1/ For those joining me later today for this @interintellect_ salon with @bronwynwilliams some quotes to ponder to frame why it's so important that we have clowns that can act as "Holy Fools."
2/ “In Russian folklore there is an archetype called yurodivy, or the “Holy Fool.” The Holy Fool is a social misfit—eccentric, off-putting, sometimes even crazy—who nonetheless has access to the truth...The Holy Fool is a truth-teller because he is an outcast.”
~@Gladwell
3/ "Against the assault of Laughter nothing can stand.
"
~Mark Twain
4/ We know instantly if the humor hit the mark, and comics like Bruce lead the way:
“The only honest art form is laughter, comedy. You can't fake it...try to fake three laughs in an hour -- ha ha ha ha ha -- they'll take you away, man. You can’t.”
~Lenny Bruce
5/ But you're taking big risks if you don't get it just right
"My way of joking is to tell the truth."
~G.B. Shaw
"If you’re going to tell people the truth, be funny or they’ll kill you."
~Billy Wilder
You are taking a BIG risk if you're not well received
6/ And lots and lots of courage
“They can speak truth and even open insults and be heard with positive pleasure… For truth has a genuine power to please if it manages not to give offence, but this is something the gods have granted only to fools.”
~Erasmus
7/ Ricky Gervais, Dave Chappelle and Chris Rock are not only very smart, they are FEARLESS, and that ain't easy, but they often say out loud what many people are thinking. In doing so, they are giving people permission to relax and feel that they're not alone
8/ And that will lead us to our discussion of Prophets. One of the most basic parts of HumanOS is the need for the illusion of control. We WANT to believe people who offer certainty about the future.
But the ancient Greeks were way ahead of us in devising an ironic myth
9/ Cassandra was a Trojan priestess of Apollo in Greek mythology cursed to utter true prophecies, but never to be believed. Perhaps a not so subtle commentary on *other* prophecies, where people believed but the Prophet was false.
10/ Many prophecies led to the forming of major religions and faiths, even when the prohespy was for the end of the world. When the date came and went, many adherents not only didn't abandon the prohespy, they DOUBLED DOWN on their belief.
11/ we'll discuss several examples of why this is so, but think of it as a "hack" that hijacks HumanOS and offers certainty in a very chaotic, uncertain world. For much of our existence, the reason for almost everything was "The Gods did it."
12/ the Enlightenment brought the Scientific Method into the mix, but instead of changing people's beliefs and minds, led to an orgy of violence against the "heretics," which led normal folks to not openly question the religious Establishment.
Who could blame them?
13/ We finally hit a fairly peaceful truth between unfalsifiable beliefs and scientific theories that have a great deal of support, but remain open to question and error-correction. Beliefs are a bit more lasting do to our overwhelming need for an illusion of control.
14/ We'll also discuss memes, that are a lot older in human society than many know and exert a powerful control of the minds that the lodge in--these memes bring people together in tribes that reinforce the beliefs transported by memes and offer "certainty" to the group.
15/ which will bring us back around to the need for truth tellers, holy fools and comedians who might just get people to rethink things, but then again
16/ Really looking forward to the discussion. Thanks for inviting me @TheAnnaGat and @bronwynwilliams, excited for this topic.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
1/ Why You Should Write Letters to Your Kids as They Grow--A thread
I've noticed a lot of FinTwiters having babies. Congratulations! I'd like to recommend you get into a habit early, and start writing letters to them that you can give them at some milestone, like turning 21.
2/ “Letters are among the most significant memorial a person can leave behind them.”
~Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
I’ve always believed in the written word. Having to put your thoughts in writing helps you understand if you clearly understand what—and how—you want to say something
3/ And if you keep written journals, there is simply no way to let hindsight bias take over, for there, in your own hand, is what you thought about something at the time, with revisions through selective memory impossible.
Writing clarifies. It illuminates. It helps you follow
I've been going through many of my old journals which stretch back to 1979, when I was 19 years old. As I've said elsewhere, our memories are often unreliable narrators, and it can be illuminating to see the many ways this is so
2/ for example, someone asked me recently if I still remembered and practiced anything I learned from studying neurolinguistic programming (NLP) which was developed and popularized in the 1970s by Richard Bandler and John Grinder. I said I thought not, but wasn't really sure
3/ but would check my notes. I found them, and realized that a lot of my later work on understanding systems thinking and structures actually began when I read the book "The Structure of Magic, Vol. 1: A Book About Language and Therapy" by Bandler and Grinder.
1/ When I was a teen, I was a professional magician (really) and I did several effects that were examples of 'mind reading' and other 'psychic' abilities. I had read several books about how to do "cold reads" of people by noting the person's age, sex, clothing, manner of speech,
2/ where they lived or went to school, etc. All of these were essentially based on high probability guesses that I would then watch the person's reaction for an indication if I was right or wrong and then go to the path of correct guesses that made the person actually believe I
3/ had psychic powers. I eventually became so disturbed by one common reaction that I stopped doing a few of the effects--even if I went out of my way to explain afterward (the people who volunteered were, I see now, a self-selected sample who shared a belief in psychic power)
GPT-J: "I try to avoid being judgmental, but, rather, strive for understanding and understanding comes through empathy, compassion, and, perhaps most of all, just listening, to truly know yourself."
.@BrianRoemmele has recently argued in his "Fork in the Road" series that the introduction of the iPhone in 2007 and widespread adoption of smartphones since then has fundamentally rewired their user's brain structure. I think we should conduct
2/ Neuroimaging studies to see if there has in fact been a rewiring of the brains of smartphone users.
In his book "The WEIRDest People in the World: How the West Became Psychologically Peculiar and Particularly Prosperous," Joseph Henrich makes a persuasive
3/ case that Culture, independent of the biological evolutionary process, does "alter our brains, hormones, and anatomy, along with our perceptions, motivations, personalities, emotions, and many other aspects of our minds." He argues that the proof of this can be found by
"If the universe has set you in front of me or put this book into your hands, then in all likelihood you are closer than most to honestly confronting the stark reality of your situation. It works both ways; when the teacher appears, the student is ready."
~Jed McKenna
"Marty: If I show up at your door, chances are you did something to bring me there."
~Martin Q. Blank (John Cusack) as Assassin in "Grosse Pointe Blank"
"Morty: Nobody exists on purpose. Nobody belongs anywhere. Everybody's gonna die. Come watch TV”
~Morty of @RickandMorty