sari
i doubt that even highly advanced AI can solve complex human problems, as these require constant meaning-making in infinitely varied situations.
thinking: there is a bias in decision-making which renders one big thing more important than lots of small things.
- Hello newsletter friends, happy to see you. Thanks for your patience as I hobble back to regularly scheduled programming after pretending to feel fine the last three months. It feels like best practice to fake it, but I’m bad at that, so I’d rather say: I’m pregnant and the first three months were very rough on me physically and I wasn’t up for any... See more
from When summer is over and fall hasn't started, it's by Alison Roman
Alison Roman announces her pregnancy
- There are two kinds of writing; alive writing and dead writing. Alive writing invokes sensuousness, expansion, and insight. It transforms and enlarges its reader. It is a kind of disclosure; simultaneously immanent and transcendent. Dead writing is passive, sentimental and afraid of telling the truth. It discloses nothing except its own performance... See more
from Art, AI, and the Courage to Create by Hannah Close
- The subscription model means content providers are paid regularly no matter the quality and quantity of the product. Makes sense – being paid on a regular basis before you make content is awesome, but in this subscription economy, we have lost the ability to place value on each individual film. If the company spends time and energy on only certain ... See more
from The Disappearance of the Hit-Driven Business Model
the current subscription-based business model makes it really hard for film makers to create a hit and/or generate a profit large enough.
- Most people I know have problems with Internet addiction. We're
all trying to figure out our own customs for getting free of it.
That's why I don't have an iPhone, for example; the last thing I
want is for the Internet to follow me out into the world.
[5]
My latest trick is taking long hikes. I used to think running was a
better form of exercise than hik... See morefrom The Acceleration of Addictiveness
Paul Graham, 2010
"We teachers - perhaps all human beings - are in the grip of an astonishing delusion. We think that we can take a picture, a structure, a working model of something, constructed in our minds out of long experience and familiarity, and by turning that model into a string of words, transplant it whole into the mind of someone else. Perhaps once in a
... See more- When Abraham Maslow did clinical studies of people who self-actualized, one thing that set them apart from others was, he wrote, that they lived “more in the real world of nature than in the man-made mass of concepts, abstractions, expectations, beliefs, and stereotypes that most people confuse with the world.” They were, to put it simply, more per... See more
from Becoming Perceptive by Henrik Karlsson
- The more choices someone makes in a work’s creation, the more likely it is to be viewed as making art.
from Art Without Intention by Lincoln Michel