'Jj

Add friend
Sign in to Goodreads to learn more about 'Jj.

https://www.goodreads.com/jeremyhelm

Incomplete Nature...
Rate this book
Clear rating

progress: 
 
  (page 371 of 624)
"it feels good to be back in the game. Deacon does it. I look forward to his framework becoming second nature" Oct 23, 2012 11:44AM

 
The Matter With T...
Rate this book
Clear rating

 
Mobilize!: Dancin...
Rate this book
Clear rating

 
See all 83 books that 'Jj is reading…
Loading...
Douglas Adams
“Vell, Zaphod’s just zis guy, you know?”
Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

Napoléon Bonaparte
“Men will risk their lives, even die for ribbons.”
Napoléon Bonaparte

Jaron Lanier
“Zombies are familiar characters in philosophical thought experiments. They are like people in every way except they have no internal experience....
If there are enough zombies recruited into our world, I worry about the potential for a self-fulfilling prophecy. Maybe if people pretend they are not conscious or do not have free will - or that the cloud of online people is a person; if they pretend there is nothing special about the perspective of the individual - then perhaps we have the power to make it so. We might be able to collectively achieve antimagic.
Humans are free. We can commmit suicide for the benefit of a Singularity. We can engineer our genes to better support an imaginary hive mind. We can make culture and journalism into second-rate activities and spend centuries remixing the detritus of the 1960s and other eras from before individual creativity went out of fashion.
Or we can believe in ourselves. By chance, it might turn out we are real.”
Jaron Lanier, You Are Not a Gadget

Charles Eisenstein
“Perhaps the deepest indication of our slavery is the monetization of time. It is a phenomenon with roots deeper than our money system, for it depends on the prior quantification of time. An animal or a child has “all the time in the world.” The same was apparently true for Stone Age peoples, who usually had very loose concepts of time and rarely were in a hurry. Primitive languages often lacked tenses, and sometimes lacked even words for “yesterday” or “tomorrow.” The comparative nonchalance primitive people had toward time is still apparent today in rural, more traditional parts of the world. Life moves faster in the big city, where we are always in a hurry because time is scarce. But in the past, we experienced time as abundant. The more monetized society is, the more anxious and hurried its citizens. In parts of the world that are still somewhat outside the money economy, where subsistence farming still exists and where neighbors help each other, the pace of life is slower, less hurried. In rural Mexico, everything is done mañana. A Ladakhi peasant woman interviewed in Helena Norberg-Hodge’s film Ancient Futures sums it all up in describing her city-dwelling sister: “She has a rice cooker, a car, a telephone—all kinds of time-saving devices. Yet when I visit her, she is always so busy we barely have time to talk.” For the animal, child, or hunter-gatherer, time is essentially infinite. Today its monetization has subjected it, like the rest, to scarcity. Time is life. When we experience time as scarce, we experience life as short and poor. If you were born before adult schedules invaded childhood and children were rushed around from activity to activity, then perhaps you still remember the subjective eternity of childhood, the afternoons that stretched on forever, the timeless freedom of life before the tyranny of calendar and clocks. “Clocks,” writes John Zerzan, “make time scarce and life short.” Once quantified, time too could be bought and sold, and the scarcity of all money-linked commodities afflicted time as well. “Time is money,” the saying goes, an identity confirmed by the metaphor “I can’t afford the time.” If the material world”
Charles Eisenstein, Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition

Ian McDonald
“Any AI smart enough to pass a Turing test is smart enough to know to fail it.”
Ian McDonald, River of Gods

596 Audiobooks — 16591 members — last activity 1 hour, 45 min ago
Audio & audiobooks are getting more and more popular for commuters & those wanting to squeeze in another book or two a month while doing other activit ...more
year in books
Darwin8u
5,085 books | 1,757 friends

Gene Z
2,012 books | 168 friends

Chelsea...
1,590 books | 154 friends

Lowell ...
582 books | 400 friends

Carl
1,874 books | 365 friends

Jeff Ho...
5 books | 119 friends

kathryn
100 books | 59 friends

Vincy
233 books | 113 friends

More friends…


Polls voted on by 'Jj

Lists liked by 'Jj