I got Eco-Marxism and I like, that the quiz prominently features questions on the environmental crisis. But I feel like, there is not much on reproductive labor or on how imperialism and racism should be addressed. These areas of struggle are every bit as central and contested as the environment. The quiz is leaning towards a white, western, cis-male perspective, but it should be possible to add a few questions and categories to address that. Maybe inspired by Marxist Feminism, Black Marxism, Afro-Marxist traditions, decolonial struggle and anti-imperialist praxis.
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lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Memes@lemmy.ml•This Brandon Bird painting hits differently this week
3·21 days agoThis is a great read! Thank you!
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
egg_irl — Memes about being trans people in denial and other eggy topics@lemmy.blahaj.zone•egg⛈️irl
3·22 days agoLots of people will love you for being yourself. Those are the ones that matter.
At that time the Anglo Saxons where foreigners among the Celtic Britons and their Romano British Culture. So he would probably be surprised, that no one is speaking Brittonic or Latin anymore. He might have gone to great length learning those native languages when he arrived in Britain and now people only speak a weird, very simplified baby version of his own West Germanic language with half the grammar and consonants taken out and the vowels all shifted around like a parody of his language.
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Europe@lemmy.ml•Germany reinstates conscription with mandatory screening for 18-year-olds
71·27 days agoThe US never had or fulfilled and obligations in NATO. NATO is part of the US empire.
No, the rooks where the ones who were elephants. Towers atop battle elephants.
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Do you think Trump will fall because of the new Epstein emails?
1·27 days agoDepends. What does the pizza index say? How busy are the fast food places surrounding the white house? /s
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Europe@lemmy.ml•NATO: Europe is suffering from shortage of air defense systems
10·1 month agoNATO: Pay tribute to the US military industrial complex! And also, the US empire will use your countries to wage war from a save distance.
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Out of ten, how would you rate your ability to empathize with people with opposing viewpoints?
1·1 month agoIf I’m physically safe, I think between 8 and 10 depending on my energy level. If I’m threatened or hurt in a fight, still up to 8 at least. We can love our enemies and still fight them with all the force necessary (but no more).
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Out of ten, how would you rate your ability to empathize with people with opposing viewpoints?
2·1 month agoOften this “evil” like hate is born out of fear or some other vulnerability so you can find the underlying emotion and emphasize with that instead. Oh the other hand, what I find really hard to emphasize with in people with fascist viewpoints is their lack of empathy. Like when they are not acting out of being afraid or hurt or anything, just really clinging to privilege and being indifferent towards racialized people.
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Palestine@lemmy.ml•Wikipedia founder Jimbo Wales has entered the Talk page for the Gaza genocide article and says in his opinion calling it genocide is a violation of NPOV (Wikipedia's "neutral point of view" policy)
9·1 month agoAll ethical systems rely on example applications. Israel’s morality can not be measured by any moral system. Rather, it’s actions are so abhorrent, that any moral systems merit will in the future be measured by whether it judges Israel’s actions as bad.
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Science@lemmy.ml•Physicists Just Ruled Out The Universe Being a Simulation
2·1 month agoAgain, I really appreciate how deep you’ve gone into this. I haven’t dealt with these topics for many years and even then, I mostly dealt with the actual physical system of a single cell, not what you can build out of them. However I think that’s were the core of the issue lies anyway.
I recently messed around with a creating a spiking neural net made of “leaky integrate and fire” (LIF) neurons. I had to do the integration numerically which was slow and not precise. However, hardware exists that does run every neuron continuously and in parallel.
So you ran a simulation of those neurons?
LIF neurons can be physically implemented by combining classic MOSFETs with Redox cells. Like: Pt/Ta/TaOx with x<1. Or with Hafnium or Zirconia instead of Tantal.
The oxygen vacancies in the oxide form tiny conductive filaments few atoms think. While the I-V-curve is technically continuous, the number of different currents you can actually measure is limited. Shot noise even plays a significant role, where the discreetness of elections matters.
Under absolutely perfect conditions, you can maybe distinguish 300 states. On a chip at room temperature maybe 20 to 50. If you want to switch fast it’s 5 to 20.
That’s not continuous, it’s only quasi-continuous. It’s still cool, but not outside the mathematical scope of the theorems used in the paper.
And yes, continuity is not everything. You’re right about busy beavers being not computable in principle. But this applies to neuromorphic computing just the same.
Theoretically, if a continuous extension of the busy beaver numbers existed, then it should be possible for a Liquid State Machine Neural Net to approximate that function.
But it doesn’t. No such extension can be meaningfully defined. If it could be calculated, then it could solve the halting problem. That’s impossible for purely logical reasons, independently of what you use for computation (a brain, neuromorphic computing, or anything else). Approximations would be incredibly slow, as the busy beaver function grows faster than any computable function.
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Science@lemmy.ml•Physicists Just Ruled Out The Universe Being a Simulation
5·1 month agoNot saying this is necessarily a problem, but the main author of the paper is also an executive manager of the journal that published it. You can find that information by clicking on “editorial board” on the journals webpage. Now, I assume, he was not actually involved in editorial decisions about his own article, because that would be a conflict of interest and they haven’t declared any. It’s not a secret and it’s easy to find on the webpage, but I think they could have made this fact a bit more prominent in the paper itself. Let’s wait how the larger scientific community reacts to this paper.
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Science@lemmy.ml•Physicists Just Ruled Out The Universe Being a Simulation
6·1 month agoTherefore, wouldn’t it be strange to rule out something using our current math/physics systems?
I get the thought, but math and physics are not the same. Math includes logic. When the authors of that paper make that argument, they don’t rely on our current understanding of physics. The theorems they use rely only logic. They are true independent of how the physics and the computation works.
Blackholes, neutron stars, quasars and other funny things that can’t be explained exactly DO exist after all
Yes, black holes inspired the paper. They do make the assumption, that a theory of quantum gravity would explain them. That’s what most people want out of such a theory.
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Science@lemmy.ml•Physicists Just Ruled Out The Universe Being a Simulation
4·1 month agoI love how in depth you went into this. And I agree with everything, except I’m not sure about neuromorphic computing.
However, I think neuromorphic hardware is able to bypass this limitation. Continuous simultaneous processes interacting with each other are likely non-algorithmic.
I worked in neuromorphic computing for a while as a student. I don’t claim to be an expert though, I was just a tiny screw in a big research machine. But at least our lab never aimed for continuous computation, even if the underlying physics is continuous. Instead, the long-term goal was to have like five distinguishable states (instead of just two binary states). Enough for learning and potentially enough to make AI much faster, but still discrete. That’s my first point, I don’t think any one else is doing something different.
My second point is, no one could be doing something continuous in principle. Our brains don’t even really. Even if changes in a memory cell (or neuron) were induced atom by atom, those would still be discrete steps. Even if truly continuous changes were possible, you still couldn’t read out that information because of thermal noise. The tiny changes in current or whatever your observable is would just drown in noise. Instead you would have to define discrete ranges for read out.
Thirdly, could you explain, what exactly that non-algorithmic component is that would be added and how exactly it would be different from just noise and randomness? Because we work hard to avoid those. If it’s just randomness, our computers have that now. Every once in a while, a bit gets flipped by thermal noise or because it got hit by a cosmic particle. It happens so often, astronomers have to account for it when taking pictures and correct all the bad pixels.
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Science@lemmy.ml•Physicists Just Ruled Out The Universe Being a Simulation
9·1 month agoAI is algorithmic and deterministic, because it runs on normal processors. Step by step like any other program. It only seems random, because it’s complex.
lemonwood@lemmy.mlto
Science@lemmy.ml•Physicists Just Ruled Out The Universe Being a Simulation
7·1 month agoHow is it in any way narrow? The three theorems they use (Goedel, Tarski, Chaitin) are actually incredibly broad. They absolutely include things we can not even imagine.
Don’t share copaganda. It’s meant to hide abuse.



Too much parking space and too many lanes. In Europe, houses like this would not be in a suburb, but in the city. Everything would be reachable by foot, bike or public transport, so less people would need a car. It’s not ideal, but at least much less space would be wasted on cars.