Learn Learnin'
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Updates about health, technology, feminism, FOSS, philosophy, life, universe, and everything
from @akshay
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I embraced pragmatism a while ago because I was tired of ideologically purist non-sense that achieved no real change.

But then I struggled a lot to find direction. How does one make decisions in pragmatism? What principles can guide us?

Also, how do we avoid turning evil?

That latter thing was my bigger concern. What if I become something that I set out to replace?

I think in some sense both these dilemmas are connected. They both question the fundamental idea of the approach. Will pragmatism really bring change? Or is it counter-productive?

I think I've found out a way to reconcile all these.

Am I being a profound bullshitter? I don't know.

But the answer I found is deceptively simple and I've written it down here: https://blog.learnlearn.in/2022/03/finding-direction-when-being-pragmatic.html
Have you heard people saying "better use of technology" will solve "problem X" without specifying what technology or how exactly it will solve the problem?

I call those people "tech-bhakts".

What they (probably) understand is how technology works.
What they do not understand?

How humans work.

They fail to see what the problems of human beings are.

They fail to account for the human factor in their techno-centered solution.

In their theories of change, the human comes last - as a beneficiary of impact.

They start with technology no matter what.

I write about why we need to decommission such theories of change in https://mbbshacker.blogspot.com/2022/03/decommissioning-technology-centered.html
"Prav is a social project to get a lot of people to invest small amounts to run an interoperable messaging service that will respect users’ freedom and privacy."

Sounds pretty stupid, right?

https://asd.learnlearn.in/prav-project/
Sunday morning read on intangible software in health system

https://youtu.be/mjjQ4bWIImw
iHEAR TransCare team released a draft competencies for trans-affirmative health provision. I'm reading it in this video: https://youtu.be/a-UeKdfGlQw
Frappe is a popular, open-source, low-code web framework from India. It works like magic. But I don't like magic. So I looked at the source code.

https://asd.learnlearn.in/exploring-frappe/
I've been thinking forever to do an online, interactive, recorded for public, learning oriented discussion series on programming - starting from quite the basics of how a computer works, going through spreadsheet formulae and ending in python or js.

Would you join as learner?

https://twitter.com/asdofindia/status/1548659422460669952?t=9z5IeluUaso8kVliWbu3uQ&s=19
Can we remake capitalism for a better world?

https://asd.learnlearn.in/remaking-capitalism/
Exploring a framework of love (instead of power) to lead a useful life.

https://blog.learnlearn.in/2022/08/love-is-enough.html
Long boring video of me reading this article titled "(Re)imagining research, activism, and rights at the intersections of sexuality, health, and social justice" and then thinking loud about certain thoughts.

https://youtu.be/X4ylpwFeqOo
Often in software applications we have a thousand things to do (eg: sending emails to all subscribers, adding a calculated field to all the records in a table). This video is a simple overview of the various approaches we can take

https://youtu.be/8TvnkMSV9xk