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Beautiful , and beautiful :

“I favor selectively shining a light on the offending symbols, imagery, and language, both past and present, as a reminder of our history and of how far we still have to go as a society… and of how vigilant we need to be.”

“I’ve never believed my role as an was to make work that ensured comfort. My paintings are purposefully subject to alternate interpretations, and a reading of Comparative Religions 101 that provokes anger is certainly possible if the viewer is a literalist. But I can’t explain the humor and irony in the work to a literalist, any more than I can explain Red to a person who is (red/green) colorblind.”

Ben Sakoguchi

The four of :

The four cardinal virtues of :

  • Justice
  • Temperance
  • Prudence
  • Fortitude

Just sayin’!

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"The scrollbar is a displeasure to my sensitive designer eyes, I will make it razor thin to turn it into a usability nightmare instead"

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To the best of my knowledge, nothing summarises best what’s “good” or “bad” or “important” than (avoiding it, preventing it, reducing it).

Not wellbeing, pleasure, flourishing, happiness, freedom, transcendence, detachment, or love.

And nothing seems better to me to measure and describe reality, what reality could be like, and how exactly it can be changed, than (rationality, logic, science).

Its contenders all look clearly inferior: intuition, empathy, revelation, tradition, authority, serendipity, chance, art, anecdote…

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That is what “reasoning from first principles” means to me.

The causal chain may be long sometimes, with many logical steps involved. And there is room for uncertainty and for epistemic humility. But the ultimate goal is to evaluate ideas and to make decisions reducing them all to lower-level equivalents based on a few core propositions.

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matters”

Very often more freedom means individuals accomplish more of their stated preferences, and very often those preferences point towards less suffering for them (and sometimes for others, too).

Freedom is (usually) good because it (usually) reduces suffering. But it’s not a given.

(Needless to say, this is not a justification for despots or kidnappers, who do not reduce but increase suffering.)

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is good”

This is true only because (or to the extent that) pleasure is incompatible with suffering, or that pleasure means that whatever the level of suffering it is being offset by a greater amount of the opposite stuff.

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Other propositions, while true and important, are derivative, reducible — not axiomatic:

matters”

…insofar as there’s (some degree of) consciousness/sentience. Because only sentient entities can suffer. And suffering is what matters.

eg, relieving a horse of a toothache is more important than preventing the annihilation of a sterile galaxy. There’s no “wellbeing” in a corner of the universe where there are no conscious creatures, no matter how vast that chunk of space-time be.

(If putting “destruction of an entire galaxy” lower in your list of worries than “someone somewhere breaks his little finger” sounds alarming to you, it’s only because it is extremely improbable that we could know for sure that the galaxy is entirely devoid of sentience, is incapable of developing or hosting consciousness ever in the future, and is not and will not provide shelter or resources to any creature. Very little confidence in that, therefore too much risk in prioritising a toothache over the fate of a billion stars in practice.)

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Off the top of my head, strong candidates for that set are:

is bad”

That’s the only thing that I’m certain is bad. My foundation for .

is true”

Math is the only that I trust. And math is behind everything.

“I matter. Others matter, too.”

This guards against the polar opposites of egotism and immolation — both mistaken.

[…]

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I aspire to navigate using as well as I can to make decisions based on as parsimonious a set of as possible.

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Bankless (@BanklessHQ@twitter.com) might be for Web3 and crypto today what Wired Magazine was for the Web in the 1990s, and the Whole Earth Catalog for the counterculture around 1970: a fun and optimistic view of the tools of the future.

"Stay hungry. Stay foolish." 🤗

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Yes, I spent ¥2000 for these Bladerunneresque viewes over #Tokyo, and I have zero regrets 🤩

@benoit @globalc

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@tripu ... and the app comes with built in trackers and can only be downloaded from within the closed walls of commercial app stores. I feel you!

tripu boosted
@tripu or just let me use your website or give me email notifications to serve this purpose instead.

what really grinds my gears is newer HP printers seeming to need a damned mobile phone app to get everything to work. I had to troubleshoot one for my mom and it wouldn't give me anything useful without the app.

she wound up buying a different printer that didn't need such nonsense. the printer is connected to a computer already, it should not need a separate computer (smartphone) to work.

I’m so annoyed by the appification of services…

No, I won’t install your stupid app just to book a haircut, to see the balance in my meal card, or to be notified when my vehicle is ready to leave the garage.

Especially if your stupid app needs a ton of irrelevant permissions, weights 250 MB, keeps itself always busy in the background and bugs me with notifications!

Develop a fucking universal web app which can be used by pretty much anyone anywhere immediately and without leaving a trail of binary droppings.

and FTW.

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