Ranty Repost of Power Generation At Home, and Libraries: The Common Good | Context, Critical Thinking, Continuous Learning: Project Do Better

Source: Ranty Repost of Power Generation At Home, and Libraries: The Common Good | Context, Critical Thinking, Continuous Learning: Project Do Better

Nobody Can Hold My Hand

NANMYKEL.COM

Seems to me that we’re all a pack of lemmings heading off the cliff with eyes open but something in us diminished.

Was this stage of insanity buried within our evolutionary game plan?  When people finally become frantic is a bloodbath inevitable? Shut my mouth–or break my pen–or my keyboard, this isn’t being helpful, I fear.  But no, those who know better say that there’s no game plan, just something called emergence.  I wouldn’t mind emergence so much if it didn’t appear to be from down below (metaphorically speaking), where the fires are kept burning. Since science questions the existence of the Akashic Records, there’ll be no one to ever know.  Some say the cockroaches may survive–whoopee.  Giddyap, Archie!

NO JOKING MATTER, so why do I joke?  (You can’t see my tears.)

‘The Godfather of A.I.’ Leaves Google and Warns of Danger Ahead

For half a century, Geoffrey Hinton…

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Sihirli Annem (My Magical Mom) s1e22: Patience Is An Adult Virtue, As Is Finding Solutions…

Context, Thought, and Learning: ShiraDest Offers Project Do Better

  Last week was , bölüm/episode 21: Sihirli Annem (My Magical Mom) s1e21: How Would YOU Feel…    This week, we see that patience is a virtue, as Betüş explains to little Çilek when her friend Alara calls from the Fairy Orphanage.  Çilek wants to go get her right away, but Betüş explains that the humans would have many questions if they just showed up with her friend at the door, so that it was better to have Perihan bring her, which made sense to Çilek.  Çilek then manages to explain to her friend Alara that she must have patience to find a family of her own, as an orphan.  More about that at the end.  Meanwhile, young Cem, on the other hand, has far less patience with his father, as Cem seems to believe that eleven years old is adult enough not to need parental permission for anything. …

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