- 23 Posts
- 180 Comments
Dialectic is the right answer
I think the historical record demonstrates that broad sociocultural change primarily happens after some great destructive crisis (war, famine, plague, etc)
It is hard to not agree that the real change usually came out of unpredictable (and painful) chaos, but does it mean that always has to be like this? As Slavoj Zizek said, Soviet Union, Cuba, etc. failed since they changed only the social conditions, but they failed to change people’s dreams. I admit that nowadays people frequently have ugly, consumerists, selfish dreams but what if this could be changed by some attractive, progressive vision? If not now, maybe in 50 or 100 years (assuming humanity would survive the climate collapse)?
I didn’t have to worry that someone would call me at a random moment and will assign me some random task.
33550336@lemmy.worldto
FoodPorn@lemmy.world•Interesting ceramic dish, in which "Itsukushima" Shinto Shrine art appears, when filled with soy sauce.English
4·1 month agoI just wanted to write that it must be hard to wash.
Thanks for care, but no need – I am just into femdom.
If I would be her cuck, I would calmly and humbly wait for a pleasure to talk to her.
33550336@lemmy.worldOPto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•My organization provides some proprietary software. What is a motivation to use a FOSS alternative anyway (as a worker)?
3·1 month agoTo answer the first question, I need to try the FOSS alternative. To the second matter, it seems that the choice will not affect others so far. Anyway, thanks!
33550336@lemmy.worldOPto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•My organization provides some proprietary software. What is a motivation to use a FOSS alternative anyway (as a worker)?
5·1 month agoActually I have some freedom to choose, including the relative expensive proprietary software. So in the essence my choice is rather moral one than obligatory.
in some sense these are cool duties, let me know when someone voluntarily emptied septic tanks of other people
33550336@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Rocket lifts off with four Artemis II astronauts on a mission to the moon and backEnglish
91·2 months agoonly my wife can inspect my anus
33550336@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Rocket lifts off with four Artemis II astronauts on a mission to the moon and backEnglish
122·2 months agoWhat scientific benefits will this mission bring?
33550336@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Announcing ARC-AGI-3 - A benchmark that tests if AI can explore, learn, and adapt in unfamiliar situations. Humans score 100%. Frontier AI scores 0.26%.English
1·2 months agoYes – this game has some fixed, relative small set of rules so the RL could learn to play by playing millions of games at random but following the rules of the game. Confront this with dounting (infinite) number of situations which may approach one in a daily life.
33550336@lemmy.worldto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Iran could develop nuclear suicide bomb vests, claims JD VanceEnglish
3·2 months agoMaybe I lack imagination since I would never came to an idea of nuclear vest
33550336@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Announcing ARC-AGI-3 - A benchmark that tests if AI can explore, learn, and adapt in unfamiliar situations. Humans score 100%. Frontier AI scores 0.26%.English
2·2 months agoOK, RL exists end results like the protein design or Go are impressive, but does exist a RL solving the benchmark problem?
33550336@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Announcing ARC-AGI-3 - A benchmark that tests if AI can explore, learn, and adapt in unfamiliar situations. Humans score 100%. Frontier AI scores 0.26%.English
2·2 months agoYeah RL exist since 80s (or in some form earlier) but have it solve the benchmark?
I am quite surprised how many Lemmy users have such high scores on the dadness meter.
I am dad of two and I perceive myself as a pretty square, but I have near to 0 points.





















Trump is a hooyman (Slavic people will understand)