What is this?
I was inspired by synthesis posts by @ek (example) and by @siggy47 (example). These are so great, and add so much value to SN -- building layers of meaning atop other meaningful layers, the best kind of capital formation helping things along toward evergreen-ness. I wanted to try my hand at something similar.
Caveat emptor: if you're generally interested in the kinds of things that I say and think, this series may interest you even more, because it's like the second derivative of that. If you're not, these posts will be even more tedious to you than my posts normally are.
1. The homelessness crisis by @Undisciplined
Homelessness is tragic and sad and gross and infuriating, all at the same time. We've all run into it, probably, and probably all felt deeply uneasy, physically and morally, that such a thing is possible.
This is one of my favorite posts ever on SN. People who have quite different worldviews are on display, and the topic brushes up against a lot of sacred cows, and yet the discussion was nuanced and respectful. Made me feel good about being a 'citizen' of SN and about its future.
2. A [pro] Marathon Slipstream rant by @mallardshead
In the beginning everything was simple -- blocks were mostly empty, you transacted btc essentially for free, and used it to buy your gift cards or weed or fake IDs or whatever people bought in those days.
But shit has now got real, the block subsidy is about to get cut in half, the mempool will probably never clear again, and hopium-fueled ignorance is starting to give way to the pragmatic idea that somebody is going to have to pay for things we used to take for granted. Like transacting in btc.
What are the implications when extra financial layers get stacked on top of the simple transaction model? What happens when the mempool fragments into sub-mempools? It's complicated, as far as I can tell, but I love that @mallardshead is exploring it.
(Actually, this topic just made me remember this under-rated post by @BITC0IN about the game-theoretic analysis of btc. The book is a rare example of really digging into some of the emergent features of btc security, which has bearing on private mempools, too.)
3. Supper, place, village, city, state by @kr
People inhabit multiple identities simultaneously. You are an individual person, animated by whatever is flying across your mind right now, and by your personal circumstances. But at another zoom level you're the member of a nation, whether you want to be or not, and your life is hugely influenced by that in a million ways. Even what you think of as the most foundational parts of your perceptual system are hugly influenced by culture [1, 2].
The article explores how identity is cultivated across these multiple zoom levels. The implications for online communities like SN are obvious; but the implications for your individual life, and for the modern world, and the future of social organization, are even more obvious.
(Reminds me of this post, also by @kr, covering Geoffrey West's book about multi-scalar organization. Interesting to see @kr's mind at work on this topic...)
4. The curious case of digital signatures by @ek
What does it mean to have an identity, in the digital world? And what's the technical process of creating it, proving it, communicating it?
Many people, including myself, have spent countless hours soaking in btc and the cryptographic setting around it without every really understanding wtf it all meant. If that's you, then @ek is your huckleberry -- this post gives you the context you need to understand how the pieces fit together.
5. Good ways to spend more time with people by @Signal312
It's been on my mind a lot that, when all is said and done, relationships are everything, or nearly everything, that matters in life. But what should you do, if you believe that? Most people -- including me -- act like good relationships will drop off the tree like coconuts.
This article digs into ways to be more intentional about spending time with people. Related to another @kr post about friendship in decline.
6. Btc as tea party by @elvismercury
I think it's fair to say that I have an obsession about not deluding myself about btc's "inevitability" and this is a post digging into that. Specifically, about how much solace we should take, and what conclusions we should draw, from the resilience of mining in China despite that nation's putative 'crackdown' on the industry.
For my taste, there's way too much fixation on the drunken-bumbling-uncle view of the state, staggering around throwing haymakers that never land, and not enough fixation on the horrific shit the state did, and does, when it feels seriously under threat. Like, invading Iraq, or rounding up people and putting them into death camps. I continue to think that most bitcoiners are not focused enough on this.
You know that "good times make weak men" thing? Is there a chance that that's you, right now? And you're just confused about what good times means, and how weak manifests in this space? And you're mistaking the patty cake culture-warring of the last couple decades with, you know, actual war? Or what a govt will do when it wants something (also here or here) or the lengths it will go to when it wants to know something?
People keep saying: it failed in all those pursuits, eventually. I keep saying: that should not much comfort you.
Refs
[1] Nisbett, R. E., & Masuda, T. (2003). Culture and point of view. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 100(19), 11163-11170. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1934527100
[2] Chua, H. F., Boland, J. E., & Nisbett, R. E. (2005). Cultural variation in eye movements during scene perception. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 102(35), 12629-12633. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0506162102
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in your reply and a search would popup to find the post you want to link to. Just like you can currently@
and a search for all users shows up. This way, you don't need to stop writing your comment to link to a post. We haven't implemented that yet though.Footnotes
Footnotes
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ortop
(posts or comments) is now ordered according to your preferences based on what you zapped in the past.1 For example, if A zapped a post and then you zapped that post afterwards, we will now tend to show you more stuff that A zaps in the future since your zap showed us that you might trust A with showing you good content now.2Footnotes
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additionally includes a time decay. ↩