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holonomically

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The Salience Network

jneurosci.org
1 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

The Power of Prediction – Lisa Feldman Barrett

youtube.com
3 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

An open source Prolog interpreter in JavaScript

tau-prolog.org
11 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·2 comments

Proof and the Art of Mathematics

jdh.hamkins.org
7 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

Demonopolizing the Internet with Interoperability

onezero.medium.com
4 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·3 comments

Bridge of Words: Esperanto and the Dream of a Universal Language (2016)

kirkusreviews.com
2 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

A Review of Jaron Lanier’s Ten Arguments for Deleting Your Social Media (2018)

medium.com
1 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

What Do House Spiders Eat?

animalwised.com
3 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

Brain scans look stunning, but what do they actually mean?

psyche.co
1 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

The Fixation of Belief (1877) [pdf]

bocc.ubi.pt
1 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

Drought in Madagascar

earthobservatory.nasa.gov
1 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

We’re Asking the Impossible of Vaccines

theatlantic.com
3 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·2 comments

Hand Gestures Help Us Learn Math

theatlantic.com
1 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

Planting trees “doesn't make any sense” in the fight against climate change

dezeen.com
23 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·22 comments

Type Theory and Formal Proof: An Introduction

maa.org
2 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

Yuval Noah Harari on Vipassana Meditation

youtube.com
2 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

Politics and social media in 'Seveneves' (2019)

jewishworldreview.com
2 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

Irreversibility and Heat Generation in the Computing Process (1961)

ieeexplore.ieee.org
3 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·1 comments

Toshiba plans to split into three firms

news.cgtn.com
3 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

Is Language a Technology?

landing.athabascau.ca
1 points·by holonomically·5 years ago·0 comments

comments

holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
There is no way to fail in what I'm proposing because there are no grades. Everyone gets feedback on how to improve and students can receive all the help they need to keep up with the curriculum.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
Then maybe it should be $36k.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
Great, glad we cleared that up.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
Then I don't really understand what you're arguing about.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
My position is that kids should be taught math at an earlier age and schools should be properly staffed and funded to ensure positive learning outcomes for all students regardless of their socio-economic background because that will lead to more equal life outcomes.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
> Oleg owes his friend, Ivan, 100 rubles. Oleg has only 50 rubles. How many more rubles (x) does Oleg have to get to repay Ivan?

50 + x = 100 ↔ x = 100 - 50 = 50. I definitely linked to something that has word problems that can be converted to algebraic equations in 1 unknown.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
I didn't say anything about "uniform success".
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
Really? Setting up equations with unknown variables and solving them is not algebra?
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
Your interpretation of what I was saying was clearly adversarial and uncharitable so I just got tired of it. It's entirely possible to have high standards for everyone (including the "stupid") without reducing the quality of the curriculum. But you're not interested in having that discussion because you're grinding some other axe about what you perceive to be the ideological takeover of the educational system.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
Yes, thanks. That clears it up. You're right. We must teach no one anything otherwise there would be some people that wouldn't be able to understand. That was exactly what I was thinking and your example helped me understand. What you were saying was clearly tautological and I just didn't have the logical training to understand it.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
Yes, this is probably what is happening. Schools are understaffed and underfunded so programs keep getting cut. At this point it really just might be better to let kids learn from Khan Academy since the adults clearly have no idea what they're doing.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
I don't see how that follows.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
I don't know if that's what's going on. I suspect some haven't really sat down to think about what exactly they believe and why. Most seem to be parroting various mantras I've seen expressed on Twitter and Reddit without having thought about the implications of what they're parroting.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
No one in any of my classes was a prodigy. We had good teachers that cared about the students (and parents that were involved in their children's education). But I do think we should have had more musical training than just choir singing.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
Spend some extra time figuring out why they're struggling. But I suspect what you have in mind is something else, something more along the lines of leaving them behind.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
Talk about what?
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
What's the fallacy in teaching everyone the same things? That seems like a good way to equalize life outcomes and give everyone the required skills for succeeding in contemporary society.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
I still don't follow. What exactly in what I suggested is the problem with equalizing outcomes? If everyone is learning the same things then what exactly is the problem? There is no discrimination involved.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
I don't understand what this means. Where I went to school there were no gifted programs but we all were doing algebra and word problems much earlier than in the US. If people want consistent outcomes then teach everyone the same thing and hold everyone up to the same standards by investing more resources in students that are underachieving. That to me seems like a much better way of equalizing outcomes.
holonomically
·5 years ago·discuss
Yup, even 2x2 systems of equations. This stuff isn't hard, I don't get what the folks in the US are thinking.