Adjacent Statham

851 posts

Adjacent Statham

Adjacent Statham

@FeisterJoshua

For the night, the universe. for the day, the night

Katılım Şubat 2021
968 Takip Edilen362 Takipçiler
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Cryptoterrestrial Society Enjoyer
Pythagoras required of his initiates 6 years of silence. Demanding people lurk before posting is our oldest mystery religion.
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Elizabeth Holmes
Elizabeth Holmes@ElizabethHolmes·
Literally and Figuratively
Elizabeth Holmes tweet media
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Chris Williamson
Chris Williamson@ChrisWillx·
Your greatest growth comes from your lowest moments. “It is an unwritten rule of life that after every prolonged period of hardship and uncertainty, there is going to be a period when you are going to achieve quantum leaps across multiple areas of your life. The only requirement is that you do not give up on yourself.” — BeautyOfSaas
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Patrick Smith
Patrick Smith@NotGovernor·
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The Resonance
The Resonance@Partisan_12·
The evolution of American people.
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Adjacent Statham@FeisterJoshua·
@basedethos Type of breath is also important. None more important to breath retention.
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⚡️Nick Sweeney ⚡️
⚡️Nick Sweeney ⚡️@basedethos·
Your breaths per minute decide how attractive you are. I don’t make the rules.
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☿ Footnotes2Plato ☼☽
☿ Footnotes2Plato ☼☽@ThouArtThat·
Wolfram mixes some deep insights about our experience of a "becoming of continuity" (Whitehead) with some basic oversights. The models of physics are precise but derivative abstractions from experience. His misplaced concreteness erronerously reverses this priority.
Big Brain AI@realBigBrainAI

Stephen Wolfram, founder of Wolfram Research, explains how LLMs are quietly dismantling our deepest assumptions about consciousness: He argues that large language models have done something philosophy and neuroscience couldn't: "In terms of consciousness, I have to say, the idea that there's sort of something magic that goes beyond physics that leads to sort of conscious behavior, I kind of think that LLMs kind of put the final nail in that coffin." His reasoning is that LLMs keep doing things people assumed they couldn't: "There were all these things where it's like, oh, maybe it can't do this, but actually it does. And it's just an artificial neural net." Wolfram then challenges a core assumption about conscious experience: the feeling that we are a single, continuous self moving through time. "I think our notion of consciousness is a lot related to the fact that we believe in the single thread of experience that we have. It's not obvious that we should have a persistent thread of experience." He points out that physics doesn't actually support this intuition: "In our models of physics, we're made of different atoms of space at every successive moment of time. So the fact that we have this belief that we are somehow persistent, we have this thread of experience that extends through time, is not obvious." Then Wolfram offers a striking origin story for consciousness itself. @stephen_wolfram suggests it traces back to a simple evolutionary pressure: the moment animals first needed to move. "I kind of realized that probably when animals first existed in the history of life on Earth, that's when we started needing brains. If you're a thing that doesn't have to move around, the different parts of you can be doing different kinds of things. If you're an animal, then one thing you have to do is decide, are you going to go left or are you going to go right?" That single binary choice, he argues, may be the seed of everything we now call awareness: "I kind of think it's a little disappointing to feel that this whole wanted thing that ends up being what we think of as consciousness might have originated in just that very simple need to decide if you are an animal that can move. You have to take all that sensory input and you have to make a definitive decision about do you go this way or that way." The takeaway is unsettling but clarifying. If LLMs can produce complex behavior from simple rules, then consciousness may not be a mystical add-on to physics. It may just be what happens when a layered enough system has to make a decision.

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Adjacent Statham@FeisterJoshua·
What the reactive meritocracy/classism discourse misses is not that billionaires deserve the money they earn primary facie, but that the down stream effects of the wealth accumulation destroy the society around it. The effects disproportionally negatively affect everyone else
Chris Freiman@cafreiman

One reason why it’s important to defend billionaires is because, as Deirdre McCloskey has argued, a key ingredient of a prosperous society is regarding “trade-tested” profit—profit earned by producing valued goods and services—as something honorable rather than repugnant.

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Yungkingmito
Yungkingmito@yungkingmito·
The strange thing about vitamin D is not that people take it; it is that the replacement became so normal that almost nobody pauses to think about what is actually being replaced. A star collapses from gas, ignites fusion, stabilises the rhythm of a planet, warms oceans, shapes seasons, and spends billions of years giving Earth a signal that life slowly learns to organise itself around through skin, sleep, hormones, timing, and eventually the genome itself. Sunlight was never just “making vitamin D.” UVB opens a cholesterol-derived molecule in the skin and begins a pathway that moves through receptors, chromatin, and over 900 genes linked to vitamin D signalling. The molecule matters, but the event surrounding the molecule matters too, because the body evolved to read vitamin D alongside light timing, redox state, and the skin surface where the process begins. Then modern life took one fragment of that relationship, isolated it, sealed it in plastic, and called it replacement. The capsule can raise the number, but it arrives stripped of the skin event, the light timing, and the redox context that normally tell the genome why the molecule appeared.
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Joscha Bach
Joscha Bach@Plinz·
If we have a boat full of people exposed to an airborne virus with a suspected mortality rate of 30-50%, an expected R0 in the range of Covid and an incubation period of 5-6 weeks, and we respond by asking them to book flights to travel home, we totally deserve another pandemic
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QC
QC@QiaochuYuan·
so apparently the concept of a teenager basically did not exist until post-WWII. a specific combination of historical forces produced a new class of young people who all had to go to high school, could not work on farms or in mills or factories anymore, and had access to money and cars. the entire rebellious teenager trope was created in this time period so it refers specifically to boomers rebelling against the silent generation, who grew up in a completely different world. the generation gap here was so stark this is also where the term "generation gap" even comes from, and i think the whole practice of naming distinct generations saturdayeveningpost.com/2018/02/brief-…
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smug fecundity@SmugFecundity

We have 3 teenagers now, 16/15/13. I cannot understand the idea that teenagers are any kind of problem. I love hanging out with them, and, surprisingly, the feeling is mutual. Every stage of parenthood has been delightful.

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Joscha Bach
Joscha Bach@Plinz·
I think it was a mistake for our culture to dismiss religion, instead of understanding and redesigning it with rational epistemology. Religion defines the intentionality and structure of the superorganism. Without seeing the shape of the superstructure, we cannot derive ethics.
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@jason
@jason@Jason·
AI is insane!
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Vivid Void
Vivid Void@vividvoid·
Postmodernism is predicated on the idea that if we dissolve the conditioning of the past, it liberates what is human, what is alive, what is present. Psychotherapy also broadly operates on this principle. This may have been true in the 70s but these days it just leaves you totally defenseless against memetic colonization. We no longer have working culture, community and religion to buttress our souls against the onslaught of media and materialism. In 2026, if you don't consciously, purposefully take the reins of self creation, you are fucked.
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Seyed Abbas Araghchi
Seyed Abbas Araghchi@araghchi·
The Pentagon is lying. Netanyahu's gamble has directly cost America $100b so far, four times what is claimed. Indirect costs for U.S. taxpayers are FAR higher. Monthly bill for each American household is $500 and rising fast. Israel First always means America Last.
Seyed Abbas Araghchi tweet mediaSeyed Abbas Araghchi tweet media
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