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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)PE
Posts
28
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387
Joined
8 mo. ago

  • Fun read! Hope you aren't in to much pain though. Sometimes I think until any thought is uncomfortable. I agree with ya. Its unnerving to accept that there is no stable foundation to our knowledge. That you in fact cannot prove that you are right about anything. Not all the way through.

    I've been trying to figure out how much I should push for the world I want given that I don't really know anything. I don't have an answer. I am starting to think that you just gotta keep on keeping on and change course when ya get feedback.

    At the end of the day we are all just on a big wild ride together.

  • So much this. I found some friends by just posting microscope content online. That is so far from going to a social venue IMO. Very niche. Yet with enough time I have found poeple that like it too.

  • Like strangely large. You ever look into a deep pool and get spooked by how deep it is? I was once on a small boat in a cave and Jesus the water was so deep. You could see so far down and it gave me the creeps.

  • I think it just informs us about the physical space we are in. That can be used in a lot of ways emotionally. A small space can feel intimate or claustrophobic. A large space can feel freeing or uncanny.

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  • This is a curious one. 90% of stocks are owned by the top 10%, so stock going down would lead to less inequality. Yet the top 10% also gets to take out their anger at us.

    Edit: and only 50% of American house holds have any retirement savings.

  • Seeing as the time axis doesn't seem special compared to spacial ones (especially in edge cases like black holes) I think time is just a perspective thing.

    My take is that all particles must be moving at the speed of light through 4d space time. Everything always moves at the speed of causality, just not always in the direction you are looking from.

    Do we know if the second law of thermodynamics is just a statistical thing? Does it work at extremely small scales? I know heat propagation could transfer from cold to hot. Its just so astronomically unlikely especially the more complicated the system gets.

  • I would agree depending on how you see physics. I think there is no smallest unit, no fundamental, infinite big and small. So though size comparisons make relative sense, they don't describe relative complexity.