stuff tagged with "philosophy"
I meet a lot of people. And see some great looking babies. A fire engine goes by, and I give them a thumbs up. I see a woman with a dog and I ask the woman what kind of dog that is. The moral of the story is weāre here on Earth to fart around.
The Curse of Knowing How, or; Fixing Everything
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notashelf.dev »
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Too many bangers to pull out of this one. Well worth a full read. But here are a couple juicy pull quotes to whet your pallette:
Programming lures us into believing we can control the outside events. That is where the suffering begins. There is something deeper happening here. This is not just about software.
I believe sometimes building things is how we self-soothe. We write a new tool or a script because we are in a desperate need for a small victory. We write a new tool because we are overwhelmed. Refactor it, not because the code is messy, but your life is. We chase the perfect system because it gives us something to hold onto when everything else is spinning.
Iām trying to let things stay a little broken. Because Iāve realized I donāt want to fix everything. I just want to feel OK in a world that often isnāt. I can fix something, but not everything.
You learn how to program. You learn how to fix things. But the hardest thing youāll ever learn is when to leave them broken.
And maybe thatās the most human skill of all.
Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Fit
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If pain is weakness leaving the body, it follows that pleasure is weakness entering the body.
File this under āthings you canāt unsee.ā
The day science begins to study non-physical phenomena, it will make more progress in one decade than in all the previous centuries of its existence.
Life's absurdity is a cause for happiness
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iai.tv »
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Sisyphus is forced to push a heavy boulder up a hill, only for it to roll back down; for all eternity. Camus famously compared Sisyphusā condition to the human condition. We too are fated to complete mundane, meaningless tasks, to chase desires and achieve goals only for them to be replaced by new desires and goals; always returning back where we started. Ronald Aronson argues it is our awareness, our human self-consciousness, of this condition that makes us superior to it.
I didn't read Camus in college1, so this concept of imagining Sisyphus happy is brand new to me.
If you also don't have much exposure to philosophy, give this article a try. It's certainly given me motivation to try reading The Myth of Sisyphus for myself.
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Although I did listen to The Magnetic Fields quite a bit. Sometimes, I lament not going through a brooding phase, and then I revisit the albums I listened to heavily in college and think, "oh yeah, I definitely had a brooding phase." ↩
The Robot Report #1 ā Reveries
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randsinrepose.com »
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Whenever I talk about a knowledge win via robots on the socials or with humans, someone snarks, āWell, how do you know itās true? How do you know the robot isnāt hallucinating?ā Before I explain my process, I want to point out that I donāt believe humans are snarking because they want to know the actual answer; I think they are scared. They are worried about AI taking over the world or folks losing their job, and while these are valid worries, itās not the robotās responsibility to tell the truth; itās your job to understand what is and isnāt true.
Youāre being changed by the things you see and read for your entire life, and hopefully, youāve developed a filter through which this information passes. Sometimes, it passes through without incident, but other times, itās stopped, and you wonder, āIs this true?ā
Knowing when to question truth is fundamental to being a human. Unfortunately, weāve spent the last forty years building networks of information that have made it pretty easy to generate and broadcast lies at scale. When you combine the internet with the fact that many humans just want their hopes and fears amplified, you can understand why the real problem isnāt robots doing it better; itās the humans getting worse.
Iām working on an extended side quest and in the past few hours of pairing with ChatGPT, Iāve found myself constantly second guessing a large portion of the decisions and code that the AI produced.
This article pairs well with this one I read today about a possible social exploit that relies on frequently hallucinated package names.
Bar Lanyado noticed that LLMs frequently hallucinate the names of packages that donāt exist in their answers to coding questions, which can be exploited as a supply chain attack.
He gathered 2,500 questions across Python, Node.js, Go, .NET and Ruby and ran them through a number of different LLMs, taking notes of any hallucinated packages and if any of those hallucinations were repeated.
One repeat example was āpip install huggingface-cliā (the correct package is āhuggingface[cli]ā). Bar then published a harmless package under that name in January, and observebd 30,000 downloads of that package in the three months that followed.
Iāll be honest: during my side quest here, Iāve 100% blindly run npm install on packages without double checking official documentation.
These large language models truly are mirrors to our minds, showing all sides of our personalities from our most fit to our most lazy.
Logic is an invention of man and may be ignored by the universe.
How philosophy can solve your midlife crisis
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Happiness often follows a U-curve in which middle age is uniquely stressful, with a heavy dose of responsibilities. Thatās all the more reason to seek out atelic activites when the midlife blues hit: meditation, music, running, or almost anything that brings inner peace. But self-reported happiness does increase later in life.
Oddly, as Setiya observes, many of the most consequential choices we make occur in our 20s and early 30s: careers, partners, families, and more. The midlife crisis is a delayed reaction, hitting when we feel more weighted down by those choices. So the challenge is not necessarily to change everything, he says, but to ask, āHow do I appreciate properly what I now am doing?ā
My daughter turns 7 tomorrow. Iām feeling like Iām finally hitting a point with that relationship where I am not needed as heavily, and Iāll soon be able to indulge in atelic activities more frequently.
The beautiful thing is that Iām now able to enjoy some of these activities with my kids as they get older.
I think thatās the part of parenting I was looking forward to the most: getting to do cool stuff (like go on rides and play PokĆ©mon) with two really cool little people.
Ten Commandments For Living From Philosopher Bertrand Russell
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I know, I know⦠another list.
Really, though, this is a list where I found it hard to choose just one to highlight here. I think Iām gonna go with this one:
When you meet with opposition, even if it should be from your husband or your children, endeavor to overcome it by argument and not by authority, for a victory dependent upon authority is unreal and illusory.
Iāve been doing this with my own kids, and it is forcing me to really take a good look at my values. After all, most arguments come to a point where the disagreement can either be won by finding mutual moral ground, or avoided by realizing you just arenāt even speaking the same language.
Life feels simpler when we tell ourselves there is a single truth and everything else is a deviation from that truthāan error, a lie, an āuntruthā. Itās disturbing to imagine that we can shape reality simply by choosing a different truth. The very idea of competing truths feels slippery, disingenuous, conniving.
Everything we have belongs to others; time alone is ours.