Lessons
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Lessons
@untitld_project
Zig Engelmannism, beginner.

Si trabajas en una película live action de Disney y propones usar colores vívidos y buena iluminación te despiden inmediatamente.


This stunt feels irresponsible to me. If we don't want regular people developing toxic relationships with their chatbots it really doesn't help for leading labs to start giving them "retirement interviews" and encouraging them to blog their "musings and reflections"

AI folks have about 4 months to pull a cure for cancer out of the latent space before we drift into the butlerian jihad attractor basin



What actually defines one second?






I think that Common Core math will be the next "Whole Language" type scandal in education. The Common Core Math *is* more advanced than the old curriculums, but what it does is frustrate and leave behind at least 50% of kids. They don't even learn the absolute basics. By increasing the difficulty, ability doesn't rise, you just produce a bimodal distribution where the average kid has less ability than before, although the "curriculum" is objectively more advanced.



@simplicialcube @morallawwithin >axiom of choice False. >well-ordering theorem False. >Zorn’s Lemma False.


This is a great piece with some mind-boggling statistics. - At Brown and Harvard, more than 20% of undergraduates are registered as disabled - At Amherst: more than 30 percent - At Stanford: nearly 40 percent Soon, many of these schools "may have more students receiving [disability] accommodations than not, a scenario that would have seemed absurd just a decade ago." As students and their parents have recognized the benefits of claiming disability—extended time on tests, housing accommodations, etc—the rates of disability at colleges, and especially at elite colleges, has exploded. America used to stigmatize disability too severely. Now elite institutions reward it too liberally. It simply does not make any sense to have a policy that declares half of the students at Stanford cognitively disabled and in need of accommodations.




IMO we should get rid of cursive writing like we got rid of the penny. It's 2025, kids don't need this shit anymore.












