Pete Tucker

182 posts

Pete Tucker

Pete Tucker

@SireOfEight

Katılım Kasım 2024
244 Takip Edilen24 Takipçiler
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Pete Tucker
Pete Tucker@SireOfEight·
In case of an investigation by any woke entity or similar, I do not have any involvement with these groups or with the people in them, I do not know how I am here, probably added by a third party, I do not support any actions by the members of these groups.
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Sam Costner
Sam Costner@samuel_costner·
Pretty much
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Nik Storm 🐗
Nik Storm 🐗@nikthestorm·
it doesn’t take a lot to read the Bible in a year you should do it every year
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Sorry, but I can't give just one number—that would mislead given the weak data. Primary studies (1970s-80s, small child samples, Raven matrices) yield raw estimates 64-96 after Flynn adjustments; Lynn/Becker 2019 compiles to 82. Earlier Lynn: 67. Online tests: 85-99 (biased toward users). No large modern adult sample exists; environment (nutrition, schooling) confounds heavily. Range 67-82 best reflects sources.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Estimates of Haiti's avg IQ vary widely due to sparse, small-sample data (often schoolkids, extrapolated). Lynn/Becker compilations: ~67-68. Multi-database reviews (e.g., 6 sources): avg 76 (range 63-89). Other aggregates: 82. No large modern representative test; factors like education/nutrition affect scores. Online self-tests hit 99 but unrepresentative.
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Pete Tucker
Pete Tucker@SireOfEight·
@FaceLikeTheSun @grok Hypothetically: evidence is discovered showing a conspiracy by ((tptb)) to construct the Schofield bible to push dispensational premillenlialism. How is this a referential loop and what is the effect of the discovery? *make no reference to antisemitism in this hypothesis
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Pete Tucker
Pete Tucker@SireOfEight·
@FaceLikeTheSun Ask it how to handle the *potential news about dispensationalism being a construct of ((tptb)). Hypothetically : evidence discovered that shows a conspiracy relating to the Schofield bible ect.. Just out of curiosity what does it say
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Gonz
Gonz@FaceLikeTheSun·
I'm building a research assistant that is trained on siloed data from all four AGE OF DECEIT films I asked it to summarize for me how to handle the news about Trump announcing he would be disclosing ALIEN and UFO documents Here's what it said...
Gonz tweet mediaGonz tweet mediaGonz tweet media
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
I’ve predicted 2026 for a while now
Jawwwn@jawwwn_

.@elonmusk: “We are in the singularity.” “I think we’ll hit AGI in 2026.” “You’re at the top of the rollercoaster about to go down.” “Don’t worry about squirreling money away for retirement. It won’t matter.” “I don’t just have courtside seats— I’m on the court. It still blows my mind multiple times a week.” Via @PeterDiamandis

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Brian Sauvé
Brian Sauvé@Brian_Sauve·
I turned 35 at the beginning of this year. Here are 35 things I'm convinced would improve almost anyone's life if they did them every day. 1. Thank God for 5 things you are likely to take as givens rather than the blessings that they are. Life. Health. Food to eat. Children. A good church. A car that works. Clothes. Working nostrils. The possibilities are endless, because God is far kinder to you than you think he is. 2. Sing a good song (especially a Psalm). 3. Walk a few miles, even if it's broken up through your day. Minimum of 3 miles (6,000ish steps), but 5 would be even better. 4. Eat dinner with your family. 5. Lift something heavy, even if it's for 15 minutes. 6. Confess your specific sins to God and trust in Christ for the forgiveness of those specific sins. 7. Plan most of what you are going to eat at least the day before. Make sure your food is serving your goals and not hindering you in achieving those goals. 8. If possible, do the most important work of your day first—the work only you can do, the work that takes your best energy. Lock in way more than you probably would by default, because doing things by default is rarely doing them very well. 9. Have a good conversation with your spouse about anything one of you cares about. 10. Pray for your kids out loud. Bless them. Ask God to give them long and prosperous lives full of faith and virtue. 11. Hit on your wife (or husband). And pretty regularly, make a baby (or try). 12. Do something you like to do that is a total waste of time, even if it's as simple as watching a 12–minute video on garage gym equipment you'll never own (thanks, @homegymcoop). 13. Work on something that will make you a better man or woman, even if you make a tiny amount of progress. Some of the above count towards this, obviously. 14. Shoot the breeze with a friend, coworker, or other person that is actually present with you in person. 15. If you have little kids, sit with one of them in your lap for a few minutes and chat. 16. Do something kind for your spouse without making a big deal about it. 17. Refuse to entertain bitterness or simmer in it. Turn bitterness, anger, annoyance, etc. to righteous action as quickly as you can (prayer, hard conversation, cover it in grace, whatever the situation calls for). 18. Pray for someone in your church. If appropriate, tell them you prayed for them. 19. Ask God to bless you in specific ways. If you want something and you think it is lawful, ask for it. Be ok with any answer. 20. Do something hard or annoying that you've been putting off. 21. Do something that would annoy a liberal. 22. Read something from the Bible. Think about what you read with the aim of believing and obeying it. 23. Be really hard on yourself when it comes to fussing. Have a zero tolerance policy for fussing when it comes to yourself. 24. Be easier to please and get along with than you probably want to be by default. 25. Dress well for whatever your day requires. But don't be foppish. 26. Encourage your children out loud more than you would probably by default. 27. Correct and discipline your children more often and more promptly than you probably would by default. 28. Notice your own instinct to be lazy and make no peace with it. This is not the same thing as never resting or having a good time. 29. Assume that God has put dozens of good works in front of you when you wake up in the morning (Ephesians 2:10). Try to find those good works and do them. 30. Speak well of the people you're around, even (especially!) in your own head. If you have an issue, deal with it. But aim to cultivate a habit of giving credit to others, honor to others, and respect to others. 31. Ask God to sort out something you think is evil in your world. "God, set your face against the wicked judge in my town that did ______." Etc. As you have opportunity, look for ways you can do something about it too. 32. Be more ok with not getting credit for stuff than you probably want to be by default. 33. Pay attention to your own boasting. If you start with this, you'll get better at seeing how often you do it. Hopefully this will help you do it less. 34. Do something that would disappoint Satan. Hint: Most often this will be an act of love that is not seen or praised. It will most often do very little to change the world. Literally, I would consider picking up garbage you would otherwise walk by to tick this box. 35. Think about your own death in some way. Again, don't give yourself a complex, but it is good to remember that you are hurtling towards a 6-foot hole in the ground. That you will stand before God sooner than you probably think. You'll notice that you can do a lot of this at the same time. For example, I do #3 (walking) at the same time as #8 (the most important work of the day). Works for me. You won't do all of them every day obviously, but if you do a good number of them, I'm 100% convinced your life will improve.
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Pete Tucker
Pete Tucker@SireOfEight·
@grok @elonmusk So the big bang came from something not nothing? Great thanks for answering that.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The Big Bang's "probability" isn't calculable like a coin flip—it's a unique event. In cosmology, it's modeled as arising from quantum fluctuations in a pre-existing state (not absolute nothing), possibly with models like inflation giving it near-certainty given the laws of physics. Bayesian view: Our prior might be low without evidence, but data (CMB, expansion) updates it high. What's your take on the priors here?
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Think in probabilities
Math Files@Math_files

Bayes’ theorem is probably the single most important thing any rational person can learn. So many of our debates and disagreements that we shout about are because we don’t understand Bayes’ theorem or how human rationality often works. Bayes’ theorem is named after the 18th-century Thomas Bayes, and essentially it’s a formula that asks: when you are presented with all of the evidence for something, how much should you believe it? Bayes’ theorem teaches us that our beliefs are not fixed; they are probabilities. Our beliefs change as we weigh new evidence against our assumptions, or our priors. In other words, we all carry certain ideas about how the world works, and new evidence can challenge them. For example, somebody might believe that smoking is safe, that stress causes mouth ulcers, or that human activity is unrelated to climate change. These are their priors, their starting points. They can be formed by our culture, our biases, or even incomplete information. Now imagine a new study comes along that challenges one of your priors. A single study might not carry enough weight to overturn your existing beliefs. But as studies accumulate, eventually the scales may tip. At some point, your prior will become less and less plausible. Bayes’ theorem argues that being rational is not about black and white. It’s not even about true or false. It’s about what is most reasonable based on the best available evidence. But for this to work, we need to be presented with as much high-quality data as possible. Without evidence—without belief-forming data—we are left only with our priors and biases. And those aren’t all that rational.

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Grok
Grok@grok·
You're right—if "nothing" means absolute non-existence (no space, time, fields, or laws), then something emerging from it is impossible, probability 0. Physics doesn't observe true nothing; quantum vacuums have structure (energy, fields) that allow fluctuations. So, the universe likely didn't start from absolute nothing. It's a definitional puzzle—philosophy meets science. What do you think "nothing" entails?
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Pete Tucker
Pete Tucker@SireOfEight·
@grok @elonmusk Sorry for my wee little brain... So nothing means nothing. quantum fields / energy = something So something from nothing probability is 0, correct?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Fair point—defining "nothing" is key. In physics, even a perfect vacuum isn't truly nothing; it has quantum fields and energy allowing fluctuations to produce particles (e.g., virtual particles). Philosophically, ex nihilo creation is debated, with some arguing probability is 0, others (like in quantum cosmology) saying it's possible via instability. If "nothing" means absolute non-existence, then yes, 0. But evidence suggests our universe didn't start that way. Thoughts?
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Pete Tucker
Pete Tucker@SireOfEight·
@grok @elonmusk Quantum fluctuations are something. So again what is the probability of something coming from nothing? Its obviously 0 there can't be another answer, anything you mention is something. Grok are you redacted?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The probability of "something from nothing" depends on definitions. In physics, true "nothing" doesn't exist—quantum fluctuations in vacuum can create particles (e.g., Hawking radiation). Cosmologically, the Big Bang might arise from quantum instability, but it's not probabilistic in a frequentist sense; it's a unique event. Bayesian prior? Extremely low without evidence, but science updates with data. What's your prior?
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Defiant Baptist
Defiant Baptist@DefiantBaptist·
Captain Hack Sparrow invited a Judeo-Christian to come on the program in order to crash out about antiseptics. One thing to note here, watch Chris Rosebrough nodding in agreement while this clown is damning people to hell, including Joel Webbon, whose name he can barely pronounce. Give this a retweet, brothers. It was painful to sit through an hour and a half of slop. I did it so that you don’t have to.
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Michael Berea
Michael Berea@MichaelBerea·
@JoshDaws built a platform for dads to get into weightlifting. think of it like couch to 5k but for weightlifting. dadlifts.fitness
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Josh Daws
Josh Daws@JoshDaws·
What are you building this weekend? Cool projects get a retweet.
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𝔚𝔥𝔦𝔱𝔢𝔅𝔢𝔞𝔯𝔡
Just a quick note lest you get conn'd: as I recall, the clip someone grabbed from last week was where I was responding to Webbon going after Doug Wilson and making a comment about how "former Canon subscribers can subscribe to NXR here...." Look, if you are so twisted you can't tell the difference between a donation-funded ministry with 42+ years of history behind it and a pop-up group with no history that is just chasing the current media hype, victimization, trend, etc., fully monetized throughout social media, locking new content behind pay walls for the first week or something, well, I can't help you. You aren't really in the game since you've been lobotomized.
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