Severin Matusek
How I conduct interviews | Cherie Hu
- The first recorded use of ‘worldbuilding’ was in an issue of the Edinburgh Review , December 1820.
from Without World - The White Review
- Lorecraft is clearly a strikingly millennial school of management thinking. All the thinkers who belong in this tradition are, as far as I can tell, between about 28-35 or so. They are firmly middle-of-the-pack millennials. Founders of startups who seem to practice a sort of management by lorecraft, such as Conor White-Sullivan of Roam Research, ar... See more
from Lands of Lorecraft by Venkatesh Rao
- André has the excitement of someone who is traversing new ground, but he’s also serious about the work.
from Andre 3000 is at Peace (For Now) by Hanif Abdurraqib
- Looking back five years after the initial Dark Forest essay and pangs of concern, what most stands out is something that those of us who are drawn to Dark Forests have felt longer than most: that the internet is real life. What we do “in here” matters just as much as — and for some of us, problematically, even more than — what happens “out there.”
... See morefrom The Dark Forest and the Post-Individual by Yancey Strickler
- Le Guin and Butler use the world-building capacities of the speculative and science fictions as a cypher into the complex social, cultural, and ecological conditions of life here on Spaceship Earth[2]. In their work, Butler and Le Guin established a more empathetic kind of world-building, using the genres as a way to think critically about society ... See more
from Ecological World-Building: From Science Fiction to Virtual Reality
- So a lot of the scenarios in my projects that seem to hinge ludicrously across dystopia and utopia—another set of unproductive binaries we’ve created—are actually machine-generated.
from On Technology and Humanity: Alice Bucknell and Her Alternative Worlds
- Perhaps one way to motivate and encourage regulators and enforcers everywhere is to explain that the subterranean architecture of the internet has become a shadowland where evolution has all but stopped. Regulators’ efforts to make the visible internet competitive will achieve little unless they also tackle the devastation that lies beneath.
from We Need to Rewild the Internet by Maria Farrell