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Dane Benko's avatar

Hi. I have a weird love of over-simplified "modernist vs. post-modernist" definitions that always do better than the deeper takes, and yours is pretty great.

I also love your take on rationalism pretty much as a method of sequestering the fear of the unknown, particularly death. This is especially important in the pseudo-Revelations structure of the post-human / singularity zealots of Silicon Valley. But the reason I like your take particularly is because intellectually I am really attracted to rationalism -- I really want things to be rational and understandable through logic whenever feasible -- but when I learned the rationalists existed I spent some time with their work and immediately realized that something profound was missing.

I had a very long streak in my teenage years involving a lot of death: friends, family, classmates. For about seven years I attended funerals all too frequently. And the midpoint of that period was 9/11. So one thing I learned during that period was that American culture's materialistic magical thinking that we call the Dream is exceptionally incapable of handling the discomfort of death. It's one of the areas where I believe Americans in particular are broken, even if the world overall is dealing with similar issues.

And rationalism obviously, in fact cringingly, is just another magnitude higher of desperately seeking to keep death out of sight. Which is really sad because another thing I learned about my seven years of death is that when you can look death in the face, in fact in the mirror, you really can own your own mind and its agency without any of the puzzles and games rationalists set up for themselves to keep their minds busy.

In that sense I love that you referred to Gravity's Rainbow particularly as the exact sort of book that would do those people a lot of good to read. I conclude the same often. These guys are clearly intelligent but too lost to get smart.

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Kevin Guilfoile's avatar

I bet Sam Bankman-Fried wishes he had a book right now.

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