xNonPartisaNx
xNonPartisaNx t1_jdw2lfb wrote
Reply to comment by GiganticBlackHole in Mozart is in your Room and he wants you to show him what Music has evolved into. What Song/Theme/Band/Album/OST/Score do you show him? by ah0xg0
You can like lats better. That's fine. But it's an objectives fact that undertow had more going on harmonically. I don't think they used the flat 5th on lats at all.
Both killer albums.
xNonPartisaNx t1_jdsjh4f wrote
Reply to comment by GiganticBlackHole in Mozart is in your Room and he wants you to show him what Music has evolved into. What Song/Theme/Band/Album/OST/Score do you show him? by ah0xg0
Their best album, actually. So much energy and raw awesomeness. New albums are good but more planned. It's very root centric. Still good. Lats is killer.
Undertow was much more harmonically diverse. And it was prime may may.
xNonPartisaNx t1_jdsj7r3 wrote
Reply to comment by CacophonicAcetate in Mozart is in your Room and he wants you to show him what Music has evolved into. What Song/Theme/Band/Album/OST/Score do you show him? by ah0xg0
Nothing past 2000? How does this paint a clear picture of the evolution of music. This sample size is top small.
xNonPartisaNx t1_jdsj0bf wrote
Reply to Mozart is in your Room and he wants you to show him what Music has evolved into. What Song/Theme/Band/Album/OST/Score do you show him? by ah0xg0
One song to explain how music has evolved?
I think Mozart would laugh at the suggestion.
xNonPartisaNx t1_j8ehjxp wrote
Reply to “The principle of protecting our own thinking from eavesdroppers is fundamental to autonomy.” – Daniel Dennett debates the sort of free will it’s worth wanting with neuroscientists Patrick Haggard and philosopher Helen Steward by IAI_Admin
Your free will is binded to the consequences of acting on free will.
Yinyang
xNonPartisaNx t1_j774473 wrote
xNonPartisaNx t1_j7565t5 wrote
Reply to comment by 70Ytterbium in What makes humans unique is not reducible to our brains or biology, but how we make sense of experience | Raymond Tallis by IAI_Admin
Also, upon reflection. This idea was specific to the Lex fridman talk.
xNonPartisaNx t1_j755z67 wrote
Reply to comment by 70Ytterbium in What makes humans unique is not reducible to our brains or biology, but how we make sense of experience | Raymond Tallis by IAI_Admin
Let me know what you think of it. Me brains are always in flux 🤔
xNonPartisaNx t1_j74kler wrote
Reply to comment by 70Ytterbium in What makes humans unique is not reducible to our brains or biology, but how we make sense of experience | Raymond Tallis by IAI_Admin
It's Daniel Schmatenberger's idea. Check him out for the straight dope.
xNonPartisaNx t1_j72h16d wrote
Reply to What makes humans unique is not reducible to our brains or biology, but how we make sense of experience | Raymond Tallis by IAI_Admin
And orca is the apes predator in the ocean. But it goes after a few fish or a single seal at a time.
Humans can lay out 2 miles of net and bring up a whole school of fish.
So, there is a thesis, reduction to Brian
And antithesis. Reduction to body
And what we need is a synthesis of these two to extract higher order solutions to the problems that arise.
If you can steelman someone who hold an antithesis to your thesis. And I mean really steelman to the point where the other person says, dude, 100% you nailed it. and they can do that for your position. Then you have a team that can synthesize higher order principals.
xNonPartisaNx t1_jdx5ust wrote
Reply to Paradoxically, what makes you unique is your relation to other people. The more robustly we try to identify who we are, the more we become embedded in all others. by IAI_Admin
Tat tvam asi
What do you mean "other people"?