consilient
No user record in our sample, but consilient has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but consilient has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
> But later philosophers came up with much better solutions Yes, later than both Smith and Marx. Marginalism didn't go mainstream until the 1890s, though the necessary pieces were there waiting to be assembled from…
Unless you're doing math (and are willing to take first order logic as a priori true) you need to start with something. Learning about the world requires data, data requires identifying a data source, and identifying a…
> simply be what that conscious thing experiences when a set of neurons is activated in a particular way? That is what it is, but that's totally independent of whether they're physical. One is a sign pointing to the…
> Okay, but this is not at all what Marx himself said. Marx was philosophically opposed in all of his writings to answering even the most basic questions about what a communist economy/government would look like. In his…
> But that efficiency of the current state, but doesn't seem to take account of the evolution that happened to get to that point. Has anyone measured the work it takes to get the market to that endpoint? Is there even a…
> This kind of shallow dismissal of my shallow dismissal of a frankly idiotic idea that doesn't deserve a deeper dismissal The labor theory of value was accepted wisdom prior to the late 19th century: it originates with…
> Marx believed that making functioning plans was useless since progress was inevitable once unleashed. Marx believed that planning out the detailed structure of a future utopian society, in the tradition of Owen or…
The LSD essay went way, way over the heads of half of his comment section.
> My impression is that they're what scott calls "my dinner guests." Yes, he's pathologically friendly towards anyone to his right: part and parcel of not taking them that seriously. > Seriously I cannot find anything…
The relevant outgroups animating Afrikaner nationalism aren't the Zulu (or Xhosa, or Tswana, etc.) as a whole, but rather the rapidly growing black working class on the one hand, and English-speaking elites on the…
> As for e/acc, I have no idea what that means. It's just the latest rebranding of Nick Land's ideology/performance art/shitposting. "Capital will devour human civilization: here's why that's a good thing."
e/acc is an internet meme. The underlying ideological group, to the extent that there is one, is the "reactionary modernism"/"Californian Ideology"/"New Right"/"neoreactionary" cluster. My impression is that for Scott…
That's not a bunch of separate caveats, it's a few principles illustrated with lots of examples. - Don't use effects for things that aren't genuinely effectful - Put finnicky state management stuff in reusable utils…
I'm having trouble finding a primary source, but here's a paper discussing the issue. Field, A. (2014). Schelling, von Neumann, and the Event that Didn’t Occur. Games, 5(1), 53–89. doi:10.3390/g5010053…
> him having personally experienced Soviet brutality didn't have the luxury of being ignorant of reality. Allied troops didn't reach Hungary until 1944, and the Soviet-backed coup occurred in 1947. von Neumann moved to…
Somethings are simply bad for you, without qualification, but for the most part it only makes sense to use "healthy" or "unhealthy" to describe a diet, not individual foods. Milk has lots of protein, minerals, and fat.…
> does HN have some type of special level of skepticism built into it that no where else online does? Obviously not, but there's no general factor of wrongness lurking behind it. HN has a crippling case of engineer's…
> Again Chomsky and other tankies Chomsky is literally an anarchist.
They're not. Most protected classes are things like "race" or "marital status" - not "black" or "married". (Age is an exception here, at least federally: young people are not protected.)
> Or do you consider wikipedia also propagandist? The Wikimedia Foundation itself is not, but there are absolutely cliques of editors pushing propaganda.
> "a subfield of computer science" (computability is a minor concern compared to the statistical underpinnings) Computability theory is not all of computer science. It's just one subfield among many.
Some of them are: I've run into sections lifted straight of of Lang's Algebra several times.
> No, that's not what superposition means a priori. The word was originally used to describe the decomposition of waveforms into sums of sinusoids, which is as canonical an example of a linear system as you can get. >…
> Why would we expect superpositions of quantum states to be encoded as a vector sum of the individual state vectors? Because that's what the word superposition means. If you don't have linear dynamics you don't have…
> Tensor product V⊗V is space of all bilinear forms on V* This is only true for finite-dimensional V. In general bilinear forms on V* are linear maps `V*⊗V* -> F` (where F is the base field) which is isomorphic to…