Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Super-Frugal Chronicles #2

This is a back-up of some comments from the Reddit post which I backed up last week.

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Q: Are you one of those crazy 30ish frugal super early retirees, or one of those more realistic 40-50ish ones that didn't go all crazy from 21 up.

A (lightly edited): I'm 35. But there is a blend here of super-frugal and inheritance, and I'll try to explain that blend here.
When I got married, some friends who came from out of town to the wedding told a story to illustrate their wonder that I was ever able to get married -- apparently, I had ruined a blind date they had tried to set up for me by obsessively talking about the cheapest way to eat. I didn't even realize it was a date.
This story shows I'm not exactly neuro-typical, and that I've been willing to go obsessive about FIRE (though I only learned that term later, when I stumbled upon early retirement extreme). 
I maxed out Roth IRAs with index funds in my 20s, but then as I thought collapse was immanent, I made my only financial goal paying off the house. We live in a smaller house than anyone in our social circle, so with some moderately intense savings rates (say 30% to 50% . . . I'm not like some of the Jedi Masters you can see online) it was possible.
I had enough fuck you money to take some time off after I experienced a lot of deaths in my family, but the reason I now have a nest egg large enough for a sub-2% withdrawal is because of inheritance.
As to your question. . . I guess I'm something in between the two, perhaps?

[They quoted me with]
obsessively talking about the cheapest way to eat
[Then asked]
What's that?
A: (again, lightly edited): At the time, my conclusion was lentils and rice. I have to give credit to Jacob at Early Retirement Extreme for prior discovery. I also know that on the date I talked about it and using value menus judiciously. I remember that part, just not that it was a date.
Since that time my wife has helped me to see some value in variety. So, a dollar a person isn't a
sustainable level for our family to be happy. I just make sure I don't pay someone else to cook or
clean up. And that will have to be frugal enough.

Books I've Read 2020

I'm tired of Goodreads -- it's just too clunky-- so I am abandoning it here in July 2020.  I will keep my own list of books I have read.

The Lives of the Surrealists.  Desmond Morris
You Are Your Own Gym.  Mark Lauren
Quirky.  Melissa A. Schilling
A Bite-Sized History of France. Stephane Henaut, Jeni Mitchell
The Way Home.  Mark Boyle
Zero Hour for Gen X. Matthew Hennessey
The Grapes of Math.  Alex Bellos
Young China.  Zak Dychtwald
Infinite Powers.  Steven H. Strogatz
Significant Figures.  Ian Stewart
Pride and Prejudice.  Jane Austen.
Richard II.  Shakespeare.
Romeo and Juliet.  Shakespeare.
Simple Chess.  Michael Stean.
What is the Bible?.  Rob Bell.
Steppenwolf. Herman Hesse.
Hermann Hesse.  Bernhard Zeller
The Illiad.  Homer.
Sleeping Where I Fall.  Peter Coyote
TVA Baby.  Terry Bisson.
Any Day Now.  Terry Bisson.
Side Effects.  Woody Allen.
History and the Human Condition.  John Lukacs
Mussolini's Intellectuals. A. James Gregor
An Open Letter to Open-Minded Progressives. Mencius Moldbug
What Are People For?  Wendell Berry
Power, Faith, and Fantasy.  Michael B. Oren
Invisible Romans.  Robert Knapp
Look Away!  William C. Davis
Audience of One. James Poniewozik
The Dispossessed. Ursula K. Le Guin
Vlad the Impaler.  John M. Shea
Martin Luther.  Carl E. Koppenhaver
The French Revolution. J. F. Bosher
The Brothers Karamazov.  Dostoevsky.
Selected Stories of Anton Chekhov. (Title of the volume). 
The History of England, Part B. Hume
Robinson Crusoe.  DeFoe
Letters to Classical Authors.  Petrarch
The Theogony. Hesiod.
The Life of Petrarch.  Thomas Campbell. 
The Holy Roman Empire.  James Bryce. 
Raised in Captivity.  Chuck Klosterman.
Principia Discordia.  Malaclypse (the Younger) and Ravenhurst
Black Iron Prison. Discordians. 
How I Killed Pluto and Why It Had It Coming. Mike Brown

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Back-Up of "Boss Chewed Me Out So . . ."

This was posted on Reddit a while ago.  I don't know why I haven't move it over before now.

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Enter f*** you money. I am quitting on Friday and my "organization" accepts resignations effective immediately.
I know this sub is pretty specific about finances, bank balances, investments, etc, but I don't feel comfortable with that type of disclosure. I will say that a paid-off mortgage, getting rid of my car, and being willing to cook 90%+ of every meal I am accountable for [1] really stretches out any f*** you money.
Instead of full-out trying to never work again, I wish more people who are not enjoying work would consider a) mini retirements (I've learned to call them "sabbaticals" to not freak out normies) or b) semi-retirement. I like this article on f*** you frugality. Be warned, the article actually uses the "fuck" word. Money quote:
Unlike FIRE, there are degrees to this. You can improve your life right now, rather than eat shit sandwiches for decades while you try to reach some distant number. There’s no need to save ten million dollars. Even ten thousand is enough to change things up.
I'm glad that after I was overcome with grief, I experimented both with mini- and semi- retirements. Because of my core of frugality, I was able to do them without denting my savings all that much.
This time I don't think I'm even going to cut into my principal. I plan on substitute teaching 3 days a week, and building a tutoring business ("micro-enterprise?"). Both of those are a bit seasonal, but I now have dividends to fill the gap. I can keep my withdrawal rate below 2%, if not closer to 1% for the year.
I don't know if this makes me "FIREd" or not. I know there will be days I hate subbing, but I'll never go in two days in a row. Furthermore, if I am fortunate in building the tutoring business, that can grow to become my way of covering living expenses.
I may never directly report to a boss again.
==
[1] My wife and I alternate who picks what is for dinner. I now cook every time it's my night. I have tried many experiments at that dollar-a-person or two-dollars-a-person range, but that is more narrow for than my wife can take every night. I just shoot for being at least half off a restaurant, and know that I've slayed the truly biggest costs in housing and transportation.It should go without saying I eat extremely cheaply for lunch. Lentils, rice, tofu, eggs, other beans, salsa . . . that range. Mmm frugal and fiber-y .

An Essay on Texas

This essay has been brewing in my mind for a while, as I think most essays should.  There is a time and place to jot down an idea and send it out immediately to the world, a "hot take" as the youths call it.  Likewise, there is a place for an expert, often credentialed by the educational system, giving a proclamation based on the facts as we have them with due diligence completed and all things considered.  An essay takes the middle ground.  It is an individual's honest attempt to grapple with an issue after some careful (but not exhaustive) examination. 

I already knew what general ideas I wanted to express about Texas, and I had gathered some lovely quotes by John Steinbeck which I will weave into this text, but I was lacking a way to rightfully begin the essay.  Of all places, I found the right quote to begin when I was rereading Pride and Prejudice [1]. In the scene a minor character, Mary, is eager to get some attention so she takes to playing music for the party, leading to this description:
Mary had neither genius nor taste; and though vanity had given her application, it had given her likewise a pedantic air and conceited manner, which would have injured a higher degree of excellence than she had reached. (emphasis mine).
There is more than one way to make yourself appear ridiculous.  One is to be of a low quality.  Another is to put on a brazen bluff that something of middling quality is the very best.  This is my critique of white Texans, and their cult of Texas.

Before I get too far in this essay, I want to be clear that I am not trying to totally tear the state down. Texas is a great state.  I think I could be happy living there, but only by doing the same things I have to do in Oklahoma -- surround myself with books, find whatever pockets of woodland are available, and spend the time I can with the weirdos who will have me.  If I lived in one of the large metropolitan areas, I would dread driving there even more than I do here; on the other hand, I could enjoy some artistic and cultural opportunities.  No one should feel ashamed of living in, or being from, Texas. After all, life is what you make it nearly anywhere in the first world.  But still.  I wish these people could tone it down a bit.

Steinbeck in his book Travels with Charley writes:
Writers facing the problem of Texas find themselves floundering in generalities, and I am no exception.  Texas is a state of mind.  Texas is an obsession.  Above all, Texas is a nation in every sense of the word (165).
This is far as I can tell a unified front that white Texans deliver to the rest of the world. And it is worth saying that this front is not without its admirers.  I once saw an online thread where more than one person said how great it was -- inspiring, even -- to hear people so uniformly "positive" about their state, and how wonderful is it to hear such pride!  These admirers are plebs -- plebs, I say! -- who have been ground down by a wider culture of endless advertising and vulgar self-promotion to the point that they come to expect it.  If someone says they are "the best" enough, these people start to think there must be something to it.  This is how you get a con man as President.

The Texas bluster doesn't work with the sophisticated, and so it didn't work on Steinbeck, who had the good fortune to marry a beautiful Texan, but the misfortune to watch a Texan (LBJ) ,who was the husband of one of his wife's most intimate friends, picked as vice president and thus witness Texans at their most empowered. Steinbeck again:
I've studied the Texas problem from many angles and for many years.  And of course one my truths is inevitably canceled by another.  Outside their state I think Texans are a little frightened and very tender in their feelings, and these qualities cause boasting, arrogance, and noisy complacency -- the outlets of shy children.  At home Texans are none of these things.  The ones I know are gracious, generous, and quiet (166). 
I have not had the pleasure of visiting any acquaintance of mine who is a Texan in their native land.  Instead, I have only been a tourist of that great state.  All I have ever received is the "boasting, arrogance, and noisy complacency" that was obvious to Steinbeck in the early 60s.

And all of that is even worse when you are an Oklahoman.  For people not from this part of the world, there is an intense rivalry in the game of football between the University of Oklahoma and the University of Texas.  And while since I've turned two both teams have won the same number of National Championships -- one a piece -- OU (as we call it, creating an acronym that reverses the letters in the name . . . for some reason) has had the upper hand in the games played.  This is called the Red River Rivalry and is played every year in Dallas, Texas at the Texas State Fair. To fill out the local color of this bizarre ritual, there was a man from Oklahoma who went by the name E.Z. Million who repeatedly ran for political office on the one issue of trying to get the game returned to Norman every other year so that the tax revenue would not be lost to Texas. As far as I, or anyone I know of, can tell, none of the offices he ran for had the authority to say where the game would be held.  However, his passion was evident, his core argument sound, and as he is no longer with us, I have no wish to speak ill of the dead.  His obituary is an interesting read. 

It's hard to know how much the football thing influences the experiences I've had, but an outside appraisal of the two states would lead you to see that a boasting Texan is just punching down.  The population of Texas is around 29 million people, and its annual state product is around $1.9 trillion.  Oklahoma has about 4 million people and state product of about $200 billion.  For my part, I have no problem pointing these truths because I define my life to a greater extent by more granular groupings: my community, my neighborhood, my block, my social circle, the person I am trying to make friends with at the moment.  It is the Texan who insists on grouping identity at the level of a landmass that takes hours to traverse even by car.

My main theory is that the losses in the king of college sports as well as perhaps bad experiences with belligerent Oklahoman leads Texans to think they are protecting themselves by going on the offensive against "my type" (sure would help if they investigated more deeply what my type was before launching a tirade).  People from other states probably get a more charming, less insulting version of Texas pride.  To again draw a parallel to Pride and Prejudice, at one point Elizabeth says of Mr. Darcy, who had mad an ass of himself on his first impression with her:
I could easily forgive his pride, if he had not mortified mine.
But what is this Texas that it's boosters (and boasters) are promoting? (Really, I just want an excuse to share another Steinbeck quote I had copied. They are fantastic):
What I am trying to say is that there is no physical or geographical unity in Texas.  Its unity lies in the mind,  And this is not only in Texans.  The word Texas becomes a symbol to everyone in the world.  There's no question that this Texas-of-the-mind fable is often synthetic, sometimes untruthful, and frequently romantic, but that in no way diminishes its strength as a symbol (169).
So how did this symbol come to be? In true essay fashion, as established above, I thought about this problem for a few days, and came up with my best attempt at an answer.  I then sat on that thought for some time, and eventually (months later) came across a quote in a book that lends some credibility to my thinking.

To some extent Texans are correct in asserting that their pride comes from being "the Lone Star State," like a whole other country.  Let's move past the thornier issues of the Texas Revolution having roots in too much illegal immigration from whites into what was at the time Mexican territory (irony!) and a desire to preserve the institution of slavery.  The fact is that Texas fought and won a war of Independence.  To some extent that makes it a different from the other states.  But that didn't seem to be enough to explain the out-of-proportion intensity, which in no way resembles how the truly self-assured talk. 

And then it came to me.  Not too long after independence, Texas became one of the united states only to join a rebellion against the Union sixteen years later and be crushed along with the rest of the South in the Civil War. I think this more than anything explains the maniac behavior outsiders observe and the gullible admire.

As I said, I later on came across some history that somewhat supports this idea. In the book Look Away! William C. Davis shows how unenjoyable the end of the Civil War was for Texas:
As late as April 8, 1865, just hours before the final gasps of surrender commenced, Governor Pendleton Murrah in Texas still struggled to put clothes on his people's backs, but found not a single machine in his frontier counties.  He had dreamed of making Texans self-sufficient, but instead now they were reduced to selling the few cattle that escaped the impressment officers, in order to buy fabric brought though the blockade, or misappropriated from the military and sold on the black market, and at grotesquely extortionate prices (286). 
Texas: born in insurrection, seasoned early by defeat and humiliation.  That would absolutely make for an "us against the world" mentality.

As I draw near the end of this essay, I want to lean on Steinbeck's words one more time:
I have said that Texas is a state of mind, but I think it is more than that.  It is a mystique closely approximating a religion.  And this is true to the extent that people either passionately love Texas or passionately hate it and, as in other religions, few people dare to inspect it for fear of losing their bearings in mystery and paradox (166, emphasis mine).  
I think an essayist should be willing to tread where others dare not.  I have explored some of the depths of the Texan psyche, or at least how the Texas diaspora takes to the road.  I want to be clear that I neither hate nor love the Texas religion.  I have no passionate feelings for the state whatsoever, and have not since I was in my early teens [2]. Instead, I just wanted to unravel the puzzle of what some otherwise decent individuals flip a switch and become so braggadocios, if not nasty, with so little cause (And I assure you, I never try to provoke the Texas response. . . well, in person).  What makes someone lose all taste, proportionality, fair-play, and reason?  I think it's an interesting case study in identity formation. It's also more enjoyable and safe to investigate because the stakes are low. Frankly, I find the absurdity of it all amusing.


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[1] I reread this greatest of all novels in English as part of a reading list I made in response the corona crisis. I thought at the time that were many books I wanted to read one more time if I was going to die.  Apparently, since I have reread so few of them after making the list, it turns out there weren't as many as I thought, but Pride and Prejudice was one of them.

[2] There was a time I was really into the OU/Texas rivalry.  Then I joined debate, and had tournaments most years on the date of the game.  Later on, the knowledge that has come to light on the effects of repeated collisions on the brain has really soured my enjoyment of Concussion Ball.  As I have moved outside of the ritual, as well as grown older, it also seems odd to me to emotionally live and die based on the decision-making skills of young men aged 18 to 23.  When the crowd is booing, I just think to myself, "well, of course they did something stupid.  What did you expect?"

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Round Up #29

Aphorisms and Shorts
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The trans-humanist plan: to transcend the meat-space.  What's their back-up plan?  To do it better.

"Unable to achieve what it desires, 'progress' christens what it achieves desire."  -- Don Colacho.  This is great an explanation for neo-mania.

If living around beautiful old works is so edifying, if walkable towns so important, if there is a certain ineffable dolce vita to all things Italian, why did they invent fascism?

How often do you hear of the wealthy cleaning up a mess they created? 1) they refuse, as a matter of principle 2) it's cheaper to give to other causes, and they know it.

Instead of talking about having the wrong heroes, I think it is more useful to talk about admiring the wrong attributes.  The dominate culture values the fact of fortune, no matter how it was earned.  It values fame the same way.  These are bad values.

To right-wingers who brag "we have more guns": history shows that once you overthrow civil order, ya'll will stop being a "we" pretty quickly.

Isn't that what Padmé said?:
"So this is how liberty dies . . . with robots everywhere."
 *Glares at a droid.*

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Links and research
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As is known, I hate television.  Here's some more anti-television content, which linked to this academic paper.

Pondering the third aphorism -- the one about fascism -- above lead me to do some background research, eventually coming to the interesting position of John Adalbert Lukacs -- he classified himself as a reactionary, but under the rubric of being against vulgarity, widely defined.  This made him against the demagoguery of McCarthy and the invasion of Iraq.  Judge a reactionary on what they are reacting against.

Coming further down this line of research, check out this book review.
Lilla presents his point succinctly: “Hopes can be disappointed. Nostalgia is irrefutable.” 
. . . One might expect nostalgia to be a condition of the old. Surprisingly it isn’t. It is often the young who long for the return of a fictional past which never existed but offers a life without the tedious concerns of the present. 
. . . The old know better than the young that cultural memory is selective, and like memory of childbirth, tends to obscure the worst bits and present them as quaint. The old have heard the stories before, and their counter-stories. 

I discovered the word juggernaut
 is probably derived from the Sanskrit/Odia Jagannātha (Devanagari जगन्नाथ, Odia ଜଗନ୍ନାଥ) "world-lord", combining jagata ("world") and natha ("lord"), which is one of the names of Krishna found in the Sanskrit epics.
I learned that the Brother's Grimm began the Deutsches Wörterbuch, the German equivalent of Oxford English Dictionary.

Use Dubai as a metaphor for our times.

Here is another good blog of someone who understands the doom.

From reading Range, I was exposed to the music of Django Reinhardt.

Le Guin sure knows how to do a commencement speech.

Back Up of "A Question to Ran Prieur"

This is not something I wrote.  Instead, Ran Prieur wrote it here on Reddit.

He was prompted by a question along the lines of how should people deal with feeling powerless.

Answer:
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There are a few different issues here.

First, did our ancestors ten thousand years ago, or even a few hundred years ago, feel like nothing they did mattered? Probably not. But their power was similar to ours: they had zero global influence, but they could make a difference in the lives of the people around them.

I think we feel powerless because global high-tech culture turns our attention away from our immediate social circle and out toward the entire world, over which it's not realistic for an ordinary person to have power.

And our immediate social circle doesn't satisfy us because half of it is on the internet, where the connections are just thin streams of information and not full-spectrum engagement; and the other half is at our jobs, which are hierarchical and micromanaged. Paleolithic foragers and even medieval peasants had more autonomy in their hour-to-hour actions than most of us do at work.

Even if these problems were fixed, I think a lot of people have been deeply damaged by a culture where our time is so heavily structured that we never learned how to have fun. We all have an aliveness deep inside us, and the better a society is, the better it can work with this aliveness instead of crushing it. In this sense our society is totally incompetent, which is why so many people are in prison for being alive in the wrong way, or depressed for not being alive at all. The challenge for all of us is to learn to find and channel that aliveness in a way that makes the world better and doesn't get us in trouble.

21st century technology throws up new obstacles to this goal, but it also gives us new tools. Our preindustrial language does not help us tell the difference between obstacles and tools, because they're all lumped together in old categories of "entertainment" or "games" or "drugs". There's a famous line on The Simpsons where Homer explains to Lisa that there's a difference between "drugs" and "druuuuuuugs" -- the former is within the authority structure and the latter is outside it. But the latest evidence shows that some "druuuuuugs" -- psilocybin, ketamine, ibogaine, cannabis -- when used carefully -- are more beneficial and less harmful than "drugs" that try to do the same thing.

Of course some drugs can be used either way, to expand consciousness or contract it, to learn how to get better at life or to avoid learning. Cannabis is probably the best example of this. But I don't buy the distinction between "recreational" and "therapeutic", because something that shows you how to live better is probably going to feel good.

Will anyone stand up and say that books are bad? "Instead of retreating into an artificial world, you should be engaging with your family." But I know people who grew up in stifling fundamentalist families and books were their only window on a world that was richer and more alive in almost every way. Despite the potential to misuse books, we all agree now that books are generally good and should be given the benefit of the doubt. Theater, film, and recorded music are newer, so some conservatives still think they're the devil's work, but most of us now see them the way we see books, as tools for mental and emotional expansion.

Interactive multimedia are much newer, so most people still think of them as time-wasters, and we still lump them together under the old word "game." I think the main difference between interactive artificial worlds and books is that the stakes are higher. Now you can really get absorbed in a world that goes nowhere, but you can also get a mental workout with a perfectly adjustable difficulty level, or a really immersive experience of how much better the world could be.

I used to come home from work and play computer games for the same reason that I came home from school as a teenager and played D&D. It wasn't just that the world was better (in some games it wasn't). It was to have an experience that I could never have at school or work: for my moment-to-moment actions to feel meaningful and rewarding. This is important so I'll say it again: Without games I would not even know what it feels like for my moment-to-moment actions to feel meaningful and rewarding.

That's how dismal this world is, and ideally we will go into artificial worlds just long enough to come out motivated to make human society work the same way, starting with our immediate environment and working up. This is really hard and it will probably take hundreds of years, but it might not be possible at all without worlds of imagination to show us what's possible.

This subject reminds me of a weird, profound line from an obscure Cynthia Ozick story: "Heaven is for those who have already been there."

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Deleting Twitter Continues

For some reason, Twitter allowed me to get deeper into my old feed than I used to (easily) be able to.  So, I went back to deleting old tweets.  What a great time for reflection it offered.  I listened to some tunes, and went to filtering (and reminiscing).

===
My quotes, moved over
===

In times like these, I think it is more important to find what is beautiful than to think about what it is important.

Whereas competition is good for the brain, domination is terrible for the brain, let alone the soul.

The problem with the Matrix's choice of pills is that it is a discrete choice -- one and done.  Instead, the system channels rebellion, so you need constant, boring, and, sigh, eventually frustrating vigilance.

Shakespeare was able to invent so many words in part because he didn't have a computer telling him each coinage was wrong.

I am deliberately trying to ignore the macro-level.  While I have failed often, I think my secret weapon is the Spring.

As a general rule, don't let people show contempt for what they don't understand. And since most people don't really understand anything. . .

Three things on the internet fill me the most with existential dread: dark humor from tribe-D, dark humor from truthful environmentalist, and the techno-optimists  . . . How privileged do you have to be to think rendering humans obsolete will go well for you?

When you read other's words you are under a spell.  When you write, you break your own spell.

If someone drops that they went to Harvard in a conversation, ask them what their favorite lecture and/or lesson was. They may recover, but they'll be confused for a good, long moment.

Boycott news. . .  Why die tense?

Dumbledore's incompetence lead to the radicalization of Slytherin.

Books are never dipshits to me.  Your move, internet.

===
The best tweets of others
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Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Determinism Doesn't Mean What You Think

Lapace's Demon:
According to determinism, if someone (the demon) knows the precise location and momentum of every atom in the universe, their past and future values for any given time are entailed; they can be calculated from the laws of classical mechanics
This notion makes sense in terms of the intellectual victories classical mechanics had won in Lapace's day.  Also, it is probably intuitive in terms of the materialistic worldview held by those who wants to be able to say respectable things at parties [1].  Lapace's Demon, however, is not the consensus of mathematicians and physicists.  In the book Infinite Powers Strogatz writes
When a system is nonlinear, its behavior can be impossible to forecast with formulas, even though that behavior is completely determined.  In other words, determinism does not imply predictability. pg 280
[Update: it has come to my attention that the above reads as those I am dismissing determinism.  That was not my intention.  Instead, I am arguing against Lapace's Demon.  I imagine the universe is deterministic.  The emergent properties of it, however, are not all predictable even with complete information.]

I thought about giving this piece the title " Determinism Doesn't Mean What They Want You to Think."  I have noticed that those most desirous to push the notion of determinism, whether they be Marxists or Scott Adams (aka "the Dilbert guy") or the like, are trying to pull a bait-and-switch, or, if challenged, a motte and bailey. The goal is to use the idea of Lapace's Demon (which isn't even true!) as the stronghold/ motte, and then switch out to the bailey of their pet idea, some simplistic, usually mono-variable, understanding of social reality.  Dilbert guy's mono-variable was con artistry.  Humans are just "moist robots" and you just need to figure out the who are the master con artists; they will always win.

This pushing of a mono-variable might work in the world of selling ideas in the short run, but it doesn't jive with actual rigor.  Again, from Strogatz
. . . all of biology is nonlinear; so is sociology.  That's why the soft sciences are hard -- and the last to be mathematized.  Because of nonlinearity, there's nothing soft about them. pg 280
Huge swathes of reality are irreducibly complex [2] --  even more things that cannot be understood at a human level of IQ.  On the bright side, that leaves always more to explore, to wonder at, and be surprised by.

But always be suspicious of those who argue for determinism.  They probably just want to trip on power.  Certainly don't be in a vulnerable position around such people. . .  Just because we agree there isn't free will doesn't mean THEY can predict what is going to happen.  In any remotely free social set up, I have functional free will from the perspective of outside human observers.


===

[1] I know that reads sarcastic, but I'm not saying there is anything wrong with respectability per se -- I actually try to be respectable enough in social settings -- but it is a psycho-social motivation that shapes beliefs more than a deep investigation of the subjects.  Cp. Crony Beliefs.  If you believe in materialism, your reasons probably have not been deeply investigated.  That does not mean the belief is incorrect, rather it has not been examined.

[2] Ie absent some computer working in another dimension, using more computing power than our entire plane of reality could provide.  So yeah, someone in Silicon Valley is working on it.

Approximating the Right Ambiance.

You what I miss the most of the outside world . . .  from The Before Time?  I miss coffee houses.  They seem to be a key part of my creative process.

Looking over the my writing since social isolation, I see that what was written in isolation is mostly reactions to things others have written on Reddit.  The good pieces that are something other than that were from drafts I had started prior.

I have sinned.  I allowed myself to become habituated to checking anti-social media again and again to see if there is any response.  It does not matter if Reddit is among the most mild of the social medias, with its features of community curation and down votes, it still has the ability to become the dreaded feed.  And I have in the recent past made it my feed, and so I ask for forgiveness.

My repentance is to get back to writing the way that is best for me.  I use the PaperMate Flair pen to write my first draft on paper.  To recreate some of the environment I miss, I have taken to a few YouTube videos, such as outdoor cafes and ASMR of libraries.  Some are real, some pictures with effects added.  It's not quite the same, but better than it had been at my worst.

Here are the videos
1
2
3
4
5




(As I find more videos, I will simply add them to this page).

Get To List for Books.

Bored?  Maybe try reading something new.


Books I read in: 20202021

I see no need to continue making that public information, so I don't.  

Back when I used to make lists of what I might read next, I gathered the following books (re-organized  as I close up shop -- so this is now a dead list). 

===


I) Ones I have a link for



Ancient and Modern Celebrated Freethinkers

The Ancient Regime. Hippolyte Taine.

The Enormous Room. E. E. Cummings.
The Duke of Lerma. Robert Howard

Martin Lutero (Spanish)

De Papel. Nicholas Basbanes
Ninety-Three.  Hugo.
The Beggar's Opera. John Gay.
Why We Should Read -- S. P. B. Mais..

Emilia Pardo Bazán

I) No link.   In my public library system or easy to find.


Money : the true story of a made-up thing. Jacob Goldstein. The Spanish Tragedie. Thomas Kyd Doctor Faustus. Marlow Tamburlaine the Great. Marlow. Edward II. Marlow Measure for Measure. Shakespeare.

October : the story of the Russian Revolution. China Miéville. The Long Loneliness. Dorothy Day

The Limits of Convergence. Mauro F. Guillén The Best and the Brightest. Halberstam, David

Views of Society and Manners in America. Fanny Wright.

McTeague. Norrris Comedy Sex God. Holmes, Pete

The Shape of the New. Scott L. Montgomery Selections From the Works of John Ruskin by John Ruskin Walter Bagehot Oscar Wilde!

Walter Pater Portrait of a Lady. Henry James Far from the Maddening Crowd. Hardy Fortune's Formula. William Poundstone Priceless : the myth of fair value. William Poundstone. The Hidden Life of Trees. Peter Wohlleben The World Beyond Your Head. Crawford Main Street. Sinclair Lewis. Loonshots. Safi Bahcall. Big Business. Cowen. The Secret of Our Success. Joseph Henrich The WEIRDest People in the World. Joseph Henrich

III) Ones I'd have to find some other way

Contrarian Investment Strategy. David Dreman. Things Hidden Since the Foundation of the World Paperback. René Girard

The Art of Problem Solving, Volume 2. Richard Rusczyk and Sandor Lehoczky