Fun game: Try to catch yourself thinking irrationally before any erroneous thought has a chance to lead you astray.
Hachiko, the loyal Japanese akita. In 1924, a professor at the Tokyo Imperial University brought him to live in Shibuya, Tokyo, as his pet. Each day, Hachiko would wait at the train station for the professor's commute home. This continued until 1925, when the professor died of a cerebral hemorrhage. For nearly 10 years—from then until his death on March 8, 1935—Hachiko would return to the train station, exactly as the train arrived each day, waiting for the professor to return.
wherever you go
When you switch on a lightbulb, your eyes perceive photons, and some neurons in your brain activate. If you switch off the light, then so-called ‘off’ neurons activate. You don’t actually “stop seeing” when you’re in the dark. No; the mind physically represents nothingness in a pattern of neurons.
The phrase “nothing exists” is not a self-contradicting statement but a statement of fact. Nothing exists.
Syllogistically, of course, time waits for an island
Sonja Vordermaier; installation, Street Lamp Forest.
The information chooses the necromancer. That's why all of those forbidden texts have a way of finding me.
Series: Utility Patent Drawings, 1837 - 1911
Record Group 241: Records of the Patent and Trademark Office, 1836 - 1978
Image description: Exterior and interior views of a short, cylindrical device which has a number of moveable flaps around the circumference.
Image description: The reverse of Page 1, with a Patent Office stamp, burns from the acidic ink on Page 3, and a large handprint, as though someone used a sticky or dirty hand to pick up the page.
do you ever think about how machine learning basically started in the 1940s and 1950s but they just didn't have the hardware at the time to implement it in a robust way
I know it's wrong but I hope she misses me too.
The problem with investing energy in trying to refute bad arguments is that you inevitably put yourself in their company.