Yes! Faith is a truncation. The important distinction being that you can't choose to have faith or
not have faith. It seems innate, though maybe you can *program* some people to be more inclined to
faith-based truncation. For my part, I'm inherently lazy. I don't take action unless there are
forces pressuring me to do so. In general, I believe some automatable process should be done
manually first, then (and only then) am I "allowed" to write a script to do it. I think
this tendency was programmed into me from a) writing scripts that I (later) realized I only used
once or twice and b) a bullshit detector I learned from hearing too many people refer to
"thick" descriptions and big words that, when pursued, they couldn't reconstruct. A
turning point was my 1st analysis course (after changing majors from EE into math). Jeff, my prof,
posted on his door a paper of his proving the existence of some structure or another and that
pushed me, unwillingly, into intuitionism.
Faith is simply an optimization method for avoiding work you may not need to do. If it's very hard
to do the manual labor, then write the script (or build the robot, whatever). If it's very hard to
write the script but you know how to sample the space a bit, then do that and work on the script
later, if you have to. So, when a Jesus freak says "You have to have faith", I hear
"I'm too lazy to do the work right now." And that's cool, as long as you don't pretend to
have done work you haven't done.
On 6/15/20 9:58 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
Faith in a nutshell.
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