philosophistry



Tuesday, Aug 12, 2003

[11:46 PM] Comments (0) | More in Ideas | philipd:\>

Aphorisms Against Work: "A life of labor always diminishes one's love of life, so become a verb like Bucky Fuller and cease to be the lowly noun spoken of so fondly, once a year, on Labor Day. "

(I apologize for all the deoxy links, but this stuff is just too good to not share)



[10:14 PM] Comments (0) | More in Ideas | philipd:\>

The lethal text: "Quite simply, the lethal text is a text that, when read, renders the reader incapable of reading. It destroys the reader's mind. It induces a crippling insanity. Only those who have read a lethal text know what it says...but they are in no position to share their knowledge. "



[05:12 PM] Comments (0) | philipd:\>
Windowsupdate.com DDOS

Windowsupdate.com has been terribly down and slow today, I think because of W32.Blaster.Worm. I noticed my laptop kept getting it's RPC service shut-down and subsequently, would require that the laptop be rebooted... apparently Stanford was tryign to shut-down the RPC process that was being used on infected machines to infect each other. The other odd thing that clue me off to the idea that I had a virus was that I couldn't go to windowsupdate.com to get an update. Apparently the msblast worm DDOS's windowsupdate.com so it a) impedes your ability to go there and b) prevents other people from going there. See right now, I can't go to windowsupdate.com... it's so slow.

How to fix it, well one way is to go to that link above by Symantec, or just do a search for msblast.exe on your harddrive and delete it. Also, block port 135... best bet, check Symantec's site.



[04:58 PM] Comments (0) | philipd:\>

Is Rush any good? Some 70s-00s band that I heard mentioned in Futurama: Anthology of Interest, 2... it sounded pretty cool when Fry was playing video games...

BTW, if you want to watch the best Futurama episode, download Godfellas from KaZaA.



[04:55 PM] Comments (0) | philipd:\>
A man who lives on the edge can only take one path in life.

Edge - "To arrive at the edge of the world's knowledge, seek out the most complex and sophisticated minds, put them in a room together, and have them ask each other the questions they are asking themselves." ... Dennet, Kurzweil... all great Prociphers... I'm still bummed that they're charging students $100+ to attend the Accelerating Change Conference.

Pssyah, singularity, Transhumanism, that was SOOO last year.

HEY! Name-drop gloating time. I've met Jurvetson... this guy is like, the Singularity-entrepreneur incarnate. First he did his schtick at Stanford, completed in 2.5 years, like suma cum lade or something (I should've done that, damn). Then, he paid some dues at places like HP. But THEN, he dot-com boomed his way to mega-bucks with things like Hotmail, and sold many things before the crash. And then quickly thereafter, and now, they're into a ton of Nanotech. Anyway, he was the first VC I heard say anything remotely interesting... someone asked, "What happens when this accelerating change keeps going, and goes straight up." then he kind of blushed, was like, "well, we get into really wild theories... I don't want to get into it" he paused, gaugingthe anxiety of the crowd, and then proceeded anyways, and sputtered off, in like 1 minute all of Kurzweil's Law of Accelerating Returns ideas, Transhumanism thinking, transcendence, etc... and people were just silent. He looked kind of embarrassed, but I was like cheering inside when I heard this...

Then, Tim O'Reilly founder of the the animal books... his deal was that when he went to college, he took a Medieval Studies major because he liked it, and then for money, he started writing technical how-tos on things. He was good, and he eventually started getting serious, publishing, and now he is a legend among the geeks.... he seems to hold up the "do what you love" philosophy as his schtick, which I admire... he is also the pointman for singularity stuff that may happen in the OSS world... him and possibly this guy, Dave Winer... but we'll see, he's having a little conflict in the blogging world, fighting for his version of RSS and what other ppl think RSS should be...

And finally, John R. Koza co-founder of the concept of Genetic Programming. He taught a Stanford class that I attended and I have a paper that I got published with other classmates. Genetic programming is basically having programs compete with each, then mate, and reproduce, in a fashion similar to natural selection, in order to find the best program... it's technologically very simple--it's based on LISP which has tree-like programming structure, like +(-(x,y),z) would be (x-y) + z.... and you can then devise programs just based on trees, and then have the Genetic Programming take branches from competing programs, merge them together, and create supposedly better children... it sounds cool, and what makes it cooler is that with computers, you can simulate large populations in a few seconds... anyway, the concept is amazing... I don't know whether Koza is a procipher or just a guy that invented a cool tool, although he has his foot in many different fields which makes him Buckminster Fuller-like in his embrace of diversity in intellect.



[04:38 PM] Comments (0) | philipd:\>
Uncool Worthy

Remember that Apple iPod and VW ad... well it had an interesting opneing song that reminded me of the 70s and transcendence. Anyways, these are the guys: The Polyphonic Spree. They're a group of 20-some-odd people wearing white robes. Yeah, I know, music that doesn't have depression and angst is not cool to listen to these days, but still, I think it's worth a shot... I did feel "uplifted" listening to it though....



[04:36 PM] Comments (0) | More in Voodoo Schmoodoo | philipd:\>
Novelty Theory

I haven't read Novelty Wave 2012: A Guide to Novelty Theory, 2012 ... but basically, I think it relates to what Terrence McKenna discovered... that basically time is the distance between novelty, and he found a fractal function that could calculate the time intervals, and he came to the conclusion that in 2012 novelty would end.

More on this later...



[04:32 PM] Comments (0) | philipd:\>
The Tautrix Reviewed

FBEOH includes a review of the Tautrix. For the uninitiated, the Tautrix is a fictitious polytheistic system that I invented for the purposes of mapping deities to my scientific beliefs, such as the Church-Turing Thesis, or the Central Limit Theorem. It provides me a proxy through which I can get the same perks as a religious-person without the aftertaste of participating in something inauthentic.

Note, a common criticism of the Tautrix is that it lacks morality or family values. Indeed it is an individualist's religion. However, I'm still not settled on the idea that one can make a philosophically sound morality. In practice, I believe in morality for sure, but I'm not convinced that there is a good enough moral system that can be set into stone. Every system I've seen has always had holes in it in one way or the other that make it inconsistent or inauthentic. Plus, I'm no expert on morality, or ethics, or even understand the difference between the two, so I wouldn't be an expert on that.

I encourage others to make up their own Tautrix that they believe in, come up with different names and different underlying principles, like Panexperientalism, and possibly include ethics that they believe in. It would be nice to see a Principher Kantas to represent Kantian Ethics.



[12:03 PM] Comments (0) | philipd:\>

Bah, it seems like Stephen Covey's right after all. His first chapter in 7 Habits of Highly Effective people is about making your expectations a little ahead of your capacity. This is similar to my earlier posts regarding how wise-men keep the recurring concept that wisdom is knowing how and when to control your desires. His second chapter, I think, is having a "principle-centered" life... I was always against this, primarily because his method for discovering your principles involved imagining what you wanted your close-ones to think of you when you died. Now, this may relate to Buber's concept that man is only a man inasmuch as he serves his community, so he could still be right on that one... but I still hold down the individualists' attitude. Either way though, Covey has a point about having a principle-centered life, which can be translated into an endorsement-centered life, or an authentic life. Everything you do should revolve around the things that you truly believe in. This is not so obvious because we could do things out of desparation even though we don't endores the acts of desparation. Finding out your principles is not easy, and I won't suggest Covey's method, but you can find them eventually.