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johngossman

1,397 karmajoined 12 lat temu

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How to Choose a Translation of the Odyssey

gossmanster.substack.com
2 points·by johngossman·4 dni temu·0 comments

Many people have no mental imagery. What's going on in their brains?

nature.com
22 points·by johngossman·5 miesięcy temu·11 comments

comments

johngossman
·10 godzin temu·discuss
Fun. I studied Japanese for two years, let it slide and now every Kanji is like "Hmmm, I've seen that before but..." I can still read kana though, which is nice to know.
johngossman
·9 dni temu·discuss
I think you are confusing the scientific process, in particular Popper's falsification principle, with science's purpose, which is to find the truth, or at least sort things into true and false. It's a bit like saying the purpose of programming is to have a bunch of unit tests.
johngossman
·21 dni temu·discuss
Ironic that you should question if the commenter talks to regular people and then cite people who work on laptops from the coffee shop, use Slack etc.
johngossman
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
They wrote a lot of letters to each other. That's effectively how the Royal Society started, as the formalization of a network of letter writers
johngossman
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
According to William Rosen in "Justinian's Flea," this plague also led to an agricultural revolution and population explosion in Western Europe.

<quote> One cannot, of course, “know” this in the same way that one can know the date of the battle of Poitiers; applying economic analysis to the spotty record of commerce during late antiquity is a tricky business. However, as can be seen in a subtly reasoned 2003 paper by two development economists, Ronald Findlay of Columbia and Mats Lundahl of the University of Stockholm, it is compelling, as well, despite its reliance on a number of simplifications. </quote>
johngossman
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
Lots of serious historians disagree. There are whole books on the topic. Here's just one paper as an example

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-demograph...
johngossman
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Fwiw, in 1900 my grandfather taught school in Washington State. He was 16 years old.

I don't know how good he was, just saying it wasn't so long ago.
johngossman
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Go look at the demographics of the last election and then tell me which groups shouldn't be allowed to vote.
johngossman
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Wait...aren't you quoting the Boomers from the 60s?
johngossman
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
If only the olds would die we could build more datacenters!

More seriously, why wouldn't older, longer-lived people be more likely to address long-term problems like climate change?
johngossman
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
"The default setting on phones is to save storage by only using 12 megapixels, so unless you've changed settings, the 200 megapixel phone loses 94% of its megapixels as soon as you press the shutter. Bad deal!"

The final picture is the result of digital processing of the 200 megapixels, which is quite different from losing the data, all other things being the same. His point is right, but this paragraph isn't worthy of the rest of the essay.
johngossman
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Welcome to my rathole: Venetian history. To expand on your thesis, the Council of Ten was the executive power in Venice, but the Doge and minor council attended the Council of Ten meetings and the Doge often chaired those meetings. And even if he was powerless, the Council was made up of other old men. I don't want to push this whole argument, I'm not recommending we adopt the Venetian constitution. But I don't think you can blame current chaos on age.
johngossman
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Average is probably not what you need to worry about: I'd bet David Attenborough and Mel Brooks still have IQs considerably higher than the average 25-year old. And I'm not convinced IQ is as important as that elusive factor called character.

But you may be right. Maybe what the US really needs is a lagoon.
johngossman
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
While I mostly agree...

Venice was run by very old men. It was common for the Doge to be in their 80s. Meanwhile, many of their neighbors had kings who were very young, sometimes teenage boys.

Venice was the longest lasting, most stable state in Europe.
johngossman
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
Businesses are risk averse and in the current environment they are all looking to secure their supply chains, whether to reduce their dependence on silicon from Taiwan, oil from the strait of Hormuz, or digital services from the United States. I think you are also underestimating the power of regulation. Not all European businesses have to be all-in for Mistral (or another alternative) to survive. This is one reason so many countries still have domestic defense, aerospace, and even automobile companies.
johngossman
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
While I generally do not trust information from "advertisements", in this case I don't see how this is any worse than including a list of sources in the bibliography. What this could be is an attempt to use those other books to sell the author's through some reflected glory (or SEO-fu) but in that case, the author is still incentivized to recommend good books.
johngossman
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
Good list. It does not include "Silk Roads" by Frankopan, which I agree with. That's a good read but much more a history of world trade (hence the plural) and strangely western-centric. I saw strangely because in the introduction Frankopan says he wanted to write a history from the point of view on central Asia, but its not that at all. Dalyrymple's "Golden Road" succeeds at Frankopan's objective and I found it much better in general. I don't want to sound too negative on "Silk Roads" but I think the title is subtly misleading if you want to learn about the trade general referred to as the Silk Road.
johngossman
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
I got it. And I've played a 1905 Martin and you can still plug a 1950s telecaster into a 1950s amp in turn plugged into wall power and everything works. Just saying, that is not the consumer electronics world in 2026.
johngossman
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
I can understand why one would want to move from Kindle to another device, but this article starts by complaining that support is being dropped for devices from before 2013. I can even understand being upset by this, but I have absolutely no faith that whatever other device I switch to will still be supported in 10+ years. Could be. But I sure wouldn't count on it.
johngossman
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
That is correct. Biology uses the term fit slightly different than the general public