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A labyrinth of ideas,
A diary of curiosities

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The anatomy of melancholy
I write of melancholy by being busy to avoid melancholy.

- Robert Burton's anatomy of melancholy
Forwarded from 0/0 (Haidar A. Fahad)
German: Aus tiefer Not schrei ich zu dir

English: Of the deepest distress, I cry out to you
Larry Page likes to imagine that he never escaped academia. Google, after all, began as a doctoral dissertation—and the inspiration for the search engine came from his connoisseurship of academic papers. As the son of a professor, he knew how researchers judge their own work. They look at the number of times it gets cited by other papers. His eureka moment arrived when he saw how the Web mimicked the professoriate. Links were just like citations—both were, in their way, a form of recommendation. The utility of a Web page could be judged by tabulating the number of links it received on other pages. When he captured this insight in an algorithm, he punningly named it for himself: PageRank. (The algorithm used by Google)

- World Without Mind
In 2002, Google decided to digitize every book in existence [and create the largest library in history].
When the historian George Dyson visited the Googleplex to give a talk, an engineer casually admitted, “We are not scanning all those books to be read by people. We are scanning them to be read by an AI.” If that’s true, then it’s easier to understand Google’s secrecy. The world’s greatest collection of knowledge was mere grist to train machines, a sacrifice for the singularity.

- World Without Mind
For centuries, engineers automated physical labor; our new engineering elite has automated thought. They have perfected technologies that take over intellectual processes, that render the brain redundant [...] Indeed, we have begun to outsource our intellectual work to companies that suggest what we should learn, the topics we should consider, and the items we ought to buy. These companies can justify their incursions into our lives with the very arguments that Saint-Simon and Comte articulated: They are supplying us with efficiency; they are imposing order on human life.

- World Without Mind
The algorithm was developed in order to automate thinking, to remove difficult decisions from the hands of humans, to settle contentious debates.

- World Without Mind
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nan_ali – .. بگلبي و أگول بعيد چا وين أضمه
وليفي واغار عليه من حضن أُمه
بگلبي واگول بعيد چا وين أضمه
The excavation of Pompei,
By Filippo Palizzi
- Mindhunter
Everything is 'disposable' these days, even people. They are disposable because they are simply too similar to one another, you can replace one with the other without much difference really.
The problem is that when we outsource thinking to machines, we are really outsourcing thinking to the organizations that run the machines.

- World Without Mind
We know, for example, that Facebook sought to discover whether emotions are contagious. To conduct this trial, Facebook attempted to manipulate the mental state of its users. For one group, Facebook excised the positive words from the posts in the News Feed; for another group, it removed the negative words. Each group, it concluded, wrote posts that echoed the mood of the posts it had reworded. This study was roundly condemned as invasive, but it is not so unusual. As one member of Facebook’s data science team confessed: “Anyone on that team could run a test. They’re always trying to alter people’s behavior.”

- World Without Mind
The company believes that it has unlocked social psychology and acquired a deeper understanding of its users than they possess of themselves. Facebook can predict users’ race, sexual orientation, relationship status, and drug use on the basis of their “likes” alone. It’s Zuckerberg’s fantasy that this data might be analyzed to uncover the mother of all revelations, “a fundamental mathematical law underlying human social relationships that governs the balance of who and what we all care about.”

- World Without Mind