1/ The Thinker and the Prover, Part 2

So why is being aware of this software “glitch” in our HumanOS useful? I believe that understanding it can help you immeasurably in both understanding yourself and other people.

The first observation is that while many can see this process
2/ clearly in *other* people, they passionately believe that it does not affect them.

If you’re a human being, it DOES affect you and realizing that can help you out of the conundrum it causes all of us.
3/ “ A good way to discover your shortcomings,” said the Master, “ is to observe what irritates you in others.”
~Anthony de Mello

But before we turn to self-examination, let’s look at some other ways understanding this process can help us
4/ improve the clarity of our mental models and belief systems.

The first is fairly obvious—when people marry beliefs about things to strong emotions and passion, their Prover will work overtime to “prove” the belief so conclusively that NO contradictory argument or pile
5/ of "facts" will be able to pierce their “reality tunnel” (Wilson's term for belief systems and mental models)

To see the truth of this, simply peruse Twitter on any given day to see people shouting at each other with each party absolutely certain of
6/ the truth and correctness of their beliefs. To paraphrase Kipling, we humans are all islands of different beliefs shouting at each other over seas of misunderstanding. This is so because if your perceptions are seriously challenged, it almost always and
7/ instantaneously bypasses the Prefrontal Cortex which is responsible for logic and reason and lands in the more ancient part of the brain that processes things emotionally. This is perceived as a dangerous threat to you as an individual, igniting the “fight or flee” reflex
8/ to kick in. Understanding this allows you to see other people very differently and may save you a world of angst and anger trying to convince them of the error of their ways. If you want to honestly and ethically try to change minds (more on techniques that I view as unethical
9/ that *do* work later in the thread) you can save yourself the endless efforts that you’d make and simply move on.

The positive effect this will have on you as an individual may stun you.

Try it for a week and you’ll see what I mean.
10/ Another of the more deadly outcomes of this process is that people with fixed, rigid perceptions suffer from filter failure. Depending upon the strength of the emotionally laden belief, their Prover might block so much useful information from their minds that they become
11/ locked into dogma so deeply that they are, in an intellectual sense, brain dead.

“Intelligence is the capacity to receive, decode and transmit information efficiently. Stupidity is blockage of this process at any point. Bigotry, ideologies etc. block the ability to receive
12/ robotic reality - tunnels block the ability to decode or integrate new signals; censorship blocks transmission.”
~Robert Anton Wilson

If you find this hard to believe, all you need do is study the history of deeply fundamentalist religious or political beliefs
13/ (And, to make it easier, start with those you disagree with). They rarely worked out well for members of society who were at odds with the reigning dogma.

Many of the ideas and concepts that gain mass acceptance over time when a majority of people’s “Provers” are
14/ all following the same paths, a consensus reality forms and it can be a positive or a negative outcome for society as a whole, depending upon the shared beliefs of consensus reality. Being out of sync with the current consensus reality can be a very dangerous or
15/ lucrative position, depending almost upon the consensus. If you exposed anti-church beliefs during the Middle Ages you risked execution but if you “thought differently” during the beginning of the computer revolution, you became a billionaire like Steve Jobs.
16/ [Oops, grandchildren are incoming, so I will continue with Part 3 later on. I also wonder if unquestioning love of your grandchild is a universally held belief of consensus reality, I sure hope so.]

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More from @jposhaughnessy

16 Nov
1/ "Thought is subversive and revolutionary, destructive and terrible, thought is merciless to privilege, established institutions, and comfortable habits; thought is anarchic and lawless, indifferent to authority, careless of the well-tried wisdom of the ages."
~Bertrand Russell
2/ Everyone who thinks must face the scary question of: Why?

Why are we here, there *must* be some grand scheme, some huge meaning to life.

So asked Buddha, Marcus Aurelius, Lao Tzu, Jesus Christ, William Shakespeare, Walt Whitman, et al. "What is the grand purpose?"
3/ There must be complex answers for this complex question!

Whole industries, academies, universities, philosophies, religions are there with the right answer, right?

Um, probably not.

Life and these institutions and philosophies have great, almost infinite pre-packaged
Read 10 tweets
14 Nov
1/ The Thinker and the Prover--a thread

“The unexamined life, said Socrates, is not worth living. That’s some serious shit. Most people wouldn’t want to examine that statement, much less their own lives.”
~Jed McKenna
2/ “We say “seeing is believing,” but actually, as Santayana pointed out, we are all much better at believing than at seeing. In fact, we are seeing what we believe nearly all the time and only occasionally seeing what we can’t believe.”
~Robert Anton Wilson
3/ "People consistently overrate their own skill, honesty, generosity, and autonomy…They chalk up their successes to skill and their failures to luck, and always feel that the other side has gotten a better deal in a compromise.”
~Steven Pinker
Read 25 tweets
10 Nov
1/ Since I reread most of the "Tao Te Ching" by Lao Tzu today, I thought the timing of revisiting How the Tao can help you when contemplating the Dow would be auspicious:
Read 5 tweets
17 Oct
1/ "Your success isn’t about you and your performance. It’s about us and how we perceive your performance...Or, to put it simply, your success is not about you, it’s about us...success is a collective phenomenon rather than an individual one...
2/ The most successful among us have mastered our networks, using them to achieve a place in the collective consciousness, snapping up valuable real estate in the brains of unlikely people. In other words, the network found him useful and chose to amplify his success."
3/ This composite quote is from Albert-László Barabási's book "The Formula: The Universal Laws of Success" and gets at a central reason why I believe that distributed intelligence networks like Twitter have given talented people a huge and new advantage to present their
Read 7 tweets
9 Jul
It’s *what* is said that’s important, not *who* has said it, a thread

1/ I have long recommended reading outside of the field of finance and investing in order to gain useful insights that help you learn how to become a better investor. There is one book, in particular,
2/ that I have been re-reading and contemplating ever since I was 18—“The Tao Te Ching” by Lao Tzu.

I recently re-read some threads (included below) that tried to illustrate how studying Lao Tzu’s ideas are very helpful in this regard. But when I was going through some
3/ old journals (also something I’ve done since age 18) I realized that we often change in ways so subtle that we don’t recognize them until we read thoughts from our earlier self. / When I was younger, I wanted to know as much as I could about the author of what I was reading.
Read 18 tweets
28 Jun
1/“Think of a flabby person covered with fat. That is what your mind can become—flabby, covered with layers of fat till it becomes too dull and lazy to think, to observe, to explore, to discover. It loses its alertness, its aliveness, its flexibility and goes to sleep.”
2/ “What are these layers? Every belief that you hold, every conclusion you have reached about persons and things, every habit and every attachment. In your formative years you should have been helped to scrape off these layers and liberate your mind.”
3/ “Instead your society, your culture, which put these layers on your mind in the first place, has educated you to not even notice them, to go to sleep and let other people—the experts: your politicians, your cultural and religious leaders—do your thinking for you.
Read 4 tweets

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