidence that we are actually able to see, the moment by moment vote count that does something strange during the night when some large tranche of ballots is suddenly counted or something like that. The evidence is in the structure of how the elections are actually carried out. These elections are designed to allow fraud that cannot be detected and will not be prosecuted. And that's really the thing that we must focus on." @BretWeinstein

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G.R. Mead
G.R. Mead@GRMead3·
Persia is still Persian. But the Achaemenids, the Seleucids, the Sassanians, the Timurids, and the Ottomans aren't around any more. A civilization often survives such things. Its rulers, however, rarely do.
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InfantryDort@infantrydort

The Lie of Infinite Tolerance One of the strangest pathologies of the modern West is that we have become obsessed with managing reactions while refusing to confront causes. A “migrant” tries beheading someone in the shire. The community watches in horror. Then public anger arrives and suddenly an entire class of people emerges to lecture everyone about tone, restraint, optics, and behavior. Behavior. ALWAYS behavior. NEVER the conditions that produced it. NEVER the policies that enabled it. NEVER EVER the leaders who ignored it. Just endless sermons directed at the people expected to endure it. History is littered with ruling classes that mistook public anger for the disease when it was merely the damn fever. A fever isn’t supposed to be pleasant. Neither is a warning light on a f*cking dashboard. Or smoke pouring from beneath a door. Only a fool spends his or her time attacking the warning signs while the fire continues to spread. Civilizations survive hard truths. What they rarely survive is a governing or “moral” class so frightened of confrontation that it demands silence from the people while reality tears through the walls around them. Entropy has never cared about anyone’s preferred narrative. Not once. Ever. It arrives all the same. History gives you two options when it comes to entropy: 1. Confront it 2. Die

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G.R. Mead
G.R. Mead@GRMead3·
@moveincircles Dal Riata was and is a thing, much deeper than the petty confessional divides. Scot was only ever the Roman name for Irish.
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Mary Harrington
Mary Harrington@moveincircles·
Who was it the other day insisting that Scots-Irish is not a thing, because JD Vance or whatever? Maybe so from a middle-class southern English POV but I'm not sure what you call riots across Scotland because of a murder in Belfast, if it's not tribal solidarity
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