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pjdorrell

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Ask HN: How come 3rd party payment systems still exist?

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An application of infinite countable ordinals to the theory of metatiktok

tiktok.com
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pjdorrell
·2 anni fa·discuss
The hypothesis that music is caused by a "glial illusion". That is, glial cells observe the activity of neural activity responding to music, and glial cells falsely perceive certain aspects of that neural activity, which results in dysregulation of neural activity in "downstream" neurons, which causes the emotional intensity we experience when listening to music.
pjdorrell
·4 anni fa·discuss
The results of these experiments indirectly tell us something about our chances of ever meeting aliens:

* No physical collapse => Everett interpretation AKA "many worlds"

* Many worlds gives us the Anthropic Principle for free

* The Anthropic Principle explains the origin of the first living organism, or, to put it another way, the observed existence of the origin of our first living ancestor does _not_ set any lower bound on the probability of the first living organism developing from non-living molecules.

* A very low probability of the origin of life implies the non-existence of any other life in the observable universe.

* Therefore, no aliens.

(The aliens do of course exist in other parts of the total Universal Wave Function, but we never get to meet them.)
pjdorrell
·4 anni fa·discuss
Link to something I wrote once, which includes a discussion about absolute vs relative morality: http://thinkinghard.com/blog/BiologyOfMorality.html.

(It would appear that "moral realism" is just another way of saying "absolute morality", or "moral absolutism".)
pjdorrell
·4 anni fa·discuss
We could ask the opposite question:

Some forms of entertainment are usually only entertaining the first time. Like jokes. Or movies.

Music seems to be a form of entertainment. But usually we are quite happy to listen to a new song more than once.

So why is that?
pjdorrell
·4 anni fa·discuss
If your theorem provers never prove a contradiction, they are all too weak.
pjdorrell
·4 anni fa·discuss
The author says:

>"The status quo provides marginal individual benefit to the person making the decision while also causing marginal harm to society as a whole. Doing the right thing doesn’t really provide much tangible short term benefit."

This explains exactly why the majority of people living in a dictatorship don't try very hard to do all the things that they need to do if they want to change their own government.

They need to do things like finding out what is the truth about their government, and telling other people what that truth is. But doing that requires individual self-sacrifice, and most people, most of the time, don't what to do that.
pjdorrell
·4 anni fa·discuss
In the bacterial example, each individual tumble chooses a new direction at random, and the effectiveness of the algorithm depends on the smoothness of the chemical density function in the 3D space that the bacteria is swimming around in.

In his human examples, all the "tumbles" are conscious decisions made by the person in response to their circumstances.

If there was some human equivalent of the "tumble", it would have to be something that was change just for the sake of change. Like: "I'm bored and/or frustrated, so I am going to do something stupidly different".
pjdorrell
·5 anni fa·discuss
CO2, or CO₂ ?