2,319 Matching Annotations
  1. Last 7 days
    1. Educators who will mentor our future leaders are in short supply

      What does this mean? It's a pretty broad statement. Is it Educators in general who are in short supply, or just those who are willing to mentor? Is this based on facts? If so, whose facts??

    1. a new generative model, a dynamic version of the log-linear topic model

      but what does this model generate ?

  2. Oct 2024
    1. Résumé de la vidéo [00:00:09][^1^][1] - [00:13:24][^2^][2]:

      La vidéo traite de l'impact des horaires scolaires sur le sommeil et la santé mentale des adolescents. Elle présente des études et des expériences menées pour évaluer les effets de décalage des heures de cours.

      Temps forts: + [00:00:09][^3^][3] Études sur les horaires scolaires * Impact sur l'absentéisme * Bien-être des adolescents * Réussite scolaire + [00:01:00][^4^][4] Étude pilote en France * Décalage des heures de cours * Gain de 20 minutes de sommeil * Complexité de mise en œuvre + [00:03:01][^5^][5] Défis de l'implémentation * Inégalités territoriales * Manque de personnel * Formation des enseignants + [00:05:01][^6^][6] Sieste et repos au collège * Lieux de repos pour élèves * Répercussions positives * Risques de décalage de phase + [00:07:01][^7^][7] Amélioration du vécu scolaire * Questionnaires et indicateurs * Collaboration enseignants-élèves * Importance du dialogue et de l'écoute

    1. Some philosophers and media theorists approach media and technology as something that people, especially children, should be protected from.

      As much as I think students need to be educated on the media, I also think they should not necessarily use it until a certain age. I saw a TikTok (not the best source, I know), speaking about how kids today do not know how to just "be bored" and need constant stimulation due to the active and constant use of media. I am curious to know if others feel the same or if there is a specific age that students should be allowed to start engaging in the media?

    2. For example, according to a recent Nielsen report, the average adult (over eighteen years of age) in the U.S. spends around 10 1/2 hours each day involved with some kind of media6 (Nielsen, 2019: 3)

      I think this is crazy! Yes, we need the media for a lot of different aspects of life now, but is too much media a possibility? Trust me, I am 100% guilty of spending too much time on media, but I wonder how this affects younger generations of students.

    1. zebras unite

      for - question - @Michael - Is this the Zebras Unite you are referring to? - https://zebrasunite.coop/ - If so, that brings up another question: - What is the difference between Fair Share Commons and a Cooperative?

    2. Fair Share's Commons offers us is a very adaptable way to formulate work systems of all kinds, living labs, labs, that are both emergent and strategic

      for - question - Donna and Marie - Compare to Cooperatives

      question - @Donna and @Marie - Compare to Cooperative - Can either or both of you compare FSC with Cooperatives?

    3. TLDR

      for - question - @Michael - What is TLDR?

    1. To survive, living systems need to process information from their environment so they can predict environmental conditions. They then translate this information into organising their material structures to maximise the efficiency with which they extract and dissipate energy.

      for - question - entropy definition of life - investigate further - entropy definition of life

      question - I'm not fully appreciating his explanation. This requires further investigation - This physical explanation of life appears to be aimed at showing that the hardware and software aspects of life work together to dissipate physical energy - Is he saying that life's purpose is to accelerate the heat death of the universe?

    1. Thus is the problem of Rich and Poor to be solved. The laws of accumulation will be left free; the laws of distribution free. Individualism will continue, but the millionaire will be but a trustee for the poor; intrusted for a season with a great part of the increased wealth of the community, but administering it for the community far better than it could or would have done for itself.

      for - quote / critique / question - Thus is the problem of Rich and Poor to be solved. The laws of accumulation will be left free; the laws of distribution free. Individualism will continue, but the millionaire will be but a trustee for the poor; intrusted for a season with a great part of the increased wealth of the community, but administering it for the community far better than it could or would have done for itself. - The Gospel of Wealth - Andrew Carnegie

      quote / critique / question - Thus is the problem of Rich and Poor to be solved. The laws of accumulation will be left free; the laws of distribution free. Individualism will continue, but the millionaire will be but a trustee for the poor; intrusted for a season with a great part of the increased wealth of the community, but administering it for the community far better than it could or would have done for itself. - The Gospel of Wealth - Andrew Carnegie - The problem with this reasoning is that it is circular - By rewarding oneself an extreme and unfettered amount of wealth for one's entrepreneurship skills creates inequality in the first place - Competition that destroys other corporations ends up reducing jobs - At the end of life, the rich entrepreneur desires to give back to society the wealth that (s)he originally stole - If one had reasonable amounts of rewarding innovation instead of unreasonable amounts, the problem of inequality can be largely mitigated in the first place whilst still recognizing and rewarding individual effort and ingenuity

    1. if you’re reading this, you are very likely in that big spike on the right of the graph

      Why and how does this career guide target rich people, or people living in the Global North?

    1. Derailed climate action: Mr. Trump will almost certainly withdraw again from the 2015Paris Climate Agreement, dismantle domestic climate and environmental regulations(particularly those seen to hamper the fossil fuel industry), and actively oppose atransition to green energy.

      for - question - Study on 2024 Trump win on polycrisis - Cascade Institute - why is there such a small analysis on the environment and especially planetary tipping points whilst climate clock is ticking?

    1. SDK uses a method from a Software Development Kit (SDK)

      From any SDK? Surely they can't mean you can stick an arbitrary "SDK" somewhere in Salesforce, and use it as a data source?

    1. All we have to do is go one step further, and treat the global name system as a way to bootstrap our petname address book. Once bootstrapped, we can continue to securely gossip names within our web of trust, even after the global name system fails.

      for - question - @Gyuri - How would Indyweb do this?

    1. In graph theory, such a layout is known as a complete graph

      I wonder what a "fully connected" brain would look like.

    1. deletes stale data records that are missing data to clean it and make it more usable

      Does this thing enable me to version my Salesforce data?

    2. DataPacks API

      Is this an alternative to the Metadata API?

    3. Product2 DataPacks

      Wait -- DataPacks aren't just for Omnistudio components?

    4. The automation server uses IDX Build Tool and the SFDX-CLI (Salesforce Command Line Interface) for automated deployment

      Why both?

    1. Orgs configured in each project

      So a single project can be configured with multiple orgs, even though they are sObject records? How does this work?

    1. the new subtlety added by the B is the creation of the spectacle by the market economy or by capitalism and here lies the main difference of his critique so what's the objective of the spectacle the spectacle aims to produce the same passive and predictable individual everywhere a spectator this new being is a passive consumer instead of an active participant in society

      for - question - the society of the spectacle - is it just another critique of capitalism?

      question - the society of the spectacle - is it just another critique of capitalism? - In short, no. It adds something new. - The new subtlety added by the creation of the spectacle by the market economy or by capitalism is that - the spectacle aims to produce the same passive and predictable individual everywhere - ** A SPECTATOR!" - This new being is - a passive consumer instead of - an active participant in society - The Spectator - sacrifices his authenticity to fit in society and - isn't a decision maker in his life anymore - The spectator is a passive human being who just awaits orders to execute (and consume)

    1. The problem is not Explicit TLS but rather the opportunistic use of TLS for the sake of backward compatibility

      If one's email service did not require TLS, would one be unable to email with another who's service did not support TLS?

    1. bioluminescence

      What is the function of bioluminescence for the adaptation of marine bacteria?

      Why do they do this?

      What other examples of quorum sensing and why?

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    Annotators

    1. CBOR, MessagePack, arbitrary text, or otherwise.

      I presume these need to have an ID field/location in the data schema. Like ACDC has the 'd' for the ID. Right?

    2. To understand how SAIDs work

      Little confused... this is telling me about how "SAIDs" work... I thought I already learned that... the #1 below seems very CESR related... are SAIDs and CESR tightly coupled? or are they independent concepts? Making an ID with an eye toward how it will be serialized seems... unnecessarily coupled.

    3. ‘d’

      This is Neither a SAID thing nor a CESR thing right? In this context - this is an input data thing. 'd' is for an ACDC, right? Are SAIDs also coupled to ACDCs? Perhaps the implication is that whatever data container you use.. in this case ACDC, there will be an ID field/location. This algorithm is used for the specific data container - wherever it has the ID. Right?

    4. 24 bit boundaries, pad characters, and pad bytes.

      Yes, this all sounds like CESR things I have heard. Again... feels very thrust upon me, with no understanding of CESR. I do understand that you are trying to just "get to the point" quickly, so I can/should glaze over some of these unknowns.

    5. pre-padding

      This pre-padding concepts seems to have been thrust uponme with no warning... What is this?

    6. How does the generation step work

      Which step is the "generation" step? 1 or 2 above?

  3. Sep 2024
    1. Augmented e-books make use of hyperlinks (both within and outside the browsed documents), create popup windows, play videos and sounds, might include interactive or live graphs, and even change according to user interaction (either through individual choices or according to a community’s practice).

      Pourrait-on les qualifier de littérature ergodique d'après la définition qu'en fait Aspen J. Aarseth (soit une littérature dans laquelle « un effort non-trivial est requis pour permettre au lecteur de traverser le texte » (Cybertext. Perspectives on Ergodic Literature, 1997, p. 2)) ?

    2. According to McLuhan, the hybridization of media produces new media, as media have a generative effect on each other.

      Jürgen Müller s'est-il basé là-dessus pour développer sa pensée sur l'intermédialité ?

    3. It is necessary that these teams integrate more tech in their staff, or even better, that publishers need to acquire the technical skills to manage or create publishing chains. A positive (or utopian) situation would be the creation of custom publishing chains by publishers by assembling free or open-source programs/software.

      Ainsi, de plus en plus l'éditeur devrait non seulement maîtriser le travail du texte, mais aussi potentiellement comprendre la technique derrière la publication d'un fichier électronique. Est-ce réaliste de s'attendre à ce que les éditeurs s'occupent de ce travail en plus du reste?

    1. image

      In the article “These new tools let you see for yourself how biased AI image models are,” Melissa Heikkilä, argues that AI-generating image systems are applying harmful biases and stereotypes. Despite the company's attempts to fix these issues, Heikkila's research with Hugging Face and Leipzig University has created a tool to bring to light these biases. The tool highlights biases and stereotypical images based on gender and ethnicity. Heikkila blames these biases on the training data used which reflects off of American culture/values. Overall, the article clarifies these AI challenges and emphasizes making the system less biased.

    2. Artificial

      Tiku, N., Schaul, K., & Chen, S. Y. (2023, Nov 12). AI-generated images show a world of stereotypes. The Washington Post Retrieved from https://ezproxy.lib.uwm.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/ai-generated-images-show-world-stereotypes/docview/2888705247/se-2

    1. AI and ML can enhance the efficiency and accuracy of AML monitoring processes

      Have there been any fintech companies that have tried to implement AI & ML in AML?

    1. what would it look like to put together an engineering program or an experimental program um orienting towards the question of what would be the form of embodiment in collective intelligence that includes human beings as at least one primary element at ontological level one that would give rise to a collective intelligence at ontological level two

      for - Jordan Hall question - engineering an intentional social superorganism - collective intelligence - Michael Levin & Jordan Hall conversation

    2. do you think that this idea of the hyper object might relate to um how an individual cell relates to the whole of the body because the body itself would be outside the cognitive light cone of the cell

      for - question - to Michael Levin - adjacency between hyperobject and cognitive light cone

    1. On many occasions, I've opened up requests for support in the form of a Github pull request. This way, I am telling the author: I have found a potential problem with your library, here is how I fixed it for my circumstance, here is the code I used for reference. You get extra internet points if you open the pull request with: "I don't expect this pull request to get merged, but I wanted to you show you what I did".
    1. in addition to value, may include information about the type and, in some cases, the size

      Value, Type, and Size of a Cryptographically Verifiable Primitive?

    2. type or size

      I don't understand why this is important. What is the "Type and Size" of a Cryptographically Verifiable Primitive?

    3. Cryptographically verifiable Primitives

      When we say "Cryptographic Primitives" are we saying "Cryptographically Verifiable Primitives"?

    4. Primitives and data structures inside Messages

      Are these on the same level? "Primitives", "Data Structures", "Messages"

    5. cryptographically verifiable Primitives

      This implies there are non-cryptographic Primitives. right?

    6. text domain and binary domain

      Assuming we are talking about cryptographic primitives... is there a difference between text domain cryptography and binary domain cryptography?

    7. Primitives

      Does this mean cryptographic primitives?

    1. No leaf sits directly over the next, so that each can gather light without shading the others. The bean twines around the corn stalk, weaving itself between the leaves of corn, never interfering with their work.

      How does a bean plant know to do this? What is the science behind it's structure deciding and intentionally moving in this way?

    1. READER COMMENTS

      Throughout this whole article we mainly focus on the newest version of AI, GPT-4, I'm just curious on the past types of AI and how it compares to the modle used today. How big is the difference and how far has AI come since GPT 1-4.

  4. www.parcoursnumeriques-pum.ca www.parcoursnumeriques-pum.ca
    1. en parallèle différents flux qui peuvent être de nature différente

      Mais qu'est-ce qu'un flux exactement?

    2. (comme le japonais ou le chinois)

      À quoi ressembler les claviers dans ces langues qui ont tellement de symboles?

    3. Si les contenus des boîtes correspondent à leur fonction, c’est une « page HTML cohérente ». Ce ne serait pas le cas si était mis dans la boîte « title » le contenu de la page.

      À quoi correspondent les boîtes concrètement? Il s'agit d'une manière d'identifier les codes entre les chevrons?

    1. Both biosphere boundaries

      for - question - earth system boundaries - biodiversity - how do we reconcile these boundaries with climate departure?

      question - earth system boundaries - biodiversity - how do we reconcile these boundaries with climate departure? - Does the term "functional integrity" imply autonomy from climate feedbacks? Obviously, climate feedback plays a huge role in determining biodiversity health - In 2013, Mora et al. found that climate departure, the year in which a climate variable moves out of the historical bounds will occur everywhere on the planet, regardless of an aggressive RCP pathway being taken. In this study, climate departure was found to take place (relative to 2013) - 37.5 years in the future under RCP45, or - 22.5 years in the future under RCP85 - It would seem that the biodiversity boundaries should take into consideration climate departure as species extinction and ecological system disruption is projected to occur, regardless of whether RCP45 or RCP85 is adopted. - Currently, we are still on a Business-As-Usual trajectory, but since 2013, scientific research has moved the danger threshold even lower so climate departure dates are likely even sooner than those calculated in the 2013 Mora paper

      to - Mora, C., Frazier, A., Longman, R. et al. (2013). The projected timing of climate departure from recent variability. Nature 502, 183–187. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature12540 - https://hyp.is/3wZrokX9Ee-XrSvMGWEN2g/www.nature.com/articles/nature12540 - Researchgate copy - https://hyp.is/go?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.researchgate.net%2Fpublication%2F257598710_The_projected_timing_of_climate_departure_from_recent_variability&group=world

    2. We capture the main components by identifying safe boundaries for two complementary and synthetic measures of biodiversity: the area of largely intact natural ecosystems, and the functional integrity of ecosystems heavily modified by human pressures.

      for - biodiversity - safe earth system boundaries - 2 measures - intact natural ecosystems - ecosystems modified by human pressures - question - quantification of biodiversity tipping points at various scales

      question - quantification of biodiversity tipping points at various scales - As ecologist David Suzuki often says, economy depends on ecology, not the other way around - Is there quantification at different potential tipping points for extinction for biodiversity at different scales and localities?

    1. So What?

      How can educators use Gen AI effectively where the information it gives us is actually true?

    2. So

      Is there a way where we can identify "hallucinations" and be able to report the false data?

    1. ext, using the same GenAI platform, prompt the GenAI to writelyrics for a song in the style of one of your favorite artists

      Do most artists rely AI to help generate their music, or do they use their own words?

    2. In order to get a sense of how GenAI platforms write, try this:

      How do people really know to trust AI and its information when Wikipedia was trusted until there was information found?

    1. at least some of my audience sometimes misunderstand this position um they say well you know to express evil is also part of nature it's also part of the universal mind which is correct um but it is also part of you of the universal mind also part of nature to strive against evil to stop evil and sometimes forcefully if need be because you're not just going to wait for evil to come and barbarize your loved ones and violate truth left and right i think what this understand understanding calls for is not the complete cessation of the use of force when force is the last resort that we have at our at our hands what it calls for is the the end of the notion that the use of force is a form of vengeance

      for - question - nilhism - nondualism - is fighting evil a contradiction? - Rupert Spira - Bernado Kastrup - question - nilhism - how do we prevent falling into?

      question - nondualism - is fighting evil a contradiction? - Pondering this idea raises the question: - Is fighting evil a contradiction? - Do we fall into duality if we fight evil? - Does nonduality imply not creating categories of morality of good and evil? - This question has no answer because - If you understand the question, you are already - a language user - applying some morality - We are already post category and post linguistic - we can never undo this and get back to pre-category and pre-linguistic - Fighting evil cannot conquer it because - in fighting evil, this implies using (deadly) force - deadly force results in death, the most extreme form of suffering - It is tantamount to abuse and justifying death is the greatest act of separation, causing great suffering to the other - In effect, we have the same result as the abuser and this can create a new generation of abused

      question - nilhism - how do we prevent falling into? - Rather, what is needed is to PENETRATE moral relativism / dualism altogether to re-discover the common sacred ground both moral categories are based upon - The use of force as a form of vengeance - is the perpetuation of the abused-abuser cycle

    2. love is something completely different it has nothing to do with whether we like someone or not i would suggest love is the recognition of our shared being or our shared reality

      for - definition - love - as the recognition of our shared being - Rupert Spira - question - reconciling Rupert Spira's interpretation of the Eastern definition of "love" with the inherent suffering designed into nature

      question - reconciling Rupert Spira's interpretation of the Eastern definition of "love" with the inherent suffering designed into nature - Consider that every individual of every species must eat in order to survive and maintain life, - In other words, suffering is unavoidable in life itself, and exists at every scale of multi-scale competency architecture (Levin) - How do we reconcile this definition of "love" with the suffering inherent in all of life itself? - If we accept that the universal consciousness manifests in ALL living beings, then it is indeed a strange situation because: - reality itself evolved biotic out of abiotic reality and - it did so by creating intrinsic suffering as predators must kill, eat and cause suffering to its prey and - mortality is built into all living organism, bringing about constant innate anxiety to defend against death through innate alertness to and defense against predators

    1. So there has to be a reality, deeper reality, out of which these spacetime reality that we call reality emerges. So so therefore the model to think of the model in your following way, consciousness is a quantum field.

      for - quote - consciousness - model of - as a quantum field - Federico Faggin - question - about Federico Faggin's quantum field theory of consciousness - Is it neo-dualistic?

      quote - consciousness - model of - as a quantum field - Federico Faggin - (see below) - Think of the body as a structure in space and time - It is both - classical - cells are made of particles, atoms and molecules that interact quantumly in space and time - AND fields - The body is a bridge between consciousness and the classical (objective spacetime) world - The body reports to the conscious field - and creates quantum states inside the cell

      potential future dialogue - Michael Levin and Federico Faggin - To unpack quantum states at cellular or subcellular level, it would be good to see a dialogue between Michael Levin and Federico Faggin

    2. Now we understand why there has to be an inner reality which is made of qualia and an outer reality which is made a lot of symbols, shareable symbols, what we call matter.

      for - unpack - key insight - with the postulate of consciousness as the foundation, it makes sense that this is - an inner reality made of qualia - and an outer reality made of shareable symbols we call matter - Federico Faggin - question - about Federico Faggin's ideas - in what way is matter a symbol? - adjacency - poverty mentality - I am the universe who wants to know itself question - in what way is matter a symbol? - Matter is a symbol in the sense that it - we describe reality using language, both - ordinary words as well as - mathematics - It is those symbolic descriptions that DIRECT US to jump from one phenomena to another related phenomena. - After all, WHO is the knower of the symbolic descriptions? - WHAT is it that knows? Is it not, as FF points out, the universe itself - as expressed uniquely through all the MEs of the world, that knows? - Hence, the true nature of all authentic spiritual practices is that - the reality outside of us is intrinsically the same as - the reality within us - our lebenswelt of qualia

    3. it has to be taken as a postulate

      for - answer - It has to be taken as a postulate - Federico Faggin - to question - how can we test that consciousness is the foundation of reality?

    4. you've mentioned the word theory a lot of times. How can we test this?

      for - question - how do you test the theory that consciousness is the foundation of reality? ( to Federico Faggin)

  5. Aug 2024
    1. I think it's it's critical for us uh when for for for for people to realize that when we reimagine what the self is and take away take take us away from this this notion of a of a subst you know some kind of monatic substance and all that um it's different than what you said before which is uh that well it's you know every everything is equally illusory I mean there's there's nothing at that point well if it's that that's a deeply destabilizing concept for a lot of people

      for - question - what would Federic Faggin think of this? - question - multi-scale communication - question - are Tibetan Rainbow body and knowing time of death examples of multi-scale communications? question - what would Federic Faggin think of this? - He comes from an experiential perspective, not just an intellectual one.

      question - what would Federic Faggin think of this? - I don't think Michael Levin provides a satisfactory answer to this and this is related to the meaning crisis modernity finds itself in - when traditional religions no longer suffice, - but there is nothing in modernity that can fill the gap yet, if mortality salience is a big issue - I don't think an intellectual answer can meet the needs of people suffering in the meaning crisis, although it is necessary, it is not sufficient - I think they are after some kind of nonverbal, nondual transformative experience

      question - multi-scale communication - This is also a question about multi-scale communication - I've recently used a metaphor to compare - the unitary, monatic experience of consciousness to - an elected government - The trillions of cells "elect" consciousness" as the high level government to oversea them - but we seem to be in the situation of the government being out of touch with the citizens - At one time in our history, was it common to be able for - high level consciousness to communicate directly with - low level cells and subcellular structures? - If so, why has this practice disappeared and - how can we re-establish it?

      question - Are Tibetan Rainbow body and knowing time of death examples of multi-scale communications? - In some older spiritual traditions such as found in the East, it seems deep meditative practitioners are able to achieve a degree of communications with parts of their body that is unconventional and surprising to modern researchers - For example, Tibetan meditators report of having the abiity to predict the time of their death by recognizing subtle bodily, interoceptive signals - Rare instances also occur of the Rainbow Body, when great meditators in the Dzogchen tradition whose body at time of death can disappear in a body of light

    1. when we experience peace what we are experiencing whether we realize it or not is is the background of awareness the background of consciousness who who's whose nature is peace and its peace is present not just in the absence of objective experience it's present during objective experience just as the screen remains present during the movie but we lose contact with it when we lose ourselves in the content of experience

      for question - What is peace? - it is rediscovering our background of awareness - we lose it when we get lost in the content of experience

    2. ultimately dissociation doesn't really happen it's um it's a model i think it's a an accurate a very useful model but the best way i can i can describe this is using the analogy of going to a 3d imax cinema

      for - metaphor - analogy - dissociation - Bernardo Kastrup - to - 3D imax cinema - localize Rupert Spira - terminology - dissociate - Bernado Kastrup - terminology - localize and contract - Rupert Spira - universal consciousness contracts to finite human consciousness - question - meaning of dissociate - Bernardo Kastrup

      metaphor - analogy - dissociation - Bernardo Kastrup - to - 3D imax cinema - Rupert Spira - At 3d Imax cinema, we wear a pair of special glasses - that make the otherwise fuzzy image to acquire a 3rd dimension - In the same way, our raw universal consciousness is like the fuzzy pattern we see on the 3d Imax screen when we DON'T have any special glasses on - When we perceive and think, it is like putting on the 3D glasses in the Imax theatre and suddenly we see objects with great clarity - Spira talks about universal consciousness "localizing" within its own activity - in the form of a finite mind of a human being

      question - meaning of dissociate - Bernardo Kastrup - Does Kastrup mean that we infinite / universal consciousness dissociates from itself into the finite human consciousness? - answer - It appears so, as at time 45:50, Spira summarizes Kastrup's views on dissociation

  6. inst-fs-pdx-prod.inscloudgate.net inst-fs-pdx-prod.inscloudgate.net
    1. suedthefatherofthechildfordamageswhichthenbecameadowryandallowedthemtomarry.

      How can a woman sueing the father of her child become a dowry?

    2. mensawwomenasagroupastheOther,butsaw themselvesastheOne,tothewholesexwereeitherimpossibleorunnecessary.

      Why would it be so hard for male historians to believe that they themselves are deeper than one generalized group based off of many aspects but women are simple enough to be dialed down to one singular thing?

    1. how do you know if, if, and when you are part of a larger cognitive system, right?

      for - question - how do you know when you are part of a larger cognitive system? - answer - adjacency - synchronicity - lower level example - two neurons talking to each other - Michael Levin - Mark Solms foundation theory of affect

      question - how do you know when you are part of a larger cognitive system? - answer - adjacency - synchronicity - lower level example - two neurons talking to each other - Michael Levin - Mark Solms foundation theory of affect

      adjacency - between - answer - synchronicity - lower level example - two neurons talking to each other - Michael Levin - Mark Solms foundational theory of affect - adjacency relationship - This is a very interesting question and Michael Levin provides a very interesting answer - First, it is very interesting that Mark Solms points out that affect is foundational to cognition - This is evident once we begin to think of the fundamental goals of any individual of any species is to optimize survival - The positive or negative affects that we feel are a feedback signal that measures how successful we are in our efforts to survive - Hence, it is more accurate to ask: - How do you know if and when you are part of a larger affective-cognitive system? - Levin illustrates the multi-level nature of simultaneous consciousness by looking at two neurons "in dialogue" with each other, and potentially speculating about a "higher level of consciousness", which is in fact, the level you and I operate at and take for granted - This speculative question is very important for it also can be generalized to the next layer up, - Do collectives of humans, each one experiencing itself a unified, cohesive inner perspective, constitute a higher level "collective consciousness"? - If we humans experience feelings and thinking whilst we have a well defined physical body, then - what does a society feel and think whilst not having such a well defined physical body?

    2. I have no idea. But what I do know is that it's not a, um, this is not a philosophical, uh, thing that we can decide arguing in an armchair. Yes, it is. No, it isn't. No, you have to do experiments and then you find out.

      for - question - does the world have agency? <br /> - answer - don't know - but it's not philosophical - it's scientific - do experiments to determine answer - Michael Levin

    3. Does the world have agency?

      for - question - does the World have agency? - Michael Levin

    1. ll three segmentsof the arm move along one single plane, which means that we can use a 2D vectors forrepresentation. Let p

      How can we make it 3D vectors? What are the differences?

    Tags

    Annotators

    1. he Experience you had when you felt this beam coming out of you uh what type of experiences should people or could people aim in order to get access to this sort of information do they need some sort of a psychedelic do they need to meditate they need to read the WR books

      for - question - how to experience nondual - how to experience non-separation

    1. whichecosystem services are most relevant for the re/insurance industry – for risk assessment,underwriting and investment allocation? Figure 1 shows those services we identified as mostrelevant to re/insurance

      for - biodiversity ecosystem services - most relevant for insurance industry

      biodiversity ecosystem services - most relevant for insurance industry - Intact habitat - respiratory disease claims are one of the key driver of insurance claims worldwide. Intact forests are a key air purifier - Pollination - stats - global annual economic cost of insect pollinators - 235 to 577 billion USD - OECD 2019 - Air quality and local climate - (see above) - Water security - Water quality - Soil fertility - Erosion control - coastal / river-bordering forests / mangroves provide key erosion protection. - roots build a natural bulwark against waves and can store water during heavy rainfall - where forests (and mangroves) have disappeared, landslides and storm surges are more common and can move further inland, causing property losses covered by insurance - Coastal protection - (see above) - Food provision - Timber provision

      question - valuable ecosystem services identified for insurance industry - what about minerals?

    2. The loss of the Amazon forest impacts (micro)climate,water supply, carbon storage and soil integrity.Deforestation affects water supplies in Brazilian cities andneighboring countries. It also impacts the actual farmsdriving deforestation, causing water scarcity and soildegradation. Further deforestation may also impact watersupply globally

      for - question - economic impact of loss of Amazon Rainforest

      question - economic impact of loss of Amazon Rainforest - If the Amazon rainforest breaches its tipping point, it seems this study does not consider the impacts of such a large scale impact?

    1. Shifting our linguistic habits towards ecological communication would require learning to pay attention to “motion and mystery of the interrelatedness and entanglement of everything” which entails deactivating the old habits and reactivating “capacities that have been exiled by these habits.”

      for - rapid whole system change - salience of shifting language habits - planetary emergency - salience of shifting language habits - question - shifting language habits

      question - shifting language habits - from industrial, goal oriented - to ecological - how? Watch Great Simplification Interview

    1. two decades ago, the influential environmentalist Herbert Girardet (1999) was still posing the relationship between the two as a potential ‘contradiction in terms’. What happened? Why does everyone think cities can save the planet, and why now?

      for - question - sustainable cities - how did the contradiction of sustainability and cities posed by Herbert Girardet in 1999 get resolved?

    1. we go from not  understanding it to apathy in the span of an afternoon which is another issue. Um, so so  what should we do?

      for - question - planetary emergency - ignorance or apathy - what should we do?

      question - planetary emergency - ignorance or apathy - what should we do? - Johan Rockstrom advocates for three simultaneous internventions that must be executed in order to achieve the following impacts: - Legally binding global governance regimes must be implemented: immediately - Paris Agreement - biodiversity agreements - Internalize all externalities - Implement a global price on carbon emissions of at least 100 USD / ton - Stop all expansion of human activity into intact nature

    1. is it possible to teach machine values

      for - question - AI - can we teach AI values?

      question - AI - can we teach AI values? - it's likely not possible because we cannot assign metrics to things like - ethics - kindness - happiness

    2. Solutions or systems that are created uh to solve problems

      for - question - neuroscience - creating neuroscience-based systems for solving problems

    3. the first question that came in and as we're embracing remote and hybrid working as The New Normal how do you address this from a neuroscience perspective

      for - question - neuroscience - efficacy of hybrid remote and live work environments

    4. this is the reason why I'm not afraid of artificial intelligence taking over

      for - question - AI - can AI learn to be intentionally distracted?

    5. human beings don't do that we understand that the chair is not a specifically shaped object but something you consider and once you understood that concept that principle you see chairs everywhere you can create completely new chairs

      for - comparison - human vs artificial intelligence

      question - comparison - human vs artificial intelligence - Can't an AI also consider things we sit on to then generalize their classifcation algorithm?

    1. This physical expression lacks fulfillment because it does notchange the world around it: Elio did not have sex with Oliver, just his clothing. The narrativecontinues, and so this physical act fails to function as a true and fulfilling confession.

      How can i refute this? Or what can i take from this?

    Tags

    Annotators

  7. Jul 2024
    1. An innovative element of the proposed approach is the use of common cliques in graphs representing documents to create a feature vector.

      for - further research - common cliques in graphs - question - relevance to disaggregating text corpus into sub-sentence graph nodes?

    1. 26:30 Brings up progress traps of this new technology

      26:48

      question How do we shift our (human being's) relationship with the rest of nature

      27:00

      metaphor - interspecies communications - AI can be compared to a new scientific instrument that extends our ability to see - We may discover that humanity is not the center of the universe

      32:54

      Question - Dr Doolittle question - Will we be able to talk to the animals? - Wittgenstein said no - Human Umwelt is different from others - but it may very well happen

      34:54

      species have culture - Marine mammals enact behavior similar to humans

      • Unknown unknowns will likely move to known unknowns and to some known knowns

      36:29

      citizen science bioacoustic projects - audio moth - sound invisible to humans - ultrasonic sound - intrasonic sound - example - Amazonian river turtles have been found to have hundreds of unique vocalizations to call their baby turtles to safety out in the ocean

      41:56

      ocean habitat for whales - they can communicate across the entire ocean of the earth - They tell of a story of a whale in Bermuda can communicate with a whale in Ireland

      43:00

      progress trap - AI for interspecies communications - examples - examples - poachers or eco tourism can misuse

      44:08

      progress trap - AI for interspecies communications - policy

      45:16

      whale protection technology - Kim Davies - University of New Brunswick - aquatic drones - drones triangulate whales - ships must not get near 1,000 km of whales to avoid collision - Canadian government fines are up to 250,000 dollars for violating

      50:35

      environmental regulation - overhaul for the next century - instead of - treatment, we now have the data tools for - prevention

      56:40 - ecological relationship - pollinators and plants have co-evolved

      1:00:26

      AI for interspecies communication - example - human cultural evolution controlling evolution of life on earth

    1. and these, as I have mentioned in the previous chapter, aresymbolic of Elio himself.

      even the apricots?

    2. After the two lovers have at last slept together, we learn that what each perceived as theother’s indifference and dislike had actually been signs of their affection all along. In fact, welearn that the signs they misunderstand are largely signs that each himself uses to conveyaffection, so that they are almost literally in love with their own reflections.

      "The signs they misunderstand are largely signs that each himself uses to convey affection, so that they are almost literally in love with their own reflections."

      Firstly, what does this mean, and how do we know?

      Does this show a disconnect between understanding one's own identity as he misunderstands Oliver's coldness which is actually affection? Elio does not have a grasp on himself because he misunderstands his own reflection, although he does come to understand him more as the story progresses.

    3. Elio says that he “repeated his phrase as if it were a prophetic mantra meant to reflecthow he lived his life and how I was attempting to live mine” (Aciman 2007: 51). These examplesfurther highlight Aciman’s theme of repetition which underscores his more potent references tothe myth of Echo and Narcissus.

      Does this repetition or echo of this mantra restrict his identity in any way?

    4. he channels Echo often in the novel whenhe describes his contemplative repetitions of things Oliver says to him in his dreams or inactuality. He has a dream that Oliver says, “you’ll kill me if you stop,” which happens in hisdreams on various other occasions, and Elio holds onto this phrase until the two of them finallyconsummate their love and Elio repeats the phrase aloud several times

      Basically, Echo is reinforcing the idea of interpersonal identification. Although in the dream Oliver says "you'll kill me if you stop", the phrase is actually said by Elio -- showing how they desire one another both to have each other but also to be one another. Through the exchanging and replacing of words. How do words and speech represent or shape identity?

    5. ndeed, Elio later emphasizes his fear ofspeaking when he likens himself to a knight in a novella he is reading who cannot decidewhether it is better “to speak or to die” in order to resolve his concealed love for a princess(Aciman 2007: 63). We later learn that the knight does decide to speak, but “fudges” and doesnot say everything that he wants to say (Aciman 2007: 68)

      What do words signify in CMBYN? We know both that Elio has a "fear" of speaking, but how does speaking show deception, and why is that important in identity?

    6. Acimanoften writes summary dialogues between his characters that give us the gist of their conversationwithout including quotation marks.

      Yes, but why?

    1. I would really argue there hasn't been a better time to make music and there hasn't been a better time to consume and listen to music

      for - question - Is music worse because entry level is lower? - Musicians response - Bernth's response

    1. In this case, the non-physical elements of the economy areconstrained (arbitrarily) to grow no higher than 75% of the total, resulting in only a modest amount ofdecoupled economic growth before flattening.Nature PHysics | www.nature.com/naturephysics

      for - adjacency - question - degrowth? - circular economy? - steady state - regenerative processes

      adjacency - between - degrowth - circular economy - regenerative practices - steady state economy - adjacency relationship - Where did the 75% number come from? Is there anything special about it? Is it some kind of a limit from the model? - Would circular and regenerative practices play an important role in this? - This would seem to indicate a degrowth type scenario. Degrowth is a misnomer, it doesn't imply continual economic downward trend, - but is specifically addressing a the decrease of physical human economic activity - that is responsible for our excessive pollution load / biodiversity loss - to levels necessary to avoid the worst impacts - It isn't explicitly stated that the other half of degrowth is growth of non-physical economic activity that nurtures and nourishes humanity

    2. It seems ludicrous to imagine that these vitalresources incapable of further expansionwould become essentially free of charge.

      for - question - transition - from capitalism to a form of socialism?

      question - capitalism to a form of socialism? - To say it seems ludicrous is an opinion that makes sense from a traditional capitalists perspective - From a socialist perspective, it seems feasible - Nothing is free of charge, however, even in socialism, there is always some price an individual must pay, it's more about the incentive structure that differentiates the two - capitalism - polarized towards self-centric perspective - socialism -balanced self-and-other perspective

      adjacency - between - capitalism - socialism - differing perspective on self/other worldview - adjacency relationship - While capitalism relies on a self-centric perspective, socialism relies on a more balanced self/other perspective

    3. We must therefore becareful to understand the phenomenonand its implications so that we do not toallow a panicked departure from growththat may result in unnecessary suffering orill-intentioned opportunists exploitingthe chaos

      for - question - climate adaptation - resiliency - how do we prepare for potential collapse?

      question - climate adaptation - how do we prepare for potential collapse? - How do we prepare? - preparation needs to take place at national, community and individual / family level - Resiliency will depend on how ill prepared we are at each of these levels - How do we prepare for: - high levels of suffering - ill-intentioned opportunists who are ready to exploit the chaos?

    4. The thermodynamic limitsexplored above, for instance, apply to anyenergy technology we care to imagine.

      for - question - fusion and deep geothermal

      question - I suppose it also applies to - nuclear fusion if it becomes feasible and - deep geothermal

    1. for - transition - renewable energy - won't work - because - the price is wrong! - Brett Christopher - green energy - the price is wrong - transition - alternative to capitalism - book - The Price is Wrong: Why Capitalism won't Save the Planet - Brett Christopher

      summary - This book provides rationale for why capitalism won't scale renewable energy, but a public sector government approach might - What about the alternative of community-owned or cooperative-owned energy infrastructure? A pipe dream? - Is renewable energy just not profitable and therefore has to be subsidized? - Perhaps it could be seen as a stopgap to buy us time until fusion, deep geothermal or other viable, scalable options become widespread?

      from - Planet Critical podcast - 6th Mass Extinction - interview with paleontologist Peter Brennan - https://hyp.is/3ss3Vj9vEe-iDX-3vRVlFw/docdrop.org/video/cP8FXbPrEiI/

    1. the question is why are the mitochondria not doing their job why is the self not responding to insulin 00:05:34 that's the issue different tissues different reasons but the main one is the liver

      for - question - health - insulin resistance - why aren't mitochondria within cells not responding to insulin?

      question - health - insulin resistance - why aren't mitochondria within cells not responding to insulin? - The fat cells are being stored in the liver, resulting in - fatty liver disease - The liver stores the fat cells floating in blood (triglycerides) then recirculates it back to the cells. - The cells and liver are caught up in a vicious cycle of "hot potatos" with the fat cells.<br /> - (See Stanford explainer video above)

  8. Jun 2024
    1. what if a band decides to take one of the udio generated songs and re-record it entirely will they own the full copy rate to that very new recording now if I 00:21:03 was udio the answer probably be like no you made that thing using our platform

      for - AI music issues - rerecording an AI music generated song - copyright question

    1. crowded diner could interfere with your ability to transmit a message

      Even though "telephone" is a silly game that people play. How does it relate to communication? Is the game of telephone an example of the transmission model of communication since there is a sender or receiver or not because it is the same message being passed along so there is not much to process?

    1. how was it that our symbols became so dislocated 00:09:34 from physical uh materiality and the biophysical reality that we've created an economy that's destroying the biosphere

      for - question - Planet Critical podcast - What is the role of language in creating an ecocidal economy?

    2. we're going to hit some very very hard limits to growth um and yet it's almost like we can't find the language for it

      for - question - Planet Critical podcast - We're in existential crisis - but difficult to convey to most people - why?

    3. why is the world in crisis

      for - question - why is the world in crisis? - Planet Critical

    1. how do we sort of cultivate an 00:40:56 intuition for complex systems right for those second third nth order effects

      for - question - Entangled Worlds podcast - How do we cultivate intuition for complex systems - to access those higher order effects? - answer - Nora Bateson - practice everywhere

    2. what life might be that baby could be 00:38:31 born in an era 10,000 years ago and would be coming into its World learning to make sense of the relationships and the way that you 00:38:45 survive in this world

      for - Nora Bateson - response to interview question - Is English language more separating? - Gedanken - Entangled Worlds podcast

      response - Nora Bateson - Entangled Worlds podcast question - Is English more separating than other languages? - yes - Gedanken - Nora responds by posing a Gedaken that shows how culturally relative our worldviews are - Our enculturation plays a major role in shaping our worldviews - Ronald Wright's famous quotation about how the human brain has not substantially changed in the past 50,000 years implies that - between the present and anytime less than 50,000 years ago, - if we were transported back in time, we would simply adapt the same culturally norms at that time

      epiphany - time travel and a clue to the deepest part of nature within human nature - This Gedanken suggests something important, namely that - if the seemingly immovable worldviews we adopt are a consequence of enculturation - then perhaps that which is the most fundamental aspect of our nature is not dependent on culture? - In other words, if we remove our enculturation, what is left is the most profound set of qualities of being human, - one that transcends all relative cultural perspectives

      reference - Ronald Wright computer metaphor on progress traps - Ronald Wright's computer metaphor helps us see how fluid the enculturation of a neonate is - https://hyp.is/6Lb6Uv5NEe2ZerOrftOHfA/www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/321797-a-short-history-of-progress

    3. it's really 00:40:26 important to to to tickle that to loosen it to to start to approach things in really different ways because they you get really different 00:40:40 responses and then things are shifting

      for - Nora Bateson - response to interview question - Is English language more separating? - loosen up!

    4. what's the point what am i g to get out of this it's the same question actually

      for - question - How to respond when asked what's the point or what's in it for me? - adjacency - what's the point? - what's in it for me? - human attention - progress traps

      question - How to respond when asked what's the point or what's in it for me? - When these questions pop up, - it can be a good opportunity to engage the other in deeper dialogue to reveal deeper complexity

      adjacency - between - questions - what's in it for me? - what's the point? - human attention - progress trap - complexity - emptiness - adjacency relationship - These questions come up a lot - and they indicate a normative human tendency: - When we focus attention on what we consider salient in our dynamic, constructed salience landscape - at the same time it defocuses our attention from the rest of the field the salient feature occurs within - In this sense, overemphasize on these questions could reveal a dependency on oversimplification - of the complexity inherent all every life situation - Remember that emptiness, with its pillars of - intertwingledness and - change - pervades everything, everywhere and everytime - and such continuous oversimplification is tantamount to - ignoring the empty nature of reality and - leads to progress traps

    1. Despite all the hand-waving, there are still no viable, scalable, truly renewable energy sources waiting in the wings

      for - question - no viable replacement for fossil fuels? - energy futures - deep geothermal

      question - no viable replacement for fossil fuels? - That may not be true - Deep geothermal may be the viable answer in the short-to-medium term and - nuclear fusion may be the solution on the medium term - https://jonudell.info/h/facet/?max=100&expanded=true&user=stopresetgo&exactTagSearch=true&any=Deep+geothermal

    1. nd you’re basically scrambling to come toterms with something, which, unbeknownst to you, has been brewing forweeks under your very nose and bears all the symptoms of what you’reforced to call I want.

      "Forced to call I want", implies societal pressure to put labels on feelings... What does Elio think of this? Assigning definitions based on symptoms. Based on others telling you -- this is the transition that Elio takes to become Oliver.

      Will he eventually not want him? And how does this prove identity is contradictory!?

  9. May 2024
    1. Analyze how musical traditions and practices from selected areas of the world have survived,

      I am very interested in learning all of the different musical traditions that are all over the world. Every place had different traditions and I am curious to learn about them.

    2. Increase their knowledge of the role of the internet and mass media have contributed to the globalization of musical sounds and practices

      I am very curious to learn about how the internet and mass media have contributed to the globalization of musical sounds. The internet has changed so many things and I want to learn how it changed music.

    3. Increase their knowledge of how local cultures around the world have adapted American music into their own society and traditions

      Do people in other countries actually enjoy American music, or is it just prevalent due to other factors?

      Is American music actually as prevalent as we think in other cultures besides our own?

    4. Trace the diaspora of folk and popular music traditions in the United States from selected parts of the world Analyze how musical traditions and practices from selected areas of the world have survived,

      Something that I have been interested in regarding American music is the influences and processes that occured to create its distinct sound, especially in rock. I enjoy the vinyl era, and I find the blues' influence on rock to be extremely intersting as it encapsulates a history unique to the United States and also uses elements from a wide variety of cultures. I'm excited to hear more about this topic during this class.

    5. Understand the pros and cons of globalization, and the ways that people engage in or reject globalization in their own localized musical communities

      I would like to learn more about the cons of globalization. When I think of globalization's impact on art I generally believe it's had a positive impact, so I would like to hear the opposing side. I would assume potentially the cons could be some forms of cultural appropriation, but I would like to hear some of the other cons of globalization for music.

    6. The course explores how music in the United States articulates a broad spectrum of human experience among diverse populations.

      I am curious to see how global music cultures have had an affect on music in the United States. I find this particularly interesting since we are often considered the world's melting pot of cultures, so I wonder how far reaching of human experience our music is.

    1. actuellement nous savons qu'il est possible de modifier le comportement des parents avec des effets bénéfiques euh sur les enfants dans une pluralité de domaine mais nous ne sommes 00:54:48 pas encore en mesure d'indiquer quels interventions produisent les effets les plus durables par exemple sur les performances académiques ou sur le obtention de diplôme qu'on a pu faire pour d'autres types de stratégie 00:55:01 d'intervention
    1. When designing a discussion board activity, it isimportant to remember that discussions are not exams andthe correctness of each person’s response is not the point.The point of discussion should be conversation, analysis,debate, illustration, application, synthesis, and reflection.

      Point of a discussion board - not exam or even correct answer but conversation analysis debate illustration application synthesis reflection

    2. “line up and answer” model is an instructor-centered mode

      Instructor centered question model

    3. At least partially at fault is ineffectivequestion design. One of the most common question formatsfor online asynchronous discussions is for instructors to posea question or brief list of questions, and then to ask studentsto first reply to the question(s) provided and then to returnlater to reply to the responses of two peers.

      issue with standard - question and reply to 2 people discussion boards - not really active learning

    1. j'ai une petite question sur en ce moment voilà on parle 01:20:09 beaucoup de du harcèlement à l'école et donc là on nous a sorti des cours d'empathie et donc l'empathie c'est intuitif donc je voulais savoir un petit peu ce que tu pensais de cours 01:20:22 d'empathie alors à la fin tu as dit quand même que l'école le rôle de l'école c'était de de former au système intuitif au système 1 avec en même temps de de former les 01:20:33 individus à revenir sur leur sur leur premières leur leur première intuition pour les déconstruire donc voilà la question c'est qu'est-ce qu'on pense et qu'est-ce qu'on fait de ces cours 01:20:46 d'empathie ou là là alors l'empathie euh c'est coûteux comme la tension ça veut dire c'est la capacité de sortir de 01:20:58 soi de se décentrer et aller vers l'autre plus l'autre est loin et plus je dois marcher donc plus c'est coûteux c'est pour ça ce qu'on parle en journalisme on parle de mort kilométrique ça veut dire que plus les 01:21:11 gens meurent loin de nous moins on a de l'empathie mais pas que de distance géographique mais aussi de distance culturelle donc si vous vous posez la question pourquoi j'ai pas autant d'empathie si pour les pour pour pour 01:21:24 ses morts plutôt que c'estes morts B parce que vous n'avez pas la même culture parce que voilà vous ne sentez pas proche de de ces gens et du coup ça c'est pour dire que l'empathie on a d'abord pour soi on est très très très 01:21:37 voilà on est moi parce que je suis dans moi-même donc on on se trouve 50000 justifications pour ce que nous sommes et plus on s'est li après on a des l'empathie pour ceux qui nous ressemblent et après on a de l'empathie 01:21:49 donc en fait voilà par cercle comme ça je vais l'étaler mon empathie après elle disparaît donc du coup par exemple quand on parle de l'empathie pour les espèces la meilleure façon c'est que les enfants 01:22:02 vivent avec les espèces pas que j'aurais l'empathie pour des insectes que je jamais croisé'estce pas donc c'est parce que plus on partage et plus il y a une proximité qui fait que je vais avoir de 01:22:14 l'empathie donc vous voyez c'est une compéten HE c'est pas qu'il y a des gens qui ont plus d'empathie que d'autres elle n'a rien à voir d'ailleurs avec les sentiments elle a à voir avec la capité de se projeter dans un raisonnement abstrait donc dans ce que vivent les 01:22:27 autres alors la question c'est bien sûr comment je fais pas que je généralise mon empathie mais par contre pour que je puisse avoir le plus possible d'expérience partagé c'est 01:22:39 c'est c'est ça c'est pas une leçon l'empathie je peux pas venir vous dire il faut penser aux autres marche pas la sensibilisation ne marche pas je vais avoir de l'empathie pour les gens avec qui je partage des expériences vécues 01:22:52 dans lesquels je me pose pas la question parce qu'il n'est même pas différent l'autre alors du coup en fait ça devient une question un peu comme la communication non violente un peu comme toutes ces choses qui qui fonctionnent 01:23:05 quand on est un éegois il y a rien de plus énervant qu'une communication non violente entre un opprimé et un oppresseur vous voyez l'opprimé va dire oui c'est pas toi c'est moi je pense que par non ça ça 01:23:18 marche pas la même façon pour l'empathie ça marche pas de parler d'empathie ça marche entre frèr et sœur bien tu as vu ta sœur elle est plus petite que toi tu te rappelles quand toi tu étais petit voilà oui mais quand on est très 01:23:29 différent si je n'ai pas automatiquement justement un affect positif ça va plus être du compromis que de l'empathie ça veut dire c'est un peu comme quand on a fait dans la société on 01:23:42 s'est dit on se tue pas on a pas dit c'est pas gentil n'est-ce pas on a dit c'est si tu fais ça tu vas en prison n'est-ce pas bah voilà c'est ça bah du coup à l'école c'est soit vraiment avoir 01:23:56 une école dans laquelle une vraie mixité sociale soit on fait les les règles de bienséance donc on respecte les autres ont des croyances différentes parce que 01:24:09 voilà c'est c'est l'un ou l'autre mais en fait naturellement quand on est fatigué on n pas d'empathie parce que c'est vraiment quelque chose qui est énergétiquement très très très faut 01:24:20 réduire cette dépense énergétique en en en rendant les expériences partagées le plus souvent présentes et on est dans un pays dans lequel il est possible d'avoir des expériences 01:24:32 partagées mais qui qui voilà c'est l'école la mission d'école de mixité sociale c'est la meilleure réponse la Meille le meilleur entraînement à la considération que de l'autre comme étant 01:24:46 proche de moi
    1. se clear, open-ended questions that tap into the higher-order thinking levelsof application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation to start conversation threads.

      open-ended questions application analysis synthesis evaluation

    1. Now, I ask questions that I am really interested in discussing. My questions are always open-ended; I make sure to provide five or six questions so that students can choose the ones they want to respond to, and I always include a general question that prompts students to react to an aspect of the readings that caught their attention.

      types of questions

    1. how exactly has Europe managed to avoid an American style opioid crisis surprisingly it 00:06:18 turns out we can thank authentic Afghan heroin for the relative lack of deaths

      for - question - how EU avoided synthetic opiod crisis until now?

      question - how did EU avoid synthetic opiod crisis until now? - answer - authentic Afghan Heroin - but with the crackdown on poppy in Afghanistan, EU drug users are primed to start using synthetic opiods

    1. the whole world is affected by it opium ferret from Afghan Fields produces nearly all of the heroines sold in Europe how will prices be impacted

      for - question - how will the Taliban's successful destruction of the poppy industry affect drug supplies in Europe?

      to - youtube - Vice - The new fentanyl killing drug users in Europe - https://hyp.is/MDez0BYcEe-rq0sJ-I6FRg/docdrop.org/video/JqqfI-bIvnI/

    1. temperature can be a major factor in determining the proportion of males and females within a population

      for - question - impact of climate change on male and female population distribution of the biosphere

      question - impact of climate change on male and female population distribution of the biosphere - How will climate change affect the proportion of males and females of the many species that are and will be impacted by dramatic temperature changes?

    1. for - Oded Rechavi - neurobiology - gene centrism - critique - from - youtube podcast interview - book - Understanding Living Systems - Ray Noble - Denis Noble

      summary - Rechavi performed experiments with C Elegan and demonstrated that it possesses a type of neuron that - produces RNA that in response to elevated temperature change is transmitted to reproductive cells so that the offsprings encode it in the genome, and it is better adapted to deal with elevated temperatures

      question - How many species do this? Is it generally found throughout nature?

      from - outube podcast interview - book - Understanding Living Systems - Ray Noble - Denis Noble - https://hyp.is/OUlGVBXrEe-iaBeZhH_4DQ/docdrop.org/video/oHZI1zZ_BhY/

    1. une alimentation, un processeur, une mémoire vive, des entrées et sorties et une carte mère auxquels viennent s’ajouter un certains nombre de périphériques (écrans, souris, clavier, etc.), des extensions pour prendre en charge une partie des calculs que l’on peut appeler des cartes filles (carte son, carte graphique) et des mémoires de stockage (disques durs).

      rappel de la structure organique de l'ordinateur de von Neumann ?

    1. we must engage with those at the helm of decision-making, at every level. As individuals

      for - question - leaders - commons movement - citizen movement - SIMACT / SIMPOL

      question - leaders - Is there an untapped potential here to engage NOT JUST WITH LEADERS, - but with individuals and citizens?

    1. do you think there is some like limitation on the 00:17:34 size of the digital Nations

      for - question - Is there a limit to the size of a digital / network nation or state?

      question - Is there a limit to the size of a digital nation or network state?

    1. My suggestion is that what is missing

      for - question - missing ingredient of global digital productive network

      question - what is missing ingredient in a global, digital productive network? - fusion of - productive ecosystems - crypto-coordination infrastructure

  10. Apr 2024
    1. I got no actual help from my long Verizon Support chat session and I kept asking if there is a block list they use that they could check (or a whitelist I could be added to...but fat chance) my IP for, since that is clearly what the error is calling out, but they never acknowledged that particular part of my questions, just ignored it.
    1. He asked what I did. I played tennis. Swam. Went out at night. Jogged.Transcribed music. Read.

      How does this structure, without the quotations, deviate from other dialogue. What does it imply about these listing of hobbies, or listing of identity, and what is its effect on us, reading? How does this tie into Aciman's exploration of what identity really is? How does it connect to what WORDS mean?

    2. The water wasinsufficiently cold, not fizzy enough, leaving behind an unslaked likeness ofthirst

      Does this also foreshadow or symbolize his desire for Oliver?

    3. If Not Later, When?

      Figure out the implications of this

    4. “Later!”

      Figure out the significance of "Later!"

    1. Another area for future exploration is moving and duplicating text within a document. If twopeople concurrently cut-paste the same text to different places in a document, and then furthermodify the pasted text, what is the most sensible outcome?
    1. if you want to create an old school settle casting of your own the very first thing you should do is decide what topics or categories you want to have in your zettle costume

      I am not sure what "topics" or "categories" means here and why they should be decided first. I thought Zettelkasten by design accommodates any number of subject matter.

    1. réalisé dans la continuité de plusieurs projets menés au sein de la Chaire de Recherche du Canada sur les Écritures numériques (CRCEN)

      je comprends pas pourquoi tu mentionnes plusieurs projets... c'est en lien avec l'ag non ?

    1. In fashion, it can be said that style evolves. In biology, life and, in particular, reproducing populations of organisms with different traits evolve.

      question Can someone clarify what it means by "style evolves", What is style in this context? Does it mean like diversity of some sort?

    1. Myself will straight aboard, and to the stateThis heavy act with heavy heart relate.

      What is the significance of the fact that all this takes place in Cyprus?

    2. Nobody. I myself. Farewel

      Is this Shakespeare condemning the unjust nature of women having to take the blame for all -- or an emphasis on her angelic and merciful nature, juxtaposed with Iago's devil persona?

    3. A murder, which I thought a sacrifice

      Sacrifice of what? Does he truly believe what he is doing is right so that Desdemona does not cheat on other men? Is this really his righteousness at play?

      Or is he sacrificing a part of him, his heart?

    4. For, of my heart, those charms, thine eyes, areblotted.Thy bed, lust-stained, shall with lust’s blood bespotted

      Very important, but still, why does he need to murder her, his one love, what is that significance WHY?!?!

    5. In troth, I think thou wouldst not

      Why is she refuting Emilia's answer? What does this say about her, or people in general -- that they will not listen to one another?

    6. Othello's description of Emilia'sjob compares Emilia to the keeper of abrothel

      Misogyny, what is the significance of this ?

    1. Creating a holistic rubric takes less time than the others, and grading with one is faster, too.

      Question: Perhaps this aspect of the holistic rubric is why it's most commonly used?

  11. Mar 2024
    1. Alas, alas!It is not honesty in me to speakWhat I have seen and known. You shall observe him,And his own courses will denote him soThat I may save my speech. Do but go afterAnd mark how he continues.

      Funnily Iago does not incite suspicion in Lodovico, only Othello. Perhaps that emphasizes Iago is a delusional part of Othello, the inner darkness that arises, indicating Othello has a fatal flaw that differs from all other characters. Is it really because he represses something? If so what? Why is he weak in his convictions and easy to sway? What does that show? What does it say about how he sees Desdemona?

    2. I have a salt and sorry rheum offends me.Lend me thy handkerchief.

      What is the significance of this runny nose? Superstition? Context?

    3. A liberal hand. The hearts of old gave hands,But our new heraldry is hands, not hearts

      he contradicts with saying that she is not following her heart?

    4. And O you mortal engines, whose rude throatsThe immortal Jove’s dead clamors counterfeit,Farewell! Othello’s occupation’s gone

      Connects personal to political. How is his military role related to his personal love life?

    5. But he that filches from me my good nameRobs me of that which not enriches himAnd makes me poor indeed

      It does not enrich Iago to steal from the names of Cassio and Othello... so why?

    6. Pleasure and action make the hours seem short

      Is he doing it just for pleasure?

    7. And what’s he then that says I play the villain?When this advice is free I give and honest,Probal to thinking and indeed the courseTo win the Moor again?

      even he states, what has he seriously done, but to carry words here and there, to incite what's already there?

    8. O thou invisible spirit of wine, ifthou hast no name to be known by, let us call theedevil!

      Iago forced the drinks on him, and therefore he is the "devil" and yet, Iago has done nothing but let normal events carry out, because the devil is in Cassio himself, and in everyone. Does the wine signifying Jesus's blood mean anything for this?

    9. Reputation is an idle and most falseimposition, oft got without merit and lost withoutdeserving.

      He speaks his true beliefs?

    10. No, for I hold him to be unworthy of his place thatdoes those things. Well, heaven’s above all, and therebe souls must be saved, and there be souls must not besaved

      What is the significance of this?

    1. what effect poly (involving more than two people) relationship choices might have, not just on the indi- viduals involved, but also, if chosen collectively, on social relations more generally

      MLA 9th Edition (Modern Language Assoc.) Mimi Schippers. Beyond Monogamy : Polyamory and the Future of Polyqueer Sexualities. NYU Press, 2016.

      APA 7th Edition (American Psychological Assoc.) Mimi Schippers. (2016). Beyond Monogamy : Polyamory and the Future of Polyqueer Sexualities. NYU Press.

    1. survive from

      怎么就 survive 了??

    2. Charmless backgrounds

      这里的 Charmless 是指不含 c,还是 hidden charm

    3. Potential fit bias is checked byperforming an ensemble test comprising 1000 pseudo-experiments, where signal is taken from the correspond-ing MC sample, and the PDF shapes are used to gen-erate background events. We obtain a Gaussian nor-malized residual distribution of unit width, and add itsmean and uncertainty in width in quadrature to cal-culate the systematic error.

      潜在拟合误差的检查

    4. control sample

      为什么使用这个?是不是通常都使用一个 control sample?

    5. as obtained fromthe charged decay.

      没看懂

    6. PDF shape parameters

      这是什么

    7. we multiply the denominator by a factor of 12to account for K0 → K0S

      为什么是乘 1/2

    8. oss in efficiency on top of the smallsignal yield

      这是什么术语

    9. since we would need to tag the recoiling B candidate forthat, causing further loss in efficiency on top of the smallsignal yield.

      这为什么会造成信号的损失

    10. eventcategory

      这是什么术语

    11. event category

      这是什么?

    12. The signal yield is obtained with an unbinned extendedmaximum-likelihood fit to the three variables Mbc, ∆E,and O′NN.

      unbinned extended maximum-likelihood fit 这是什么?

    13. B thrust axis

      thrust 轴是什么东西

    14. observables based on event topology

      这是什么东西

    15. misreconstructed

      错误重建具体是哪里错误了

    16. B-vertex fit

      顶点拟合是指什么?前面的最小接近距离?

    17. The Mbcrequirement corresponds to approximately (−16σ, +3σ)in resolution around the nominal B mass [12], and the∆E requirement denotes a ±10σ window around zero

      没看懂,这里的对应是什么

    18. further study

      进一步研究什么?

    19. a maximum-likelihood fi

      这是什么?为什么这么做?怎么实现?

    20. We perform a fit for each B candidate, constrainingits decay products to originate from a common vertex

      common vertex是哪一个?B meson 衰变?

    21. the beam-energy-constrained mass

      这是什么东西?

    Tags

    Annotators

    1. 1.

      What is the difference between CTA and HTA? The exact same example is used. The only difference is that the HTA version is depicted with boxes around the actions.

      Both seem to include cognitive tasks. And both seem to be hierarchical.