Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸

66 posts

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Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸

Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸

@rdavidmullins

Katılım Eylül 2023
224 Takip Edilen36 Takipçiler
Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸 retweetledi
The American Mind
The American Mind@theammind·
“Fukuyama has made a career out of the 'end of history.’ @SpencerKlavan points the way to careers for young Americans in the continuation and making of history.” Chris Flannery writes that America's founding principles aren't just “values” but are rooted in eternal reason.
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Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸
Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸@rdavidmullins·
@LedermanHarvey It's because most universities are rooted in a critical posture that's rooted in fear. Critical Theory has become the default setting of The University Mind. We fear failure and success at the same time, sit on the sidelines and shoot intellectual spitballs.
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Harvey Lederman
Harvey Lederman@LedermanHarvey·
Two thoughts: 1) academics are so shortsighted! We’re faced with a transformative technology and all anyone can talk about is plagiarism. Use blue books! It’s not that big a deal. 2) AI may very well destroy the university as we know it. It will change what it makes sense to teach and more importantly how it makes sense to teach. We could offer thousands of classes with AI tutors guided by faculty, we could teach new skills that help people navigate the new world, habits of mind could be more important than content, maybe more radically human society could focus more on leisure/schole and the university could take up more of our lives as we focus on fulfillment. We supposedly have imagination and creativity! Let’s start using them instead of focusing narrowly on one issue with assessment
Brian Leiter https://bsky.app/profile/brianleiter.@BrianLeiter

"AI will destroy universities" leiterreports.com/2026/04/06/ai-…

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Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸 retweetledi
Niall Ferguson
Niall Ferguson@nfergus·
If you just got into an Ivy League college (or your kid did), you really ought to read this excellent post from @uaustinorg. There really are better ways to spend four formative years of your life.
University of Austin (UATX)@uaustinorg

To: Admitted Students on Ivy Decision Day From: UATX Congratulations. Getting in was hard and you should be proud. Now here’s some unsolicited advice so you don’t waste the next four years. Go to class. We know this sounds obvious. But as the New York Times reported recently, Harvard students routinely skip class, rarely speak up when they're there, and focus on their devices instead of the discussion. Faculty say few students do enough preparation to contribute meaningfully. The average college student spends about 20 hours a week on class and studying combined. At UATX, we aim for 50. That’s the difference between a part-time commitment and a full-time job. You (or your parents) are about to spend upwards of $90K a year. If you don't show up, you're paying roughly $250 per skipped lecture for the privilege of sleeping in. Read the books yourself. Your generation is the first to arrive at college post-literate — raised on short-form video, dependent on algorithms, and increasingly incapable of sitting with a difficult text long enough to let it change your mind. Ninety percent of college students use AI academically. This makes you more reliant on the authority of others. Most professors will also stand between you and the text. They’ll tell you what Marx “really meant,” what Aristotle “failed to see,” as though an academic in 2026 has outsmarted minds that shaped civilizations. The good professors do the opposite: they put you in front of the book and they work with you to find what a great mind has to teach us directly. Find those professors, and read everything yourself. Say what you actually think. Seventy-three percent of conservative students report withholding their political views in class out of fear their grades will suffer. Our advice isn't political; it's intellectual. If you spend four years learning to say what's expected instead of what's true, you’ll graduate roughly where you started — just older, more credentialed, and more practiced at self-censorship. One study finds that nearly half of students show no measurable gains in “critical thinking” after two years in college. Keep this in mind as you make decisions about which professors to take and how to do your assignments. Taking a small hit on your paper to gain integrity and wisdom is usually worth it. Ask for real grades. Sixty percent of Harvard undergraduate grades are now A’s. Twenty-five years ago, it was 20%. It got so bad that the legendary Harvard professor, Harvey Mansfield, started giving students two grades: the official one for their transcript, and a private one reflecting what they actually earned. He called the official grades “ironic.” So here's a suggestion: Take your A, but also ask your professors for a “Mansfield grade” so that you know where you stand. And don’t avoid difficult courses to keep your transcript clean for law school. Get work experience before you graduate. Forty-two percent of recent college graduates are working jobs that don't require a degree. Many employers are projecting the next few years to be the worst college grad job market in years. A degree alone — even from an Ivy — is not a job guarantee. Seek out apprenticeships, internships, and real work starting freshman year. The students at UATX are connected with entrepreneurs and business leaders from day one. Many will graduate with four years of work experience alongside their degree. You can build something similar at your school, but you'll have to do it yourself. Understand how debt shapes your life. If you're paying full freight or even half, do the math with your eyes open. Your decision to take on debt will quietly reshape the trajectory of your adult life through countless small surrenders: the job you take because it’s safe instead of starting the company. The city you choose to live in. The relationship you delay and the kids you don’t have. For women, a $1,000 increase in student loan debt lowers the odds of marriage by 2% per month in the first four years after graduation. None of that shows up in the college brochure. If you're going to take on debt, treat it like the constraint it is from day one: save aggressively and make sure every dollar is buying something that will actually compound in your favor. Find the people who take school seriously. The best thing about a great school isn't the lectures or the library. It's the handful of professors and students who are genuinely there to learn — who read ahead, argue in good faith, and push you to be sharper. Find them. UATX is a small community of those who seek a serious education. At a larger university, you have to build this community yourself. * The most dangerous thing about an elite university is that it is very easy to do nothing for four years and still come out looking successful. The transcript will say you excelled. The diploma with the fancy crest will open certain doors. Your parents will be proud. And yet you will have coasted — through inflated grades, unread books, and borrowed opinions. Getting in is an accomplishment. Making the next four years worth it will be harder, and the right decisions will change everything. We wish you luck.

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Basil the Great
Basil the Great@BasilTheGreat·
The leftist mindset is insane "Name an Islamic City you would feel comfortable wearing that dress in" "What about what White people did" 🤦 If you cannot be bothered to listen to the end No, she doesn't ever answer the question
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Liza Rosen
Liza Rosen@LizaRosen0000·
Top British attorney Natasha Hausdorff stunned the audience by destroying the Muslim narrative! This is one of the most powerful speeches ever made!
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Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸
Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸@rdavidmullins·
I see what you're arguing now. I misunderstood what you were saying honestly. Indeed, en or em dashes. But the point t would be the same if people started saying the guardian only has AI posts because there are en dashes. BUT here's a post from the economist. Literally the first post in the app.
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Marshall Steinbaum 🔥
Marshall Steinbaum 🔥@Econ_Marshall·
I have a PhD in economics from the University of Chicago and my main work task these days is removing em-dashes from Claude output so it's not overly obvious.
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Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸
Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸@rdavidmullins·
@kimmonismus Yes, indeed. Otherw, we'll retain the same stupidity of reaching an important milestone and then finding new Gettier objections for why we didn't *really* reach AGI. difficulty is that agreeing on a def of "intelligence". obv bottleneck.
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Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸 retweetledi
David Ulevitch 🇺🇸
Doubt I’ve ever seen a story with more falsehoods and deceptive language in the first two ‘graphs in my life. What an absolute trash piece. We need more @PalmerLuckey’s and less liars like Nathan. Can’t believe an editor let this out. I care because people read it and believe it.
Nathan J Robinson@NathanJRobinson

I realize the title of "worst billionaire in America" is highly competitive, but I wrote about why I think Silicon Valley "war king" @PalmerLuckey deserves the prize: currentaffairs.org/news/palmer-lu…

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Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸 retweetledi
Palmer Luckey
Palmer Luckey@PalmerLuckey·
This "deeply reported" piece from WIRED is inexcusably bad. First, it is just wrong. Not nitpicky things, fundamentally false jabs and premises. Second, it completely ignores the stakes of supporting active troops to push r/antiwork softboy talking points. Examples below.
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WIRED@WIRED

Like Trae said, we spoke to 37 former and current Anduril workers, in addition to investors, experts, and former military officials, for this deeply reported story, which you should read: wired.com/story/andurils…

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Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸 retweetledi
Chubby♨️
Chubby♨️@kimmonismus·
Reading the Saturday edition of Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (my daily newspaper). There’s an interview between a journalist and an AI expert, and something struck me. In Germany, the conversation around AI is almost entirely framed through fear. Should we “consume” AI in moderation, like a good beer? Who is responsible when it makes mistakes? Does it make us less intelligent if we use it too much? And so on. Not a single question focuses on the upside. Not one tries to explore what AI could actually do for humanity. Instead, the underlying question always seems to be: How much suffering will AI bring? This is absurd.
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Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸 retweetledi
Google Earth
Google Earth@googleearth·
In 2025, we doubled down on evolving Google Earth into a professional-grade geospatial platform. In 2026, we’re hitting the accelerator. 🏎️💨 Our mission: Empower professionals to transform their businesses, their cities, and the planet. Here is what we're building this year 🧵👇 goo.gle/4syrWM2
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Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸
Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸@rdavidmullins·
12. What follows from this? LLMs aren't broken because they lack a world model. They're one layer of a larger architecture that doesn't fully exist yet. Meaning doesn't require embodiment — but reasoning that acts in the world requires all three layers working together. The philosophical question and the engineering question are the same question: how do you navigate a relational field intelligently? Brandom and @ylecun are working on the same problem from different ends. Eager to see how Anthropic pursues this with their latest @AmandaAskell
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Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸
Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸@rdavidmullins·
11. Here's the unifying image: Life is a search problem. Whether you're a bacterium chemotaxing toward glucose, a human navigating a city to meet a friend, or an LLM tracing the inferential path from premise to conclusion, you're optimizing movement through a relational field toward a goal. Intelligence is what you do when the field gets complex enough that simple gradients don't work.
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Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸
Ryan David Mullins 🇺🇸@rdavidmullins·
1. Philosophers have been arguing about whether LLMs "understand" anything. The real question is more interesting: what kind of understanding do they have? And to answer that, you need a theory of meaning almost nobody in AI is using.
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