I'm sure they meant it in the sense of an exquisite quantum magnetometer.    I 
remember one day when one of our colleagues remarked on Glen's numerous 
elaborate models of his social environment.   Interesting because the 
accusation was, as I understood it, a lack of grounded information in his 
models.    Unless that magnetometer was providing grounded information and the 
other extrovert in that conversation simply lacked such a metaphorical device?

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of u?l? ???
Sent: Friday, February 26, 2021 11:38 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] interactive media bias chart

Yeah, that's a nice tie-in. I'm a moody person, not in the "stuck in a mood" 
sense, but in the traditional schizoidal sense. My parents called me 
"hyper-sensitive", which predates "snowflake" by some 40 years I guess. But 
following along with the conversation last Friday, one's algorithmic depth is 
an "impedance match" coupling to one's environment. The simplistic inference 
might be to argue that shallow algorithms are a marker for shallow realities 
(or the idea that circumstances are actually homogenous and universal - or 
xenophobic people didn't travel enough as kids). But the more interesting 
inference is that if we limit the dimensionality of the transduction boundary, 
we'll indirectly limit the hysteresis. We moody people suffer from low 
dimension sensori-motor interfaces. You stuck-in-a-mood people suffer from a 
high dimension interface.

Of course that means I'm now Googling LTA Research like a dorky middle schooler.

On 2/26/21 11:23 AM, jon zingale wrote:
> To thread bend a little, there is something here in your description 
> of *reduction hysteresis* that sympathizes with my recent reflection on 
> *mood*.
> The Pärt and the Merlin you sent me are of a kind such that I can 
> listen for a while before habitually producing the same within myself, 
> nothing specific necessarily, but a generalized mood. It is quite 
> different than getting a song in my head, it's more like the babblings 
> of a neural net. At times in my life, such moods have had surprisingly 
> long-lasting (on the order of
> months) effects on my emotions and possibly on my decisions. As far as 
> horrible people, I am in no hurry to make such reductions.

--
↙↙↙ uǝlƃ

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