"WOMEN AND BOOKS"
"One of the consequences of the widespread literacy of the masses is that lay women were able to read. Such consequences cannot be ignored as further insights were obtained regarding the differences between how men and women read. But now it seems, are there any men reading fictional books today?"
"Whilst the data does suggest men prefer reading non-fictional books or books about philosophy which does involve a philosopher saying something like, 'Such propagation of the nonsensical impossibilities uttered by the interlocutor whereby his lack of cognitive abilities is unable to concieve of a world without nation-states.' These type of men find a lot of unease in reading a fictional novel whilst women do not. This brings further to the question of why women are overwhelmingly reading books these days whilst men aren't so much."
"It might be hard for young people to understand these days but books used to be read...for pleasure and not merely for revision or for some literature examination. People used to read for pleasure. Whilst people do tend to focus on the information aspect of books in terms of gathering new information via books, pleasurable aspect of reading books is not much discussed."
"This discussion about the pleasurable aspect of reading books is very related to the current phenomena of majority of book readers today being women. Passages of books consists of words that flow like the ocean which connect sentence to sentence like a bridge across the river and such words are used to aid the reader in conceiving of situations in accordance with what the author has written where you are left interpreting the big pool in a hotel containing numerous people of different backgrounds...who have different interpretations. But such interpretations are kept within the pool not outside of it as the author does not want you to engage in eisegesis (which the post-modernists insist on doing) but rather he wants you to engage in exegesis of the book. These type of books don't only focus on flows and dull descriptions but also human emotions."
"A visual picture of someone crying is not the same as novella describing a droplet of tear as 'Eyelids started clattering, clattering, clattering. Desperate. Desperate to prevent the dam from breaking apart but one tear. Only one tear had escaped from the eyelids which dripped down onto the eyelashes as it now dries away.' It becomes harder to understand why men are not very into contemporary fictional books when various philosophers including today are men and many thinkers of this era such as mathematicians, historians and economists are men as these novels do involve a lot of thinking about things."
"It becomes harder to understand why men don't read contemporary literature a lot especially if you know what mathematicians do in terms of deductive reasoning which does. For example, trying to come up with the solution to the 'collatz conjecture' involves a lot of thinking. Don't be mistaken. The man does enjoy trying to solve this mathematical question especially since he has thought about it for a long time. The question is what is different about this type of pleasure in comparison to the pleasure of reading a fictional book. It could be argued that the types of pleasures that is being discussed are very different where trying to solve a mathematical question involves obtaining the pleasure of trying to solve a problem. It's not the slowness that the man finds pleasurable in solving a mathematical problem, it's the desire for the quick pleasure of solving problem. Sound familiar?"
"To understand what really is the difference between how men feel about reading fictional books and women reading books, we look at an instinctual form of pleasure: Sexual pleasure. The man experiences sexual pleasure very differently in comparison to the woman. The man tries to frequently punch the wall repeatedly in his attempt of releasing the water behind the dam. It's not the frequent receptiveness of punching the wall that the man find pleasure in but the desire of wanting to release it. This needs to be understood in terms of understanding how women experience sexual pleasure as women enjoy the tension itself. This is what the woman enjoys. If it's too fast or too sudden, the woman doesn't enjoy it that much. But...if its slow like a snake which seeks to bite its prey...the pleasure that the woman experiences...is immense. Whilst the man rushes, sprints and peddle and peddles and peddles and breaks HIS SWEAATTT!!!!! Do you now see the difference?"
"Lets ask the question, why are women are reading more books than men? To put it simply, modern women find reading books more pleasurable than modern men. A more complicated response is that the manner in which a lot of books are formatted especially novels are formatted whereby a lot of the pages consists of words and sentences which indicate the 'building up' of things which is something that the woman sexually enjoys. Whilst the modern man doesn't really enjoy to the extent that the woman does and he prefers the short form videos in a scrolling horizontal format under the 'for you' page as he continues to recieves the quick pleasure of watching these short videos."
Polymathematician
npub1g0qv...z6rs
A man with a heart.
"In the book 'Flatline Constructs: Gothic Materialism and Cybernetic Theory-Fiction' written by Mark Fisher and edited by Exmilitary Collective, it says: 'Cyberspace is not, straightforwardly, a copy of the world, a mere tracing of it...It is fully a part of the world...'"


"ROBOTS AND HUMAN RIGHTS"
"There are fictional books which mention of a setting which consists of landscrapers, humans and robots where it claims that that these robots have citizenship with 'legal rights'. Whilst many books emphasizes the focus of the philosophical view towards consciousness and emotions, the lesser discussed topics is the government claiming that robots have 'rights'."
"As you find the claim that robots having 'rights' as absurd, scientists and figures such as Elon Musk insist that artificial intelligence is 'conscious'. Whilst there is some speculation of what pushes them towards these positions. The question is that what if they wanted to 'justify' their claim that robots have 'rights' according to liberalism?"
"This is somewhat different from the legal positivist's approach which an approach associated with hobbesian theory. This involves them accepting whatever declarations uttered by the government of the nation-state. What they prefer is that they want the word 'robot' and the word 'human' to become 'interchangable' where the government of the nation-state declares that the robot has the same rights as the human."
"It is not unexpected of some of these roboticians who are similar to post-modernists where they wish to blur the lines between reality and false tales where the post-modernists want to distort language with the usage of pro-nouns whilst some of these roboticians want to convince you that a static object has conscientiousness."
"Their desire of blurring the line is their attempt in 'normalising robot rights'. But the question arises is that what does the liberal believe about the human being and what does he believe are rights?"
"Contrary to the views of others, the early liberals did not consider themselves as atheistic. John Locke himself opposed atheists where he viewed that they weren't trustworthy in abiding by contracts. The early liberals believed that humans were endowed with rights by God. They believed that the state should protect these rights. They didn't believe that the state endows human with rights which is contrary to the view of westerners today where they believe that the government can create rights. The current westerner's view aligns with the view of the 'legal positivists'."
"The liberals themselves valued the human intellect. The so-called 'enlightenment period' was centered around the emphasis of the intellect. They saw the intellect as the main difference between the human and the animal."
"In the current post-modern era where the human intellect is mocked by proponents of AI alongside some of the masses emphasizing their subjective experience over objective facts that are ascertained by the human intellect which is a consequence of social media algorithms that was coded by people who believe that data is more valuable than subjective experiences. Some of these people have claimed that artificial intelligence has obtained 'conscientiousness'. They claimed this after the introduction of chatgpt when they were shown an illusion of 'thinking'. This illusion of thinking which some people view as an objective fact according to their subjective experiences is propagated by some of these roboticians where they believe in the blurring of the lines between a human and a robot."
"A robotician claiming that a robot can become a human is similar to a feminist claiming that a man can become a woman."
"The robotician wants to propagate this illusion of thinking where he wants to classify the robot as a 'human' in accordance with the ideologies of modernity that emphasizes that the intellect is the defining feature of the human that separates the human from animals. It does need to be understood the extent of which liberals differentiate humans from other animals on the basis of the human intellect when liberals classified black people as monkeys when they wanted a liberal understanding of enslaving black people."
"Now these roboticians has deluded some of the masses that AI is 'thinking', they now want to insert that AI software into a mechanical android body that 'looks' like a 'human' and 'feels' like a 'human' in their attempt of 'normalising robot rights'."
"Modernised 'traditionalism' is 'traditionalism' without the involvement of the family."
"Arranged marriages? I think you meant matchmaking."
"My husband doesn't provide for me. My boss does."
"My husband doesn't beat me. The policeman beats me."
"Extended family? I think you meant my LinkedIn network."
"In the book 'Flatline Constructs: Gothic Materialism and Cybernetic Theory-Fiction' written by Mark Fisher and edited by Exmilitary Collective, it says: 'Gothic Materialism takes it for granted that real materialism must involve total immanentization; one of its chief resources, therefore, is the philosopher whose whole work was devoted to developing a rigorously immanent account of agency: Spinoza. For Spinoza, there is agency everywhere but this never belongs to human subjects.'"


"A woman who named herself 'Esther Vilar' who is the author of the book 'The Manipulated Man' she said in her book the following: 'Constant self-abasement in the presence of men has led women to develop a secret language which other women understand but which is incomprehensible to men, since they take it literally.'"


"In the book 'Understanding Media' which was written by someone with the name 'Marshall Mclulan', it says, 'Man becomes, as it were, the sex organs of the machine world, as the bee of the plant world, enabling it to fecundate and to evolve ever new forms.'"


"In the book 'Flatline Constructs: Gothic Materialism and Cybernetic Theory-Fiction' written by Mark Fisher and edited by Exmilitary Collective, it says: 'Pornography and Gothic fiction stand behind the media machineries McLuhan describes, as technologies for the targeting and heightening of stimulation. Gothic fiction, like pornography, is sold as a body-stimulating machine...'"


"According to the transhumanist, manipulating the nervous system is like adjusting the voltage of a circuit system."
"An obsession with data is an obsession with the past."
"HAS FIAT CURRENCY BECOME ELECTRONIC?"
"Since the introduction of fiat currency which is paper money, governments now have shifted from metallic currencies such as gold or silver towards paper currencies."
"The difference between metallic currencies and paper currencies is that metals involve mining whilst with paper currencies it involves printing in other words obtaining one unit of paper currency is much more easier and quicker than obtaining one unit of metallic currency. Meaning the government has the ability to print lots and lots of money if it wanted to. So in other words the government or the central bank is the monopoly within the money market where it is the country that supplies the national currency."
"Something changed in 2008. Instead of the manual printing of money being used by central bank, something called quantitative easing was used where banks electronically printed money. Now with the shift towards paypall, bitcoin and debit cards and credit cards, cash and coins are rarely used where the government wants to monitor your transactions more and more closely..."
"ARE GOVERNMENTS ADDICTED TO BORROWING?"
"One of the aspects of the current global system is mass adoption of nation-states engaging interest-related transactions and in the context fiscal landscape this means borrowing money."
"Whilst borrowing money is tempting for governments who want to fix a short-term problem, borrowing money involves interest payments that the government pays to the lenders who are in this case bond investors."
"The government issues government bonds which investors invest in where they see this as reliable fixed income. And here is the situation that government find themselves in where as the 'debt' has grown, the fear of 'default' increases. In other words the government is inclined towards engaging in reduction in public spending (lower salaries, less equipment in public sector etc) and this conflicts with the desires of the elements of the public especially of those who work in the public sector which could lead to a rise of protests and riots and dysfunction within these government 'institutions'."
"Various governments are entangled by the 'interests' of bankers and other elements of the finance sector the government is inclined to ignore the masses and inclined towards the desires of the finance sector."
"Smartphone: Graphene OS."
"Social media: Nostr."
"Messaging app: Session."
"There is a difference between an idea and the implementation of that idea."
"HISTORY AND COMFORT"
"There are those who postulate that history consists of rhythms whereby the people sigh, 'Never again' as if they did not say it before they went into phase of comfort as they forgot the pain of hardship. Does thy comfort cushion the pain that you endured whilst you yearn to struggle again? Much of history bears the similitude of a pendulum which swings from comfort to hardship to comfort..to hardship to comfort...to hardship."
"BIG DATA, MISINFORMATION AND REALISM"
"In the era of social media, where fake news is much more common, state actors now with their 'bot armies' are involved in spreading fake news and state media unsurprisingly engage in fake news. But what is quite peculiar or interesting in the type of fake news that is spread where it is sometimes clearly obvious that its fake where old footage and game footage is spread by these state actors. It's as if these state actors haven't tried using deepfake or google veo 3?"
"Data is delicious according to the data scientist where data is desired by corporations, advertisers and governments."
"With this mass collection of data by these actors, they now have so much data that a new subject arose about big data. With big data, it becomes very difficult in terms of inspect each unit of data within a dataset especially when there is a large amounts of data. In other words, algorithms and particularly machine learning algorithims are increasingly employed by these actors where they use it to navigate through this big data."
"These algorithms are not perfect especially if you're using machine learning algorithms that are susceptible to false positives and false negatives. You might think that a machine learning algorithm has a small margin error. However it is not as simple as that."
"The 'small margin of error' is the average difference between the output of the machine learning algortihm with the test data (subset of data A) input and the amount of a different subset of data A."
"Now the machine learning algorithm possibly might classify something as 'positive' according to the dataset it has been trained on when it is actually negative i.e. false postivies and vice versa. Now you might think this is 'insignificant' but something to understand is that the algorithm itself is trying to find a general pattern within the dataset it's being tested on where you find individuals insisting on making sure the dataset consists of things that have correctly classified i.e. image of black hair is classified as individual with black hair etc."
"If the dataset consists of things that are incorrectly classified (i.e. a dataset mentions an image of a black hair that has been classified as blonde hair), the machine learning algorithms detects false patterns which are not reflective of reality. In other words if the opponent understands the general pattern in which the model is detecting, the opponent now recognizes what to input without getting detected. This is analogous to a hitman disguising himself as a waiter where he blends into the crowd where he is technically detected but he blends in within the crowd which is different from a hitman not using a disguise where he tries to penetrate through the building without being detected by cameras and guards."
"If you think that chatgtp is not susceptible to input blending in within their patterns, you are mistaken. There is something called, 'Slopsquatting' where the A.I. 'hallucinates' an output of a software package (which is similar but not identical to what the programmer asked for) where that package in github contains malware. If you are confused by this, there are domains that have the name 'binng' which isn't the same of bing of course but is similar to it but these hackers try to exploit typos, in this case these hackers try to exploit the 'hallucinations' of A.I. To summarise, not even A.I. prevents someone from blending their input as part of the general pattern in which A.I. detects stuff."
"Now what is the relationship between these algorithms and misinformation promoted by state actors? State actors understands the other side uses algorithms which absorbs photos which contains metadata and other forms of data. A diverse range of misinformation is used by state-actors where they use game-footage, old footage, fake documents, false quotations and more where they attempt to confuse their enemy and the spectators watching this including the algorithms where the state actor uses a diverse range of false information where they want that falsehood blending into the algorithm and you might think that it is a 'small' thing but do you think that missing a mark in your exam paper is a 'small thing'? Now what makes you think that this small thing is insignificant if a country is waging a war?"
"In the recent clash between pakistan and hindustan, social media pages were flooded with conflicting claims of f-16s being downed and other fabricated claims. But such claims are treated by realists as possibilities. Where the realist assumes that such trust does not exist between two nation-states especially belligerent countries where he treats the claims issued by these governments with either skeptism or an acknowledgement. If the realist acknowledges these claims as 'possibilities' he pushes himself towards the position of risk-averse behaviour where he thinks that even if it is extremely unlikely, the realist views that possibility seriously out of fear that it might possibly be the case but the person who is willing to take the risk is willing ignoring these possibilities whilst he pushes through."
"These algorithms are part of the correlation between technology and international relations where such algorithms distort information which is fed into spy agencies which places hidden marks of the reports they send to the civilian government."
"The fog has existed in the past and it still exists today yet this fog is quite different especially in the era of cybernetics."
"TECHNOLOGY AND ORGANISM"
"The history between the interaction between the organism and technology is a long one. Is it a tool? Or is it something else?"
"The fact that the body is discussed alongside with the mention of technology where technology is not cited as separately from the body is an indication that the discussion of the relationship between technology and the organism is of significant importance."
"The question is posed, 'Is technology connected to the changes of the biology of the organism?'"
"If we look at the history of technology, we find that the armies in europe used crossbows and bows as part of their long-range equipment. They used armor where they tried to avoid the human body being penetrated by sword. They used catapults as part of their artillery."
"We are not talking about industrial technology, we are talking about PRE-INDUSTRIAL technology. Now what's this got to do with changes of the biology of the organism. The fact that they had this technology, they felt safe, they felt strong, they felt confident in their ability of destroying an army with less technologically advanced equipment. This touches upon the topic of the nervous system where the nervous systems works differently in responses to the human being feeling different feelings. So we can conclude that even the primitive of technology correlates with the changes of the human nervous system."
"Now we look at modern technology which involves technological advancements in videography and website development. We see the extent of how much technology correlates with different biological responses when that technology is used to manipulate the biological processes of the human being."
"Dopamine. Quite common term you might have heard."
"The porn company shows a video which stimulates your dopamine and when you got tired of it, they gave you another video, another dopamine kick, they gave you another video...another dopamine kick This is technology where it is being used by companies where they try to deliberately influence your neuro systems. Social media is quite similar to this but instead they give you feeds and scrolling where they try to stimulate your dopamine alongside triggering your emotional reactions such as anger."
"Is it a tool or is it something...else? Who knows?"
"TECHNOLOGY AND PRIVACY"
"As technology has accelerated through as new dilemmas have emerged regarding the question of technology. In this case the not-so-unheard of dilemma between privacy and technology has been mentioned several times."
"When something new or something historically unprecedented had emerged, people had either fully accepted it, fully rejected it or engaged in reconciliation."
"With the case of new technologies alongside the topic of privacy, where new modern technologies are now attached with new forms of surveillance technology people have either entered the compliant camp, the rejection camp or the reconciliation camp."
"The people who have entered the rejection camp are those who have taken a luddite approach where they believe that surveillance technology has penetrated modern technologies such that it is practically difficult not to be surveilled whilst using some form of technology."
"Some people have acknowledged how widespread surveillance technology yet they still use it where they believe that it is practically difficult not to use technology in the current modern era where other people now expect you to use smartphone. These are the people who have surrendered."
"There are people who both believe in both privacy and the utility of technology where they have tried to push a reconciliation where they propose a range of technologies that involve a degree of privacy which is implemented today such as signal, session and simplex which involves encryption algorithms."
"In the case of the luddites, they underestimate the extent of which you need modern technology especially in the modern era especially if you want to receive a salary and the expectations of companies and government departments of you having access to the internet. On the other hand, the compliant camp underestimates how much their data is being used for things they did not concieve of where their data is being used as part of other group's psyops and this is without mentioning the lack of security. And the reconcilers underestimate how difficult it is to practically keep up with new technologies especially quantum computer and alongside convincing the masses to obtain privacy focused devices and apps when those privacy-focused apps lack the speed and some of the features that many of the members of the masses are addicted to on other devices and alongside of how difficult it is to avoid surveillance technology."
"That website you clicked? You gave your IP address. That photo you uploaded? You gave your metadata. As you can see, it is very difficult to escape the web of surveillance technology."
"It's important to remember that if you really want to obtain privacy in the modern era, you avoid using technology. Obviously this might not be easy today but it's not impossible to leave some spaces free of electronics. Those who wish to reconcile, probably need to keep up with technology, your device might be 'safe' but it might be vulnerable to another form of technology for example, a lot of infrastructure including nuclear plants involve public key encryption but those who use quantum computer, they are capable of penetrating through that meaning a new form of encryption is need to prevent those who undermine encryption via their quantum computers."
"ANTI-QUANTUM ENCRYPTION"
"It's important to understand what a quantum computer is in comparison to a normal computer in a simplistic manner. Quantum computer performs specific tasks quicker than a classical computer does where it stores qubits instead of bits."
"How could this impact encyrption?"
"There are specific quantum algorithms that are used such as 'grover algorthim' and 'shor-algorithms' where these algorithms break public-key algorithms that are widely used. Therefore some have attempted to build anti-quantum encryption methods.'"
"There are four anti-quantum encryption methods: Hash-based signatures, lattice-based cryptography, code-based cryptography and multivariate cryptography."
"TECHNOLOGY AND ORGANISM"
"The history between the interaction between the organism and technology is a long one. Is it a tool? Or is it something else?"
"The fact that the body is discussed alongside with the mention of technology where technology is not cited as separately from the body is an indication that the discussion of the relationship between technology and the organism is of significant importance."
"The question is posed, 'Is technology connected to the changes of the biology of the organism?'"
"If we look at the history of technology, we find that the armies in europe used crossbows and bows as part of their long-range equipment. They used armour where they tried to avoid the human body being penetrated by sword. They used catapults as part of their artillery."
"By the way we are not talking about industrial technology, we are talking about PRE-INDUSTRIAL technology. Now what's this got to do with changes of the biology of the organism. The fact that they had this technology, they felt safe, they felt strong, they felt confident in their ability of destroying an army with less technologically advanced equipment."
"This touches upon the topic of the nervous system where the nervous systems works differently in responses to the human being feeling different feelings. So we can conclude that even the primitive of technology correlates with the changes of the human nervous system."
"Now we look at modern technology which involves technological advancements in videography and website development. We see the extent of how much technology correlates with different biological responses when that technology is used to manipulate the biological processes of the human being."
"Dopamine."
"Quite common term you might have heard."
"Where the porn company shows a video which stimulates your dopamine and when you got tired of it, they gave you another video, another dopamine kick, they gave you another video...another dopamine kick."
"This is technology where it is being used by companies where they try to deliberately influence your neureo systems."
"Social media is quite similar to this but instead they give you feeds and scrolling where they try to stimulate your dopamine alongside triggering your emotional reactions such as anger."
"Is it a tool or is it something...else?"
"Who knows?"