HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

antwerp1

no profile record

Submissions

1k Word Philosophy

1000wordphilosophy.com
18 points·by antwerp1·2 anni fa·3 comments

Any Writers Using Draftback?

1 points·by antwerp1·3 anni fa·0 comments

comments

antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
Quadratics might be more useful for optimizing (min/max problems)..
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
Didn’t Chinese yuppies already experience all this like, 20 years ago?
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
…and let us know before your company goes public
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
Seems like a good time to invest in Spain’s solar..

Perhaps they can export stored sunlight to their neighbors up north..
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
I spent one evening laying on the Yosemite valley floor, from dusk until well past the moon and stars had made their appearances. The entire time I was there, frogs were holding a concert. And sound echoes between the rocks.

I think timing might be an interesting factor to introduce, e.g. all forests at sunset.
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
When did this become legal?
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
Can you elaborate on the second point? Sounds like an interesting dynamic but I don’t understand..
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
“The Buddhist does not see the world as divided between warring good and evil influences, but rather views the wandering mind non-judgementally, as needing only constant gentle correction.”

This is something I never understood about the New Age movement.

You use the word correction. Now, whether done gently or forcefully, the act of correcting something implies a path of some sort— to compensate for getting off-course while moving toward a target, if you will. If you cannot judge that you are off-course, how can you possibly (gently) correct yourself? Further, can you define a target without asserting a judgement? Can you say “Let’s aim for the stars” without simultaneously implying, not the moon, and not the earth?

Even viewing the mind as “wandering” is a strong judgement!

If the enemy is simply a name for whatever is pulling you off-course, then isn’t that embedded in any judgement of correction?
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
Thank you for sharing, this was a nice contrast to the usual mindfulness approaches. Also appreciated the takedown of Mr Hanania
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
Very beautifully written. (A little puzzled as to why 4 people were involved in publishing the excerpt)
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
(I mean the original reference itself is surprising)
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
This was such a trip, appreciate all the references. But that is no philosophy for life. I’m actually surprised it is written that way in the Bible.
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
It’s kind of amazing to think people were writing 2,000 years ago and that their work was preserved and we actually have access to to their ideas.

Especially when you consider that 21st century writing is pretty much text messages and AI..

Do we just not stuff to write about anymore? Have all the good theories been taken?
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
You want fire and brimstone self-help?
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
Sounds like something Louis Carroll might have had fun with
antwerp1
·2 anni fa·discuss
Milosophy

Latin > Greek
antwerp1
·3 anni fa·discuss
… khod-Kushi in Persian means suicide.
antwerp1
·3 anni fa·discuss
If you have enough savings to take year off, quit your job (or minimize/part time it) and apply yourself to what you really (think) you want. You may be surprised at the results, but at least you’ll know you pursued your dreams
antwerp1
·3 anni fa·discuss
Thank you. Is it a technical term used in marketing?

Plenty of people also criticize behavioral economics for being manipulative, especially if they don’t agree with the behavior to be “corrected”
antwerp1
·3 anni fa·discuss
It would be silly to assume that the criteria that yields a law (or a system) be itself subject to that law or system. Logically, that criteria must encompass the system and cannot at all be subject to it