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a commonplace journal about life and random interesting topics humblespace.xyz
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Forwarded from M
I think my argument is somewhat abstract but stems down to this;

Some level of irrational optimism/delusion is needed for society and a select group of ppl to be comfortable to risk-take as they can believe a 'story'.

E.g you can't tell army that there is odds of losing this conflict, have to upkeep morale. Or that certain things/inventions are not possible back in historical times. E.g. you need people who are deluded enough to believe that we can invent flight, undersea cables, wireless communications, gunpowder, etc.

When things are viewed probabilistically, the best and most rational minded ppl will be assigned towards taking +EV bets. but what happens is that the majority/mean is likely to be become overly risk-adverse (same as how normies cannot deal with loss in investing) which hampers societal/future developments
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humblespace
I think my argument is somewhat abstract but stems down to this; Some level of irrational optimism/delusion is needed for society and a select group of ppl to be comfortable to risk-take as they can believe a 'story'. E.g you can't tell army that there is…
such a great point here

if all of society shifts toward +ev bets, then no one would be left to further humanity by taking a chance on irrational bets

a certain level of delusion is necessary

thinking in bets pushes for a rational operator, but not everyone should be or that we shouldn't be too rational all the time

a good mix of rationality v gut instinct in life would be good

what are the optimal levels? don't think anyone knows yet

read the discussion here: https://t.iss.one/c/2522076793/944
[cc]

ChatGPT’s most brutal truths in psychology

1. your brain lies to you constantly
2. what you avoid controls you
3. you are not who you think you are
4. who you surround yourself with reprograms you
5. you are wired for emotion, built to regulate it
6. you will suffer either way — so suffer for something worthwhile

https://www.instagram.com/p/DRh9TW2CQ_U/?igsh=MmdndWFheG1nMnBq
[BR]

Normal People by Sally Rooney

one of the first romance fiction that i’ve read and i could not really get into it

read 75% and found myself starting to speed through the remaining chapters (~3 days to finish)

i guess maybe this genre just isn’t for me

it was interesting to read the dynamics of the two main characters, albeit frustrating

i guess that’s just normal people like you and i

2/5
not my type of read
i really liked this discussion that i chanced upon in a book subreddit

giving up on a book just means we’re not in the right place for it yet

nothing wrong w that at all!
Resentment is like lighting your house on fire to annoy your neighbour with the smoke.


great quote from the sitcom ‘Old dog, new tricks’ on Netflix

great show, highly recommended
humblespace
how to trick your brain into doing difficult things https://www.brainhealthdecoded.com/p/how-to-trick-your-brain-into-doing summarised form: https://x.com/drdominicng/status/1996210397419045243?s=46&t=nluSw7cwYGx8zFxfoYi5Iw
most are tricks that i’ve read before in habit books like atomic habit, eat that frog, etc. years ago

wanted to log it here for archiving and to serve as a refresher for myself
[BR]

The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho

picked it from a community recommendation here

this book talks a lot about fate or "Maktub"

once you're able to speak the language of the world, the world is yours

main takeaways:
- be present enough to observe the world. learn the language and recognise the omens.
- everyone is born with a Personal Legend that we were meant to fulfil
- hints of manifestation (law of attraction)
- in your pursuit of greatness, seldom will people understand
- everyone has a central role in history, and normally he doesn't know it
- everything happens for a reason

fav quotes:
when you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve it.

at a certain point in our lives...our lives become controlled by fate. That's the world's greatest lie.


4/5
easy and light read
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[cc]

we’re a mosaic of the people we’ve loved

https://www.instagram.com/p/DR5WlWMEiAt/?igsh=OWlnM2VxZnVwZjVu
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Forwarded from decisive
This passage is especially important, you can never win against someone who loves the game.