kixiQu

joined 4 years ago
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Most of the time "oracle decks" and such feel very lifeless to me. I love how this is made with clear adoration for the history of tarot, but with some experimentation too -- I can't believe I haven't seen something like those Luna cards before!

 

This is fascinating to me.

One thing that I've been rolling around in my head is the frequency with which contemporary cults invoke a need to reunify science and religion. There is an actual weight to that idea, but I wonder what it is that makes it such an effective selling point--and with a throughline to the early nineteenth century, at that!

 

I don't know if this will be useful to anyone, but... I find that Miniflux is maybe a little too "minimalist" and "opinionated" for my taste? Anyway, I've got a few Tampermonkey userscripts for it now and this is the first one I've cleaned up.

The other puts sort buttons on the feed page for absolute number of unread entries descending, and unread:read ratio descending. If anyone wants that one I'll clean it up and put it up too.

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submitted 4 years ago* (last edited 4 years ago) by kixiQu@lemmy.ml to c/architecture@lemmy.ml
 

The Nazis were big on stripping stucco off buildings.

Ornament seen as "dishonest", above the plain spokenness of simplicity -- the reason I hate it as an aesthetic view today is because this shit is not ascetic. It is not cheap. The global elite (at every slice, including the one that catches most Americans) shouldn't get to pretend we're being simple or plain when we participate in the consumption economy. Decorate your home with acanthus and cheap gilt, at least you're engaging in an aesthetic that implicitly values the labor in the creation of applied art. Buy a Herend Rothschild plate, trapping of supreme 1800s inequality, and an artisan in a worker-owned coop gets paid a good wage to paint the little bird on. But the cult of Design often makes its minimalist wares with Walmart-exploitative processes, as bad as any mercury gilding, and that it gets to act superior about its aesthetic is repulsive to me. When Dolce & Gabbana sends crowns down a runway, at least that's being honest about what it is, where it comes from, who it's for.

I probably need to write something up properly about this because I have a lot of poorly-articulated feelings about it.

 

Does anyone know good resources around framing this whole thing positively emotionally? All the news coverage and even health guidance I see makes me want to emit a low, ceaseless gurgling sound. Even the "aren't our health workers brave" aspect makes me despair at how poorly we're handling the safety net of it all.

 

My problem switching off of gmail is that I'd really like to start moving to an alias-based approach (so, you know, lemmy@maya.land for Lemmy emails, etc.) but this then conflates two issues so I solve neither.

I wish Google Takeout were required to maintain consistent formats so people could develop tools against it. I could make a lot of progress by pulling out the decade of history I have with them and not maintaining more than a couple months of data inside their stuff at any given time.

 

My brain is broken. Broken, I tell you.

Tom Stoppard!

Rosencrantz!

Sean Connery!

Guildenstern!

I like reading Tom Stoppard plays even though they suffer from the "ah this woman was written by a man" aura.

 

If this author is full of it, please do let me know, but... This was a fascinating read.

Linguists in the age of nationalism had real influence in a way that's nearly unimaginable today, because the accompanying standardization handed people useful tools they had a reason to wield. It reminds me of the Korean alphabet. See also the creation of modern Hebrew. What are the conditions today that could use new tools? This wiki points to some grassroots innovation around the digital world and Cyrillic....

 

I wonder why it is that Irish lace crochet now mostly seems to be done by Russian-speakers? Anyway, there are some really gorgeous examples on Instagram that I'm terribly jealous of. I've made an account on Ravelry and have a simple trim I'm going to attempt!

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gas stoves are bad (earther.gizmodo.com)
 

I moved in with someone who lives in a new condo building. Naturally everyone here picked shiny new appliances which means a gas stove. It's a highrise, so the weak hood vent just disperses the air around the condo. New construction means some LEED standard or other means there are only two small windows that open somewhat to the outside. In order for the HVAC's fan to run, it has to be attempting to change the temperature; there is no steady temperature fan-on option.

I also bought an air sensor because of CO2 concerns... but it also measures VOCs and particulates.

And oh my.

How does this not freak other people out?? Is it just that no one is measuring levels of indoor air pollution? If it's this bad in a bougie environment, couldn't it be so much worse for other homes?

Is anyone working on legislation to require vents to the outside?

 

Gonna dig into this a little.

The metaphor of Facts is an escape from the responsibility of personal judgment. ... As the presumptive base unit of epistemic reality, the metaphor of Facts seems designed to excuse humanity from any exercise of the rational functions whatsoever.

In a world where we are all committed to the idea/ideal of Facts, trust and context-synthesis are still how we end up with those Facts. People naturally have to hone their rational functions that are necessary to evaluate these, just to exist in the world... but we are committed to the idea of denying what we are doing. And where getting the Facts Right is especially valued, it is more important to us to construct our identities on this, and thus we are especially blinded to our own assumptions and heuristics.

The metaphor of Facts implies a moral obligation to believe. ... The metaphor of Facts implies a moral obligation to convince others to believe. Given Facts imply a moral obligation to believe, every fact is a micro-Bible, demanding its own micro-crusade to carry it forth to trample the heretics.

Bzzt! This is a parochially Christian--nay, specifically Protestant view of the world. The Crusades sought to conquer, not convert. The idea that Facts constitute a great Truth is what's here being criticized. And yes, the idea that Truth obligates belief is pretty embedded in a lot of stuff dealing with the concept of Truth at all, so sure, let's go with it. But the idea that it necessarily follows that if you possess Truth, you have an obligation to proselytize--that's pretty culturally specific. If he's just trying to make an observation on a particular culture's relationship with truth, though, it's a nit I shouldn't pick.

The piece gets weaker as it moves to social consequences.

The future of humanity does depend on persuading people to be rational.

If that's the case, humanity doesn't have a future. The more committed we are to personal rationality, the more troubling we find our own irrationality, and thus the better we learn to rationalize it ex post. (I'll spare you my full rants on contemporary 'rationalists')

Then how he says a belief in Facts leads people to behave. 'Bullying'.

Ultimately we must decide what’s more important — freedom of speech, or the metaphor of Facts.

They're both pretty flimsy concepts outside of a legal context, IMO.

The problem of taking this piece to the social consequences of the idea of Facts is that -- look, he's pointing out that you can't clean observations of context, you can't wash them off independently of trust and make them this clean Platonic form of Knowledge where we all get to be objective in Facts-world together. This much I'm with him on, yes. But the idea that censorship is bad--why, this relies upon value statements around a clean Platonic form of Speech. Except of course speech has context, doesn't it? There's causality to speech, origins and impacts. When the whole point of the piece is to show how this is problematic for Facts, speaking of Speech as a distinctive category, assuming an objective good -- doesn't fit well as an axiom/assumption for here.

Ultimately every time we're talking about epistemology it's a good day for me.

 

A lot of people over on HN reacting quite strongly to this one in Serious Manner so sorry for non-humorous commentary.

This is fascinating to me mostly because anyone who has ever had a proper personal crisis and recovered from it is intimately familiar with this line of thought but also with the necessary work to counter it with patience for oneself. Yes, you thought you'd do more, but this is what you could do today, and all you can do is try for more tomorrow. Lots of people did a lot more today but if you don't want to give yourself an aneurysm you're going to have to motivate yourself by looking at all the things you managed and trying to, you know, increment on that. Maybe you didn't get through college at the age your friends did but that's got nothing to do with whether you should or can now. Etc. etc.

Is the pandemic doing this to everyone now? Do I need to write a guide? :thinking face:

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