1/ The Thinker and The Prover--Part 3

We left off with how the ability to challenge consensus reality could be a horrible or great thing, depending upon where society finds itself at the time. Generally, the more open and free a society,
2/ the greater the impact of people who challenge the conventional wisdom. One of the reasons why my Prover always finds free markets superior to other systems is because they have provided the lion’s share of new things and ideas. This wasn’t always so,
3/ and for certain regions ruled by Fundamentalist political or religious beliefs, *still* isn’t so.

When we study history, we see that before the connected computer age, consensus reality changed very slowly and often was extremely hostile to anyone who injected new ideas
4/ that changed the consensus reality of society and individuals.

It wasn’t just the Church that condemned Galileo, it was also almost every “respected” scientist of his era. The same was true for Einstein and the early Quantum theorists—all were enthusiastically and
5/ and aggressively dismissed and or attacked by the majority of established scientists of their era. And note, we’re talking about about *science*, where the scientific method is supposed to be the most objective of systems of study. The same is true in almost all aspects
6/ of human society pre-internet consensus realities. For example, the group of artists many revere as among the best of history—the Impressionist—were given this name by members of the established French Academy in order to mock and deride them.
7/ Entire generations of humankind lived and died under the same consensus reality. The Christian Churches of the West; the Islamic Rulers of the middle east and the Hindu, Taoist and Confucianist beliefs of the East ruled their populations almost unchallenged for centuries.
8/ They created powerful symbols and doctrines that few living under their rule dared challenge, for the fate of a heretic or apostate was usually a very quick, yet grueling death. Generation after generation of humankind had these doctrines and symbols embedded in their
9/ consciousness so thoroughly that they still have a powerful effect on a majority of the world’s population to this day.

The invention of radio, talking movies and TV changed the balance of power for those wishing to maintain a steady-state consensus reality. They became
10/ the most powerful tools for shaping and creating consensus reality to a point unseen in human history. The design of our HumanOS often fails to distinguish between what's "real" and what is "fiction." Thus, these new mediums became the most powerful tools for broad
11/ distribution of ideas that our Thinkers can contemplate. For a while, that seemed to work out well, because, in the US, there were only 3 TV networks, a few national newspapers and a studio system in Hollywood where the owners of the movie studios had an ironlike grip on
12/ what could be and couldn't be made as a movie for broad audiences. There were, of course, exceptions, but one reason why people are often nostalgic for this period is that--on the surface--there seemed to be a strong consensus in society they were living in. All the Thinkers
13/ were apparently thinking similar thoughts and the Provers were proving them.

I say on the surface for of course this wasn't exactly true. There were many subgroups who had very different beliefs, but they were seen--largely--as very taboo and the Overton Window didn't make
14/ them eligible for broader consideration. Members of these subgroups were also largely confined by geography. If you lived in the rural South, for example, your "reality tunnel" was much more severely restricted than if you lived in San Francisco. But cracks started appearing
15/ in this seemingly placid consensus reality. First as a trickle, then as a flood. The 60s and 70s were such tumultuous decades because subgroups (Tribes) started to openly challenge the prevailing authorities (who were thoroughly indoctrinated in consensus reality, at least
16/ publically) with often violent results. Younger readers may not be aware of it, but many, many things were dragged into the public consciousness over those 20 years: gay rights, antiwar positions, the ability to proclaim yourself an atheist without losing your position in
17/ society, X-rated movies, and much more are, for the most part, uncontroversial today, but people sacrificed blood and treasure to make this so.

And then, the Internet was created. For the first time in history, anyone with access to a modem--now, anyone with a smartphone--
18/ could make their views on, well, *anything*, known and there was NO WAY to stop them.

The Internet and Social Media became the single most advanced delivery system for any belief that wanted to see how many Thinkers it could attract. There's an obvious reason why
19/ authoritarian regimes attempt to limit or outright block access to the Internet and social media--they intuitively understand the power that these distribution systems have to topple them and their ideology.

But with this amazing interconnected, universally available
20/ communication network came lots and lots of noise. This is one reason, I believe, that many people feel so unmoored and anxious now. We are living in the largest social experiment in human history, and there's no control group. Lots of research shows that *more* choices being
21/ available often led to people either making no choice at all or reverting to a more simple belief system that is broadly shared and "feels" comfortable. Life now offers almost infinite pre-packaged belief systems. It does this primarily to "help" you avoid thought.
22/ But things have drastically sped up due to the Internet giving a microphone to virtually anyone who wants to change consensus reality. It may be counterintuitive for many, but this tsunami of ideas are hitting perception filters in our brains which were not designed for
23/ this type of onslaught and the results are telling--many people retreat into well-worn and time-tested belief systems and unconsciously turn off their Thinker and let their Prover seek out subgroups with similar beliefs--leading back to a lot of the fractures we see in
24/ society and culture today.

Is this inevitable? I think not.

In the Part 4, we'll look at how you can re-engage your Thinker in ways that will help you upgrade your mental models and belief systems and tactics you can use to smoke out ideas living rent-free in your head
25/ without your conscious approval. Ludwig Wittgenstein said "to understand is to know what to do." Hopefully, with a better understanding of this process, we'll all be able to openly explore new ideas and turn the ones we like over to the Prover, who will, no doubt, prove it.

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More from @jposhaughnessy

26 Nov
1/ Reading "The WEIRDest People in the World: How the West Became Psychologically Peculiar and Particularly Prosperous" by Joseph Henrich

The first thing that strikes me is the idea that in addition to many psychological studies having serious replication problems
2/ the author found that even well designed studies have: "Massively biased samples: Most of what was known experimentally about human psychology and behavior was based on studies with undergraduates from Western societies.
3/ At the time, 96 percent of experimental participants were drawn from northern Europe, North America, or Australia, and about 70 percent of these were American undergraduates."

This leads to biases the author and his research associates dub
Read 8 tweets
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
15 Nov
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
Read 16 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

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