I mentioned GurusPod's evaluation of Schmachtenberger:

https://decoding-the-gurus.captivate.fm/episode/daniel-schmachtenberger-jamie-wheal-jordan-hall-making-sense-about-making-sense-of-sensemaking

but couldn't find the tally of scores. A friend found it for me. Here it is:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Oe-af4_OmzLJavktcSKGfP0wmxCX0ppP8n_Tvi9l_yc/edit#gid=0

My favorite guru, https://www.youtube.com/c/ContraPoints, scores rather low 
(μ∘μ = 1.5). Schmachtenberger ⇒ 4.05. I'd love to see some others on the list, 
like Gregory Bateson, Stuart Kauffman, Stephen Wolfram, etc. But GurusPod is 
more interested in modern pop. Kids these days are unlikely to be hypnotized by 
doorstop books full of words. Peter Thiel or Elon Musk might be good 
suggestions, though. I'm sure they're on the radar.


On 2/15/22 11:56, glen wrote:
Excellent! Thanks. However, it's also important to note that the lawsuit is 
against UC Davis, not Neuralink. So, to whatever extent that Neuralink funding, 
mixed with tax payer funding, drives university research (and possibly other 
things like overhead or paying a percentage of salary for some with teaching 
loads, etc.), those backseating costs can deeply impact whatever it is we call 
a research university.

I'm about halfway into my "evaluation" of https://consilienceproject.org/. What 
I've seen so far has a healthy plating (I was going to say veneer, but that's too thin) 
of pretty words. But those pretty words sound a tiny bit like Neuralink's corporatized 
strawman/response to these accusations. I bring up Consilience because it's placed in 
between a for-profit company and a research university. On Consilience's About page, you 
see 2 ethical commitments:

• collective attribution of authorship, and
• transparency in methodology

These may seem a bit contradictory to some observers. My guess is that, given 
some time and effort (maybe even semi-automated NLP computation), I could 
ferret out who wrote which featured article. What I'd like to be transparent is 
who contributes what to each article. (This is a professional task I have to 
some extent with my clients ... so it's not mere hobby.)

Going back to the lawsuit against UC Davis and the 3 example spectrum (and 
perhaps even the political tangent SteveS raised), where does Neuralink end and 
UC Davis begin? In our capitalist society, is it reasonable for Neuralink to be 
less susceptible to the flattening you describe by aggregating (not summing 
over) all subjects' projections from a high-dimensional construct?

We see a similar thread in the "academic free speech" rhetoric the alt-right is 
pushing these days (though there are lefty exceptions) ... aka when is an academic not 
talking as an academic? And in the Barret and Gorsuch exhortations that they're not 
partisan hacks ... even when talking at a partisan event.

[sigh] I know these fluffy issues aren't interesting to most people. It's way 
easier to shut up and calculate. But not only are they interesting to me, I 
think they're necessary, then, now, and later.


--
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