Category Archives: Human Behavior

Discussing Bitcoin Information Theory – Bitcoin Magazine

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In this episode of Bitcoin Spaces Live, host Christian Keroles (@ck_snarks) is joined by Aaron Segal (@LudiMagistr) to discuss his article for Bitcoin Magazine titled "Bitcoin Information Theory: B.I.T.". Aaron explains how entropy is closely related to money and how Bitcoin as information is ultimately a reduction of entropy. This is an extremely enlightening discussion, as Aaron applies the laws of thermodynamics to explain the monetary phenomenon that is Bitcoin. Other speakers include Guy Swann (@TheGuySwann), Mark Goodwin(@markgoodw_in), and Bitcoin TINA @BitcoinTINA

Full Transcript:

[00:00:07] CK: I'm really excited for this conversation. Im going to ping Mr. Aaron Segal quickly to get him to join. Were going to be talking about a really interesting subject, Bitcoin information theory. People like to refer to Bitcoin as digital gold. In my mind, that is a very limiting way to think about Bitcoin, just because gold was sound money in the past, does not limit Bitcoin to just being the digital incarnation of gold. It is far more than that. It is actually the removal monetary uncertainty. Aaron calls it entropy in his article. We are going to be spending the next hour or so, talking to Aaron about the article.

Before we get into that though, I want to tell you about Bitcoin 2022. I'm pretty sure, Aaron's going to be there. Almost everyone that you've been seeing speak on Bitcoin Magazine Spaces will be at Bitcoin 2022. It's going to be the biggest Bitcoin event in history. Bitcoin '21 was the biggest Bitcoin and crypto event in history. We are going for a three X on that. We're really trying to take the Bitcoin event space to the very next level, and it is going to be an absolute blast. There's going to be something for institutional investors, to core developers, to Bitcoin plebs. We have a four-day event, including a full-day music festival to celebrate the Bitcoin culture.

Extremely excited. You can use promo code Satoshi, or HSFP, Have Fun Staying Poor. They both give you 10%. If you pay with Bitcoin, you can save an additional $100. You can stack those. Pay with Bitcoin and you use one of those promo codes to save the maximum amount and do not wait to get your ticket. It's going to be an absolute blast. All right. That's enough for me. Aaron, what is up my man? Welcome back to Bitcoin Magazine Spaces And really excited to talk about your first article for Bitcoin Magazine. You've now contributed three, but this was your first one back in May.

[00:02:00] AS: Yeah. Thanks, CK. Nice hearing your voice again. Nice talking to you guys. Thanks for everyone for joining. Yeah, it's an interesting topic. Like CK just said, one of the genesis of this was my thinking about gold, and thinking about the whole digital gold narrative that was becoming a lot more pervasive last year. We'll call it during the first and second quarter of the year. Some point down the road, we can get into my background, but real quick, I've been on the buy side. I've been in the hedge fund industry for 17 years.

Ive approached this, my background, of course, as an investor, as an asset allocator. I've been involved in macro equity credit derivatives, traded all through the great financial crisis and saw the insanity that was occurring back then and have only seen it actually increase since then. You would have thought that that would have been the pinnacle of the insanity, but it was really just the beginning. For a lot of us, of course, Satoshi included, that was an eye-opening era. For me, I've been involved in so many different asset classes. Most recently, I work in a hedge fund. That's more involved in the credit industry and that's how I've gotten speaking with guys like Greg Foss, and has gotten closer to him, because we have some shared experience there and shared experience in the insanity of the credit market where real yields, they're now negative.

Essentially, I've started to see the world in which I operate become more and more administered, more and more manipulated over the years. That has just disturbed me more and more, as I've started to see the consequences, both socially, economically from a market perspective, from the ability of prices to actually make sense in a coherent fashion and the ability to model. My initial mentor, this guy named Marty Zweig, he was a legend in Wall Street in the 1980s-1990s. He was famous for actually predicting the bond crash in 1987, literally. That was on a they call it Black Monday. He was on this television show, like the predecessor to CNBC the day before, he predicted it literally that Sunday morning.

His mantra was always don't fight the Fed. That's because he grew up in this era where Greenspan had introduced this concept of moral hazard. They used to call it the Greenspan put. Now, Alan Greenspan, for those who don't know, was a central bank in the 1990. That was the lens in which I formulated my views. I also have always had this little tinkering interest in physics and theoretical physics and quantum theory and all this stuff I can nerd out on as a lay person.

When I started thinking about, this is before really, you had guys like Saylor talking about Bitcoin as what do they call it? Digital electricity. I had come across some of the work of Buckminster Fuller. Now, a lot of people also quote him too, but his theory of the kilowatt dollar. That got me thinking about the second law of thermodynamics.

Basically, just to frame this whole article is it's a amalgamation of the second law of thermodynamics, information theory, which was a theory that took thermodynamics in an entropy and applied it to networking and information and telecommunications in the 1950s-1960s. A guy named Claude Shannon was the grand master, the founder of that school of science. Then just my own economic background, my own tinkering as an investor. I think, honestly, that's the best way of learning the real merit of things is by tinkering in them. That's why I've always had a mistrust for economists. I really would implore it. This is nothing against economists. That's my background too, before I got into the field of investing.

If you ever come across somebody, who's giving you investing advice and they don't have any

money invested, I would be very weary of those people. Im buying all of these concepts and this background to formulate this equation. I'm going to use the term equation loosely, here because it's really just a thought experiment. It's not an equation that can necessarily be applied empirically for practical purposes. I think, it really helps frame, as CK was getting to and alluding to at the beginning, it helps frame why this is so much more than just digital. Because digital gold is just a store of value. It's not a transmission mechanism.

Just big picture. I don't want to get too deep into the weeds of the article itself, just regurgitating the actual article. I'd like to do a brief run through of what I'm getting at and the basic concepts, and then some of the implications, which are things that I didn't talk about in the article. I kept everything pretty abstract in the article. That way we can run with it and have hopefully, a more fun conversation. It's talks a bit more about some of the pragmatic applications of these ideas.

Yeah. Basically, for those who aren't familiar, the second law of thermodynamics is basically saying, hot things always cool down, unless you do something to stop them. Another way of expressing that is that disorder, which is characterized quantitatively as entropy always increases over time. There's a really great quip by this astrophysicist that I came across when I was doing research for this article. I think, this can be applied to anything in the shitcoin, altcoin space.

If your theory is found to be against the second law of thermodynamics, I can give you no hope. There is nothing for it, but to collapse in deepest humiliation. He wrote that in 1915, but I think that applies pretty well to a lot of things that are going on right now. That's thermodynamics in a real simple nutshell. Information theory, like I mentioned is pioneered by this guy named Claude Shannon, mid-20th century. He was a computer scientist. He applied it to, how can a signal that's going across a telecommunications network be transmitted with a minimal loss of information?

When you start to ask that question as an engineer, you then need to start defining what information means. We were just at the precipice of this information revolution at this time. It might seem like a thought that we all think about a little more frequently now. I don't think it's necessarily what the everyday person thinks about, but I think a lot of people probably in this room tend to have these kinds of big idea thoughts. Back then, it was really a very esoteric concept, because digital information was just non-existing.

The way he defined it, that I thought really was succinct and valuable is if information equals resolved uncertainty, entropy must be the uncertainty needing resolving. What you can deduct from that is that information equals resolved uncertainty. Uncertainty is entropy. Therefore, information equals reduced entropy, right? That's the first big step in trying to connect thermodynamic entropy to informational entropy. You end up with an equation where the more that you increase thermodynamic entropy, which is the more that you're expending real-world physical energy, the more you can reduce informational entropy, which is another way of saying, the more you can create structured, utilizable data.

Before I move on away from information theory, just another side that I came across in my research was, since Claude Shannon's original theory, in his original white paper, there have been a lot of subcategories of information theory, and they've been applied to many different fields. One of them is actually behavioral science. It's interesting from that perspective, because I think a lot of Bitcoiners really geek out on some of the behavioral science aspects.

It's becoming a bigger part of economic theory, too. There's behavioral economics now that has become more invoked, since guys like Daniel Kahneman came about in the 1970s, 1980s, and started to popularize it then. From the behavioral science perspective, they were trying to solve for what consciousness is.

That's just pernicious difficult thing, amorphous thing that we've tried to define as humans for many centuries now, and from a neurological and behavioral science background, they decided to bunch up consciousness into two key categories, which is our ability as humans to differentiate, which is to break down the whole into its constituent parts, and then integration, which is understanding the connection of these parts and reintegrating them.

Really, you can't have consciousness without both of them. You can have intelligence with one or the other, but you can't have consciousness without both of them, at least by this theory. I'm bringing this back to the relevance of this conversation is that when I was reading about that, it turn on a light bulb for me when it comes to praxeology. Praxeology, it's a concept, it's a philosophical concept, I guess you can say, regarding human action. You only really find it used within Austrian economics.

Again, there's probably a number of Bitconers in here who might be familiar with the term, who might be familiar with Austrian economics. For those who aren't, it's essentially a term that was corn by Ludwig von Mises, or Misses, I never know how to pronounce it. Essentially, it's the first principles of Austrian economics, which is that it assumes that humans act out of their own set of goals. Those goals are always base conscious desire, conscious belief system.

When I started to think about how to integrate this with information theory, so if consciousness is a form, of course, a form of information, and it's a form of reduced entropy, which is structured information, then if you have a system where that information is being manipulated, where that information is losing its signal, then you have a huge problem in terms of our ability to base our human behavior in a efficient way regarding our economic goals.

Basically, consciousness is reduced to entropy and if economics is the application of human actions towards goals and values. If the input to that belief system arise at goals that are flawed, because of the way our monetary system is structured, then the whole system devolves in error, because we are all making decisions based on what we believe to be rational, but the information that we're using to come to those conclusions is wrong. Our first principles are wrong.

Whats scary about that is you can go a long time in such a manner without realizing how bad it is, because we're all suffering from the same input problem. We're all receiving flawed information simultaneously together. That's how I tried to tie together I know this is all mouthful here. By the way, CK, just I can ramble. Pause, ask questions, whatever you want to do anytime. I'm getting I'm going off the deep end here.

[00:12:22] CK: I thought that was great, by the way. Maybe you even want to just, the last part, maybe just to repeat that one more time. Because I think, that's where we are right now. That's what you just described.

[00:12:33] AS: Yeah. Basically, a very fundamental concept in economics is to boil down like CK is saying, a fundamental concept in economics is that we base our decisions, whether or not to consume, whether or not to defer consumption, whether or not how and where to allocate resources based on a belief system. That belief system is based on our personal motives and goals. If that is based essentially, from our conscious state where we are taking differentiation and integration of our world around us, and if that world is being obfuscated by bad money, then our rational, or seemingly rational decisions will not be actually rational. They will seem that way, and they will seem that way for a very long time.

This is why I think Bitcoiners love the whole matrix analogy, because it's exactly what that is. It's a world that is internally accurate, but not real. I guess, you can go down a real deep rabbit hole and say then, what is reality? Reality is what we make of it or whatever. I'm not even trying to get philosophical here. You just have inputs that are manifested from an outside source, like they're manifested, not from our own actual action and behavior that is bootstrapping it. There's this external input that's driving it.

That, we in turn are reacting and basing our behavior off of that information. We are doing so, and it's creating flawed allocation of resources. Where does that leave us? I think, this is why this concept is only going to become more interesting actually, as we, I think, become more tuned to the interplay between energy, in real-world energy and money.

Of course, that will become much more apparent when we start to see how, for example, mining, which is a completely different rabbit hole. I don't think we have time to get into that. How mining can bootstrap as a first and last resort buyer. Always, a number of you in this chat are familiar with some of those ideas. There are people who are far better than I am at explaining them, so I'm just going to leave it at that. I do think as we become as a society, much more aware of the interplay here and how energy and money are just inextricably linked, because I don't think that's a given. I don't think people realize that. That's going to be key.

If the 21st century is really the century that we're going to see information as the scarce resource, information is what we need to harness. That's in comparison maybe to the 20th century, where carbon energy was really what bootstrapped society and bootstrapped human productivity. If that's the case, then we need to ensure that the economic activity is not wasting the energy itself. That's exactly the problem with monetary entropy, which is really, the crux of this equation.

When there's monetary entropy, you have a system that starts to leak. A system that leaks, thermodynamically speaking, is on sustainable. What is the equation? It sounds a lot more complicated than it is, honestly. Again, think of it more as a mental model. On one side, you have thermodynamic energy. I'm going to get into some aspects of the equation, because we only partially defined some of it so far, but I'll just give you the full equation first.

You have thermodynamic energy raised to the power of, in this case, you'll see X, and X stands for human innovation, or productivity. What I mean by that is that's essentially just technology. It's an input of technology, a variable for technology. The reason you raise it via power law is because that's how humanity scales. We take thermodynamic entropy. We basically take resources, we utilize them. Then we leverage our innovation to utilize those resources to a greater degree without needing further input. For any given input, if you have a greater power law, that means you have greater innovation associated with that.

You take thermodynamic energy, you raise it to the power of innovation, and that equals the negative of informational entropy. What I mean by that is that on the other side of that coin, the more energy you're utilizing and the more productivity you're scaling with that energy, you have negative entropy, which is on the informational side, which is what I'm saying without it is that you're taking information and you're making it more structured.

You're creating something out of it. What are humans? Humans are just little pockets of reduced entropy within a world that's constantly scaling up with greater entropy. There's this physicist, Brian Greene, who has a great quote. I'm just going to paraphrase it here. He basically calls it the entropy dance, which is the universe is essentially, on this timeline of greater entropy. Actually, that's how a lot of physicists defined time. Of course, Bitcoiners also have this weird association with how there's this intuitive association with Bitcoin in time.

Entropy is actually from a physicist standpoint, the only way that we can define what time even is. The only way you can actually determine time, other than just as a human concept, is there's an era of time that's based on entropy going from a lower level to a higher level over time. That doesn't mean there's not pockets of reduced entropy that form around that. That's all of what human progress is. That's all of what geological progress is. That's what a planet is. That's what the solar system is. We can do that on our small scale, too. That's what I mean on the right side of that equation when I refer to negative informational entropy.

That's what we are creating with physics on the other side of that. Now, there's one little variable that I haven't mentioned here, which is that when you raise thermodynamic entropy to the power of human and innovation, there's another variable in that human innovation. Exponent, which is monetary entropy. This is really what the crux of the whole problem is. Because money is a transmission mechanism, but it's also a technology. A technology, that if it's allowed to function at design, will allow information to scale. That's why you have to raise thermodynamic entropy to the power of that as well, because it's just like any other technology. It's something that can either increase productivity, or inhibit it.

We will define just for simple purposes, and what I did in this article is defined monetary entropy as a long-term inflation rate of that money, of whatever money system in question that you're talking with. In this case, let's say, we're talking about the dollar. Now, and it's a tricky definition, because then you have to define what inflation is. I think, a lot of us in here understand how slippery slope that can be. There's some arbitrary metrics, like CPI. None of them are perfect. They all have imperfect ability to actually assess inflation, because inflation is something that's subjective. It's something that is not based on an aggregate level of data. It's based on a fluid system, where prices are constantly fluctuating.

Just for simplicity purposes, just think of it as an inflation rate of money, whether that be the growth of a money supply, whether that be some aggregate inflation mechanism, but its some form of leakage to the system. If you have thermodynamic entropy, and you have a lot of innovation, that's great. You're creating a lot of negative informational entropy. That means you're creating a lot of information that can be utilized. It's good for society. It's good for productivity. It's how humanity scales.

If all of that is being obfuscated by monetary entropy, which we're subtracting from that power law, you end up missing out on so much of that human potential. In some ways, you could completely negate it. That's something, guys like Jeff Booth are really amazing at articulating is how technology is deflationary, but monetary inflation is basically this hamster wheel that we're on that's basically, we ended up spinning our wheels, because we don't allow that innovation to flourish. We don't allow it to do what it would otherwise do.

Maybe it does what it wants to do in certain fields. Maybe certain areas, we see massive technological innovation, massive deflation, but that ends up getting counterbalanced by some massive inflation in some other part of the world. A great example of that would be Moore's law, reducing the cost curve of semiconductors, but simultaneously, healthcare costs and education costs have gone through the roof, and real estate and all sorts of other things that have completely negated the benefit to humanity that may have otherwise caused.

Basically, you have this leakage in the system. When there's no leakage, when you have a pristine money that has zero entropy, everything can transmit from one side of the equation to the other fluidly, without anything obfuscating, without anything, getting in the way. That is really the aha. That's the crux of this. That's why I think money that can scale in this way, and it can scale not just as a store of value, but as a medium of transmission and as a medium of specialization, which we can get into in a little bit what I mean by that. That's really the crux of why this is so different from just digital gold. Before we go on, I'll pause there.

[00:21:47] GS: Aaron, first off incredible. Super, super smart. Do you think that inequation or inefficiency is like a purposeful, tactical thing? Or just a literal inefficiency of a money market?

[00:21:58] AS: Yeah, that's a good question. I tend to believe that I think, everyone in the system Not everyone, but I think, there's a lot of people in the system that generally genuinely think that the system we're in is good, is righteous, that everyone's just doing the best they can. I tend to think that these mistakes occur at the margin and over time and they compound. Because a great example of that, you can put together a system where you say, okay, We need more money because we need to fund this or that thing.

Then of course, a lot of that is war and bad things, of course. There's also good things. There's social welfare. There's actual goals that are ideologically valid. What happens is people don't see the long-term compounding effect of that one little policy, right? Then that puts you in a path dependent system, Because that involves creating more debt. Then when you create more debt, you reduce the money velocity. When you were just the money velocity, you need to print more money to create more GDP. When you do that, you need more debt and then you end up in a debt trap. Then everything else becomes even more path dependent, because you can't go back. You can't stop.

You have all these well-meaning people who maybe made decisions along the way that were incremental, or incrementally detrimental, but theyre well-intentioned, but they put us down this path. Now we're on this path that we can't get out of. That's actually a big theme of another article I wrote, where I really talk about, it's called Revenge of the Nodes. Its one of the more recent pieces I did, which really talks about the deterministic path that we're on. There's really no way out. The only way out is Bitcoin. Honestly, I'm not saying that just to talk our own book here. I genuinely haven't come across any alternative from an economic, from a societal standpoint.

I think that's why we're all here. I think, we all know that. I don't think it's purposeful. I think, it's just the nature of the system. There certainly are negative actors involved, but I don't think it's purposeful.

[00:23:46] GS: If I can actually add to that real quick, is that humans, particularly on a long enough time scale, humans are a product of their environment. The incentive structure of the legacy system is just bad. It's just a horrible incentive structure that leads to certain outcomes. What's funny is that, when we debate, or talk about whether or not these actors are malicious, or if they're just incompetent, or they're just responding, they're navely responding to the incentives without any judgment. I'm just a good banker. These are the policies that make a bank survive in this environment. It just so happens that I'm leveraged 40 to one. That's a terrible outcome, but they responded properly to the incentives to become a successful bank.

There's a degree of whether or not they're malicious or good from an intentions perspective. If the results are the same, does it really I think, we're in an environment of terrible incentives. It's more likely that will even create bad intention to actors, people who are simply there to abuse the system. Now, bad people, almost never think they're bad people. That's why evil is so dangerous. It's almost done almost always done righteously. I agree, this is fundamentally an incentive problem. It's a structural problem.

Our economic system is just fucked six ways from sideways. The only way to fix it is systemic incentives correction. The only way to do that is to start with the money. Without Bitcoin, there's no fixing the incentives. You're just wiping clean and starting from scratch on a bad incentive system, because you've led to the end result, which is destruction. Otherwise, we just go down this whole path all over again, and we have enormous amounts of pain in the short-term, just to kick the can for a whole another century-long, or 70-year cycle or whatever it is. Or we fix the incentives. We fix the money. Obviously, that is what Bitcoin is, and that's why it's such a profound innovation when you look at it from that context.

[00:25:49] AS: Yeah. I think that's spot on. At some point, if you start talking about, if you bring morality into this conversation, or ethics, you allow people to hide behind things. You allowed people to have a high-time preference with that, because you can say, Oh, that might all be well and good, but in the short run, we need to do this. In the short run, we need to solve for this. We see that with what's going on in the ESG movement. Then, of course, there are valid concerns about the environment, but then people misuse them, people misread them.

Again, it gets back to what Guy was just talking about with incentives. I'll read something from the article itself to touch on this a little bit. The crucial realization is it concerns the important paradigm shift inherent to Bitcoin is as follows. Fiat money involves a net increase in entropy. This cannot be overstated as it is imperative to the articles thesis, such a conclusion is reached despite money theoretically being a form of information that should reduce entropy when applied as intended. However, fiat unfortunately is not money as money was intended. Inflation, centralized, and this is the key part that gets to motives in the incentive structure.

Inflation, centralized, and thus arbitrary control of the rules of supply and attempts also controlling demand via administered risk-free rates, via global exchange rate volatility and competitive devaluations, mercantilism subsidies, free debt supporting zombie industries, opaque and uneven taxation enforcement, and many other behaviors, all conspire to create an aggregate equation of massive entropy and fiat money of economies.

Again, none of those things that I listed, they're all horrible. None of them are like, because of one bad actor, or one bad intention. They're all just a result. They're all a consequence of that, of a bad system. I think, another thing that's key about this too is, and this is something CK and I have talked about. I think we did another space is on this at one point. Obviously, there's a lot of crazy signs about inflation. Now that's a whole different conversation I'd love to have some point. Putting that aside, even if we were dealing with 2% annual inflation a year indefinitely, not only is the math of that extremely deleterious on just from compounding perspective, right?

Even if you lose your value 2% a year for 20 years, that's a horrible situation to be in. From a thermodynamic system, taking this back to the equation, of the article, theres actually, I think it was a Robert Breedlove, Michael Saylor interview, where Saylor gets into because he's got his engineering background. He likened it to an adaptive control system. I'm not an engineer. I have no engineering background, but he basically said, that's a common engineering term. It's a structural way that engineers go about trying to solve a problem. Adaptive control system requires a few things in order to be effective. It needs negative feedback.

Basically, it needs a system that has volatility, right? It needs to be able to receive volatile responses in order to react and adapt to them and adjust. That gets back to anti-fragility, which we'll get into in a little bit. You need that and you need a variable to control. You need to actually define what you're trying to control. In this case, Saylor absolutely noticed, that's a correct ledger, right? That's what the blockchain is. The variable you're trying to control is the correctness of the ledger.

Then the third variable that you need is a low error rate. This is what's key to the purpose of this conversation specifically, an error rate is just, when you have a system and you want it to have a long-term degree of integrity, from a thermodynamic perspective, you can't have just a leakage of energy, because that compounds over time.

Imagine if you're an engineer and you're trying to take an internal combustion engine and you're trying to make it more efficient. You're trying to make the same amount of energy input create a greater amount of horsepower as an output. Meanwhile, your tank is leaking 2% oil per day, and this is, I'm basically paraphrasing Saylor's analogy here. This is not my own. I thought that was just so perfect, and it's so related to the whole crux of this article, which is so even if you don't have hyperinflation, or some high level of inflation, if you're losing even 1% of the systems energy input per day, it's just not going to last.

Not only will you not increase productivity, which by the way, just so the point on productivity and I talked about that scaling function, right? You need to raise thermodynamic energy to the power of something. That power is human innovation, which is basically another way of saying, productivity. Productivity, we actually just got our third quarter of 2021 productivity numbers yesterday. I believe, it was the lowest level since 1981. We have workers working in more hours and producing the same or less output.

By the way, productivity, this is not just a one-quarter phenomenon. This has been a consistent, long-term, structural decline that's really been confounding economists for decades. I remember having this debate in 2007 with people trying to figure out why is productivity declining? We're in this golden era of the digital information technology, so why is productivity so weak? Productivity is weak because of the incentive structure that I was just talking about. The incentive structure is bad, because you have a high error rate. You have energy leaking out of the system.

Yeah. The bottom line here is that fiat money always has a monetary entropy above zero and Bitcoin always has a monetary entropy of zero, period. That's it. It never goes. We've never had that in any monetary system ever. Therefore, this equation can scale indefinitely.

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[00:32:22] CK: You talked about all the pitfalls of monetary entropy. Now you said, okay, Bitcoin fixes this effectively. That enables human productivity and to scale indefinitely. I feel like, we need to dig into that a little bit more.

[00:32:38] AS: What I meant by that is that, the only thing stopping you at that point from a societal perspective is your own innovation. There's nothing getting in the way. There's nothing obfuscating it at that point. There's nothing to say that this can't continue to scale. This actually gets into what I was just about the second little rabbit hole I was going to go into, which is that an implication from this equation is that the systems inputs, which are that thermodynamic energy on the left side of the equation, exhibit greater scarcity over time.

That's where people talk about resource scarcity. The whole concept of why resources are even scarce to begin with is because there's entropy. If there was no entropy, if the law of physics didnt entail the second law of thermodynamics, we wouldn't have a problem with resource scarcity. Entropy means that energy can only move in one way. We use energy and we create order out of disorder. We can't then go back. There are systems that we can create. That's part of what innovation is. You break an egg, you can't put the egg back together again. There's only a limited amount of resources as a result of that ever increasing degree of entropy.

Why does this matter? If the money is supposed to be a shock absorber to all of this, right? As we use more resources, in order to make ma make it so that humanity uses resources intelligently and applies them non-wasteful way, you need something to absorb the scarcity of all of that entropy. As I say in the article, if money is not permitted its intrinsic capacity to absorb this scarcity, other resources will need to fill that void. This increases the cost of information production, because there are fewer and fewer sources of increasing thermodynamic entropy from which to convert into decreasing informational entropy.

What I mean by that is you start to lose the price of all of those inputs, the price of all that thermo The Bloomberg commodity index is up 50%. Oil is up 43%. Gasoline prices are up 50%. This is versus pre-COVID levels. Not on a year-over-year basis. Natural gas prices in the US are up a 160%. UN food price index is up 40%. Base money supply is up 35%. Housing prices are up 20%. Rent prices, I believe, are up 18% though. They obfuscate with the owner equivalent to rent and the CPI number, which is a bullshit number. All of these things, all of these finite resources are what starts to absorb the monetary entropy that sound money should be absorbing instead. As a result, getting back to your question, CK, you can't scale as well because things become cost prohibitive.

The innovation becomes throttled by that. Resources that are meant to be utility goods, that are meant to actually be used end up being stores of value. Real estate is a utility good. Yes, it's an income producing property, but it is meant to be a dwelling. It is meant to be an object of utility. That's a whole different conversation. The point is that even when there's innovation occurring, it's done in a really centralized and lopsided way, where because Yeah, please go ahead.

[00:35:45] MG: I wanted to interject right here, because Saife talked about this and he's got a whole section in his new book, Fiat Standard. One of the things is that when you're talking about, when you see nominal values of things increase, the level of monetary entropy that is resulting from this is not merely in, like you're saying, it's not just in the fact that you're losing the savings in the communication of any value over a period of time, but it's also giving the appearance of profitability to things that aren't profitable.

A house is actually a maintenance heavy thing that is purely for utility. The idea of holding it as a store of value is actually a terrible idea. A house is a liability. It is not an asset. Unless, you are renting it out, unless it's an apartment building or something that is generating income, it is just a consumption good. Just like having a sandwich, or a car. That's all it is. Yet, the appearance of it having a nominal return, where the number is going up, even though its real value return is not positive, leads to so much misallocation of resources and to stuff that is not innovative.

Buying and sitting on a bunch of houses does nothing for the economy. It does nothing for progressing humanity forward. It's not actually producing a return. It's just producing nominal gain. Your number count is just going up with the amount of money and new debt being created in the system. The sheer amount of capital time and labor that could go to an innovative purpose, to something that has real gain, that's actually a productive company producing some positive good for humanity is completely being bastardized. It's being soaked up by all of these nominal returns in just holding stuff, in wasting commodities, just to sit on them. People talk about, oh, inflation not inflation, but deflationary currency that goes up in value means people are just going to hoard it.

That's a great thing, because money is not a productive asset. Of course, you want somebody to hoard money and not a tractor, a house, something that people actually need. If the value of the money is going up, that means everybody's income is going up. It's just a tally. You're actually not getting in the way of allocation of real resources and consumption goods that people desperately need to better their lives.

You're not you're not screwing up the price system by buying something that you actually don't have any demand for. You don't need another house. You're just parking value. Whereas, the flip side of it is it's oh, if the money is inflationary, oh, we're going to invest it. No, they're not. They're just going to hoard assets. They're just going to take things that people need off of the market. The rich are just going to hoard it, so that they don't lose money. The distortion of that is in trillions and trillions of dollars. Stuff that in a matter of five years, allocated in the right direction could have huge societal benefit and is instead, is just buying up real estate.

It's incredible the amount damage, that even a seemingly minor monetary entropy, or disincentive can cause, because there are second and third order effects that make things appear profitable that just aren't, that have no actual value or use in society, because you've destroyed the function of money. Youve destroyed the means of communicating that value. Everybody's just spending all of their time and energy on the business of translation, which is solved by money. Now, it's a new problem in society again that's not there, unless you put unnecessary entropy in the money.

Anyway, I just wanted to add that I actually have I'm at 13% battery and I'm at TabConf right now, just sitting in the corner. I thought I would have my battery pack with me and I'm stupid. I'm going to have to shut down my phone, so that I have enough battery power to get an Uber out of here at the end of it. I'm sorry, I was only in here for

[00:39:44] CK: Thanks for joining, Guy.

[00:39:45] GS: 15 minutes to hang out.

[00:39:46] AS: Thanks, Guy.

[00:39:47] GS: Thanks, guys. Take it easy, you all.

[00:39:49] AS: Just to add, by the way Guy does a reading of this article. If you guys are like I am, prefer to listen to your words. On Bitcoin Audible, he has a reading of it and he has his Guys Takes, which are awesome. Yeah, everything he said is spot on. I actually see someone wrote in here, they were shocked at my statistic that I gave about productivity being down.

I think, this is a really misunderstood concept. This is why even some of the smartest economists out there really get confused by this concept of why productivity is declining over the long run. Just to be clear, it is a very volatile statistic when used, because the way that it's defined is like I said, it's hours worked relative to output. All of these things are so abstract, so let's break it down for a second here. It's like, why is productivity problematic with a highly entropic money? Why is it so important for productivity to scale, to have a money where the ability to save it is pristine and why its transmission mechanism being completely transparent is so important.

Let's talk first principles here for a second. There's really only when you really break it down to its bare bones, there's only two sources of human prosperity. Two arrows that can cast this forward, from caveman into wherever we want to go. One is savings, which is another way. Economists call excess consumption. The other is specialization, and they're inextricably linked. The reason that they're so linked is savings is necessary. It's your pool for investment. It's your belief in the future. Up until agriculture and I guess, our ability to create surplus through agriculture and animal husbandry or the domestication of animals, we didn't really have extra savings, right?

We were just hunter gatherers living hand-to-mouth and going through in this cyclical process. There's a really interesting study I came across from NIH actually, which got into there's a lot of debate as to how the agricultural evolution route evolved, like what caused it and why it evolved basically throughout these disparate parts of the world and all of these completely different societies simultaneously.

It's amazing when you think about it. These are all people that never interacted once and yet, they came across the same conclusion on a scale of hundreds of years from one another, which, in the timescale of humanity is basically, no time at all. One of the conclusions they reached from this article, whether you believe it or not, I just found it to be interesting was that we thought that I think there's a pre-existing belief that agriculture was a result of societies that were struggling and that needed to innovate their way out of that problem.

What they found, actually, it was that societies that moved from hunting and gathering into agriculture, were actually prosperous societies. What they did was they were basically, trying to solve for robustness against uncertainty. That's what storing value was. The reason I'm bringing this back to specialization and savings is that when you have excess savings, when you have that cushion against uncertainty, which of course, we've take for granted now, but all societal collapse is previously were a result of lots of exogenous outcomes occurring that really blew up these the societies. They were very sensitive to volatility. They had that negative feedback in their system that told them, Oh, it's important to save. It's important to have this.

Then once you can do that, and once you have those excess savings, you suddenly have the ability to start specializing. There's that parable of the primordial fishing island, where you have this just this tiny little economy of two fishermen fishing. Only when you have excess fish that you're no longer consuming, can one of them invent some new skill. Then, that new skill creates more surplus. Then that creates new innovation, and so on and so forth. It's something we just take for granted at this point.

Actually, there's a lot of great work from a lot of Austrian economists that talk about how a lot of new Keynesians and monetarists have really changed the narrative, that savings is usury, right? The saving is bad and consumption. That's such a classic example of a bad system, where we're punishing savers. Is that if we save too much and there's no money velocity, money can't scale. I see people, there's this big altcoin economist on Twitter. I forgot her name, but she got all these PhD credentials. I don't think she's ever worked a day in her life, actually investing or anything. She's always talking about how Bitcoin is horrible for society, because it's never going to scale and there's going to be no money velocity.

Guess what? Our current system right now is horrible money I wrote down the stats here. By the way, money velocity is when $1 produces more output. If you have a dollar in the system and you have money velocity of two, that means for every dollar you put in the system, it creates $2 worth of GDP, right? When you have declining money velocity, you need more and more dollars to create the same amount of GDP. That's how you really get bad inflation. It's also how you get bad productivity. More importantly, it's how you get into a debt trap. A debt trap is what we're in.

Unequivocally, I don't think anyone who really knows anything about economics would say differently. When you come across anyone who tells you that Bitcoin is going to decrease money velocity, because it's just going to make everyone hoard and save as if that's a bad thing, point to what's going on. What's going on is that you have money velocity plummeting from, I believe, the pre GFC, pre great financial crisis range was around 1.8 times to two times. Now in the US, were at 1.1 times. We're basically getting close to breaking that one-to-one ratio, which would be horrible.

Japan, in comparison, their money velocity is at 0.4 terms. That started at around 1.6 times back in the late 1960s, early 1970s. Europe it's even worse. They're also below one time. 0.8 times and they were back 1.8 times in 1995. China's even bad. China's at 0.5 times versus 0.8 times in 1998. The only reason that US velocity is better than all of those is because we're the reserve currency. We have more avenues for global lending, despite these trends.

If you think about Bitcoin in comparison, why would the opposite system to this also have a low velocity? We have a system that is requiring more and more debt and more and more money printing for each dollar of output that we want to produce. We need more of those dollars of output to basically, fund that debt. It becomes this really bad, vicious cycle. The question to ask is, why would it not be the opposite? Wouldn't it be more intuitive that the opposite of a debt trap would actually involve an increase in money velocity over the long run? Once Bitcoin is monetized, once we're actually in a system where the Bitcoin is the unit of account.

Trying to take this back to what Guy was saying, and really bringing it into something that's tangible, let's talk about the current problem that we're in and why productivity in this particular quarter was so bad. Like I said, you had more hours worked for the same amount of output, and that's why productivity plummeted. We all know, we've all been reading all the headlines about this labor shortage. I'm actually working on a piece all about this. I have lot of views about why this labor shortage is structural, but that's a whole different rabbit hole.

Let's just take it as a given for the moment, that at least we have a labor shortage right now, and that's affecting our ability to be productive. How could Bitcoin help this? How could Bitcoin help this? First of all, like I just said, when you have more debt, you have less productivity. It's just a classic outcome of the production function, which is you have labor, capital as your inputs. If you have too much capital, you crowd out labor. You crowd out labor's ability to be productive.

See the rest here:
Discussing Bitcoin Information Theory - Bitcoin Magazine

Opinion | Why Are Republicans Now Loving the Sweet Sound of Electric Vehicles? – The New York Times

One word: jobs.

Full-time, well-paying jobs. And not just the 11,000 permanent jobs at the two new manufacturing sites, but also thousands upon thousands of construction and infrastructure jobs to build and maintain the huge campuses. Bob Rolfe, commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development, estimates that the West Tennessee site alone will create about 33,000 construction jobs, along with some 27,000 corollary jobs once the complex is fully operational.

Its nice that the plants are an investment in a green future, in other words, but thats not the reason leaders in Tennessee and Kentucky are doing cartwheels. In investing $11.4 billion in electric vehicles and bringing those jobs to Tennessee and Kentucky, the Ford Motor Co. has inadvertently invented a perfect laboratory experiment in how to turn the red states green.

When money is on the line, politicians have always been willing to jettison positions they have stated loudly, for the record, over the course of years. Ms. Blackburn was also thrilled in 2019 when Volkswagen announced it was making the Chattanooga plant its North American base for manufacturing electric vehicles, adding 1,000 jobs. She was thrilled again when the battery company Microvast announced earlier this year that it was setting up shop in Clarksville, bringing almost 300 jobs to Tennessee, and when General Motors announced it would build a battery plant in Spring Hill, bringing another 1,300 jobs. The G.M. announcement came on the heels of yet another announcement that it would be building its new electric S.U.V. in Spring Hill.

These electric car and battery plants are just the most visible manifestations of the green future that is coming, even in the reddest of red states. It doesnt matter in the least whether Republicans like it. As with the Ford Motor Co., they can participate in and profit from it, or they can get left behind. And they are finally showing signs that they dont wish to be left behind.

All deathbed conversions smack of hypocrisy, and this level of overt hypocrisy is almost unbelievable. Green technology is economically viable today only because Democrats seeded this field years ago. Obama-era funding for clean energy research and electric vehicles, for example, is a key reason for growth in those sectors during even the environmentally hostile Trump years. Red-state politicians have worked unceasingly to subvert policies that created the very economic harvest they are now reaping themselves. It is truly nothing less than enraging.

But rage, no matter how justified, should not obscure the real point here. The point is for human behavior to change in time to save this gorgeous, teeming, irreplaceable, suffering planet. Deathbed conversions happen because time has run out, and our time has run out.

If even dug-in science deniers such as Marsha Blackburn and Mitch McConnell can come around on climate issues when they are convinced that doing so would benefit their constituents in visible and measurable ways, then its conceivable that an environmentally sound future is possible even in regions now tightly tethered to fossil fuels. Its even conceivable that renewable energy could cease to be a political issue and become simply a common-sense strategy for a country that doesnt want to run the planet into the ground.

Go here to read the rest:
Opinion | Why Are Republicans Now Loving the Sweet Sound of Electric Vehicles? - The New York Times

Maybe the Torah is just trying to teach us stuff: Readers respond to tirade about Toldot – Forward

This is an adaptation of Looking Forward, a weekly email from our editor-in-chief sent on Friday afternoons. Sign up here to get the Forwards free newsletters delivered to your inbox.

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Maybe Rebecca was not deviously plotting a coup to help one son over the other, but strategically trying to show her husband that both their boys had strengths to celebrate. Maybe Isaacs fathering flaws are rooted in the fact that his own father almost sacrificed him at the altar. Maybe I shouldnt view biblical characters through a 21st century lens of privilege and hyper-parenting.

These were among a flood of insights that readers shared in response to last weeks newsletter, titled The Torah is not a parenting manual. It was all about the struggle Ive been having with Toldot, the Torah portion in which Rebecca helps Jacob steal the birthright and then the blessing of his twin, Esau, tricking their father, Isaac, in the process.

It was the first time Ive written a full column about a Torah portion and more of you read it than read any other one since I started this weekly thing 18 months ago. Im not quitting journalism to go to rabbi school or anything, but I thought Id embrace the Talmudic tradition of give-and-take and devote this weeks newsletter to your thoughts on this classic story of family dysfunction.

The Jewish way is to question, Rabbi Hillel Adler of the Consortium for Jewish Day Schools wrote me in an email. Indeed. Thank you for your questions and answers.

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One of the first, and most thoughtful, emails I got last Friday was from Marsha Mirkin, who literally wrote the book or at least a book on how we might relate to Rebeccas parenting choices: The Women Who Danced by the Sea: Finding Ourselves in the Stories of our Biblical Foremothers, published in 2004.

I saw the story as dealing with favoritism and limitations that get in the way of growth and connection, Mirkin said. She noted that the word love is rare in the Torah but present in this chapter, and argued that Rebecca is not so much tricking Isaac into picking her favorite, Jacob, but lovingly nudging Isaac to not totally ignore Jacob.

As a mother of twins, I had argued that Rebeccas overt favoritism of Jacob without regard to the impact on Esau was impossible to imagine. But I found Mirkins take totally relatable. Of course a loving mother would be concerned if her husband seemed to seriously favor one twin; of course she would try to show him the others merits in hopes of giving both their best shot at good lives.

My understanding: Your father took you and was going to sacrifice you when you were young. Dont make that mistake with your son Jacob, explained Mirkin, a psychologist who specializes in families and was a resident scholar at Brandeis University.

Throughout, she shows Isaac something about this ignored son, she added. Twins have different personalities as you experienced and Rebecca was wise, and she and Isaac had a special, close relationship. I think Esau and Jacob both were blessed in ways that fit who they could become based on their individual personalities.

Courtesy of Wikipedia Commons

A Flemish tapestry depicting Toldot, in which Esau sells his birthright to Jacob.

Mirkin was one of several people to raise the Binding of Isaac as important context for the Toldot story, something our rabbi, Marc Katz, also talked a lot about as he helped our twins study the portion for their bnei mitzvah last year. Dont you think Isaac behaves as he does because his psyche was damaged by his father, who, to prove his love for God, agreed to sacrifice him? asked a reader named Randi Hacker. That is some deep trauma to have to live with.

For sure. Who am I to imagine how the untreated PTSD from that episode plays out?

Roberta Gold, who has taught literature for more than 30 years, compared our endless re-reading of the Torah to the study of Shakespearean classics even students who know how Romeo & Juliet ends, she said, are on the edge of their seats and hope the lovers wont die. Every reading brings a new revelation about how and why the tragedy plays out.

The stories in Torah, like all classics of literature, remain classic because they reveal universal truths of human nature that do not change over time, Gold reminded me. You wanted Rebecca to be a role-model mother of twins because you want to be a role model. But you missed the point. Rebeccas flaw of unequal love and favoritism is all too human.

Rebecca is a legitimate matriarch because the Torah does not expect perfection, she continued. The characters seem larger than life, but though there are miracles, they are largely people of this (highly flawed) world.

Nina Mogilnik also found me totally unfair to Rebecca. She particularly chastised me for suggesting that if Rebecca were a normal mom who loved both her twins she might have tried to challenge and change the rules. Mogilnick found this breathtaking, kind of condescending and reflecting some kind of cockeyed chutzpah, and said I was inappropriately viewing the tale through a contemporary lens of suburban-mom privilege.

What on earth do you even mean by normal mom? demanded Mogilnik, who has written for The Jewish Week, the Times of Israel and the Forward, among other places. Is it normal to strive to push your kids to achieve certain kinds of success? Is it normal to prize academic achievement? Is it normal to brag about children? Is it normal to struggle with post-partum depression and still get up off the floor to feed and clothe your kids? Is it normal sometimes to hate your children? To regret having them? Your definition of normal seems to proscribe all kinds of attitudes and behaviors that are endemic to the human condition.

Point taken. I hate the word normal and should never have used it. After getting Mogilnicks note, I rewrote the sentence in the website version of the column to say if she was a mom who wanted the best for both her twins. But Mogilnick also had more to say about Rebecca as both a role model and a realistically flawed character like all of us.

One could argue that Rebecca showed extraordinary courage in essentially demanding of God that God answer why she was made to suffer with quarreling fetuses, and to demand to know if having this strife between her children was her purpose, she wrote.

I am not excusing the discomfort of reading of a mother who clearly favors one child over another, and a father who offers a stingy blessing to the disliked son, Mogilnick continued. At least I have the humility to know that parenting is brutally hard work, that my kids havent lived long enough yet to know everything they think they know, and that the best I can do as their mother is love them to the best of my ability, and equip them to go out into the world and be better than I am.

Actually, that sums up my parenting philosophy almost exactly.

And there was yet more wisdom in my inbox:

From Michael Klayman: I feel Rebeccas pain, because what she did she did for the nation, and not for her family specifically. It must have been excruciatingly difficult for her.

From Susanna Levin: I know a rabbi who says that Genesis (which he calls the book of communications) teaches by showing examples of how not to parent.

David Rubin: Jacob gets his comeuppance big time. He has to spend years running for his life. Laban tricks him just as he was tricked. Then, his sons lied to him (tricked him) when they lied about Joseph. But, in every instance of dishonest and deceptive dealing, the tricky person pays for it in the end.

trobador@aol.com: These books contain archetypal legends, and perhaps a bit of ancestral memory, but the frequently savage ethics of the protagonists are nothing for us modern-day Jews to boast about.

Harriett Epstein: This is real human behavior we are reading not Father or Mother Knows Best.

Rabbi Adler, who I quoted above saying the Jewish way is to question a phrase I particularly love given my chosen career responded to Rabbi Katzs quote about the Torah not being a parenting manual with, of course, a series of questions: Is the Torah a guide on morals? Is the Torah a manual for marriage and relationships? Is the Torah a history book? Is the Torah a book on theology?

Maybe the Torah is just trying to teach us stuff, he concluded.

Sounds right to me. Thanks for helping make that real.

Maybe the Torah is just trying to teach us stuff: Readers respond to tirade about Toldot

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Maybe the Torah is just trying to teach us stuff: Readers respond to tirade about Toldot - Forward

The ‘Cornbread Mafia’: Day one of the Summer Wells case on Dr. Phil – Johnson City Press (subscription)

The parents of missing 5-year-old Summer Wells were not given time on Dr. Phils stage, in person, during the first of two episodes the television show has titled The Disappearance of Summer Wells.

Airing Thursday, the first hour-long episode only showed Summers parents, Don Wells and Candus Bly, in pre-recorded videos. The shows host, Phil McGraw, Ph.D, instead spoke onstage with two men he described as body language or human behavior analysts.

Near the opening of the show, some video footage showed Don Wells driving through what appeared to be the Beech Creek community of Hawkins County, near the Sullivan County line in the Lone Star Road area.

As Wells spoke about June 15, the day Summer was reported missing by her parents, he pulled into an grassy area near Ben Hill Road, site of the familys home and where Summer was reported last seen by family members.

Wells said hed hurried home after Bly phoned him at work to say she couldnt find Summer, and arrived to see family and neighbors searching the area.

My heart sunk because I knew she was abducted, Wells said into the camera. I knew she was gone.

McGraw said Summers parents, like many people today who want to spread word quickly, turned to social media soon after their daughter was reported missing and while finding some support, also became targets of bullying, accusations, and threats.

The couple agreed to meet with body language analysts in what was presented to them as a way to help prove those online naysayers wrong, McGraw said.

The Dr. Phil Show website describes the two men as interrogators who have worked with the FBI, law enforcement and the military and have been referred to as a human lie detector.

The bulk of Thursdays show was devoted to clips from that meeting, which was videotaped near the familys home, and some blow-by-blow breakdowns of how McGraw and the two analysts interpreted the couples answers and physical reactions.

At one point a clip showed Wells answering the analysts questions about what he thinks happened to Summer, saying She was kidnapped.

McGraw red-flagged that, saying it was a departure from the earlier-used abducted. One of the analysts said kidnapping infers a transactional event.

Early in the show a clip was shown of Bly breaking down during the interview, crying and complaining that she felt interrogated and wanted to stop. She was shown removing the microphone attached to her clothing and leaving the room.

The three also weighed in on a clip edited down to Summers mothers answering no to three quickly-fired questions: Did she hurt Summer; does she know what happened to Summer; and does she know who took her daughter.

McGraw and the analysts, who agree they could easily be mistaken for law enforcement officers, drew attention to and replayed the portion of the tape of Bly saying no three times, once for each question. The three men specifically noted the third no was said in a lower voice after a slight side-to-side headshake.

Asked later what she thinks should happen to the person who took Summer, Bly paused before saying they should be put away for life. McGraw and the analysts said the pause raised questions for them.

Then it was pointed out she raised one eyebrow while thinking about her answer, which the analysts interpreted as her not being sure what she should say.

Later, McGraw and the analysts went back to the taped scene where Bly broke down crying and left, to reveal what shed been asked just before she lost her composure.

The two analysts had asked the couple if they thought the Cornbread Mafia could be involved in Summers disappearance.

Summers father said hed heard of something called the hillbilly mafia, but he and his family had tried to stay clear of them.

McGraw explained to his shows viewers that Cornbread Mafia is a colloquialism used to describe a grass-roots crime syndicate in Tennessee.

McGraw and the analysts replayed the video clip and said the mention of the Cornbread Mafia coincided with the beginning of Bly frowning, then beginning to cry, and said it showed she having a strong emotional reaction which could be anything from fear to guilt to pain. Her actions, they said, were signs of insulating and running.

After Bly said she felt like she was being interrogated and wanted not to continue the interview, Wells tied to calm her, saying the men were asking the questions to try and help find Summer.

Its not helping me, she said.

Before the final commercial break, about 50 minutes into the one-hour show, McGraw told viewers that the parents in-person appearance was next up. When the break was over, McGraw told the audience were out of time and said to tune in tomorrow to see whether the couple show up and if they do, whether Summers mother will stay onstage throughout McGraws questioning or leave the room.The show will air locally at 4 p.m. today on WJHL, showed Bly on the Dr. Phil set being asked about what happened to Summer.

I have no idea what happened, Bly said.

McGraw said he doesnt believe Bly began looking for Summer or called Wells as quickly as the two-to-three minutes Wells said that she said, calling it inconsistent with everything hes seen.

I do not have a hyper-vigilant mom here, McGraw said.

McGraw said he wasnt accusing Bly of wrong-doing, but it doesnt add up and when things dont add up he has questions.

The show was taped weeks ago. Summers parents have been contractually bound not to talk about their appearance prior to the shows airdates.

The rest is here:
The 'Cornbread Mafia': Day one of the Summer Wells case on Dr. Phil - Johnson City Press (subscription)

When Students Feel Helpless, Here’s How to Empower Them (Opinion) – Education Week

This is the first in a three-part series on the legacy of psychologist Albert Bandura, who wrote Ask a Psychologist pieces on self-efficacy and teaching moral behavior.

How do I help students feel like they have potential?

Young people need to believe their actions can make a difference for their future. Heres something I wrote recently about the topic for Character Lab as a Tip of the Week:

When Al Bandura died in July, he was 95 years old and among the most eminent psychologists in history.

In the year before his death, Al and I began a lively correspondenceby phone calls, email, and once via U.S. mail.

So much of what Al spent his career studyingand his own life exemplifyingis what all young people need in order to fulfill their dreams and their potential: personal agency.

What is agency? The conviction that you shape your own future.

What is the opposite of agency? Believing that youre helpless to make your dreams come true. Seeing yourself in lifes passenger seat, likely on a trajectory you dont like and didnt choose.

How did Al become so fascinated with agency? Early in his career, Al told me, he was a clinical psychologist working with patients with phobias. He noticed that fear is self-perpetuating. A patient who was afraid of heights, for example, would take pains to avoid skyscrapers, airplanes, or even stairwellsand thus never learn to overcome their fear.

And its not so much the fear and the rumination that are the problem, Al told me. Its believing youre helpless to change your emotions and thoughts. Thats the real problem.

In an experiment that would become the foundation of his theory of human behavior, Al showed that snake phobias could be cured by what he called guided-mastery treatment. This approach combines two active ingredients. First, the therapist models a desired behavior in response to a challenge (e.g., calmly looking at a photograph of a snake). Second, the therapist progressively ratchets up the level of challenge, ending with actually handling a live snake. The process is collaborative right up until the end, when the patient learns to manage challenges entirely on their own.

And do you know why I knew this was really important? Al asked me.

I didnt.

Because months and months later, some of the people in that study came back to see me in my Stanford office, he said. Not only were they still freed from their debilitating fear of snakes, they had a sense of resilience and efficacy in other areas of their lives as well. They had a sense of agency theyd never known before.

For parents and teachers, theres a profound lesson in this classic psychology research. And it is this: Young people need both challenge and support to develop confidence. We can neither solve all their problems for them nor expect them to grow without scaffolding.

Dont tell anyone they have complete control of their destiny. Thats not true. And yet each of us, no matter our circumstances, has some control, particularly over our own thoughts and actions.

Do provide training wheels. It may seem paradoxical, but the young person in your life needs your help to develop a sense of personal agency. They need you to nudge them to try things that scare them a little. When still finding their balance, they need your steady hand. And when theyre ready, they need you to let go, so they can pedal on their own.

See original here:
When Students Feel Helpless, Here's How to Empower Them (Opinion) - Education Week

Typing into the void: The joy of one-sided conversations with K-pop idols – Digital Trends

I watched yourJejuisland video! It looked like a very relaxing time. Thank you for your vlogs, theyre so much fun!

I recently sent this message to someone who probably wont ever see it, and absolutely will never reply directly to it. Yet it made me smile, it brought me happiness, and I do it most days. Before you ask, no, Im not stalking anyone. Its through an app that offers Direct Message-style conversation with K-pop idols, and its just one example of a growing number of apps that are connecting us to others, many of whom would normally be inaccessible, in very different ways.

Why would anyone invest time and money in a one-sided conversation? Is this illusion of intimacy the ultimate in fandom, or saddening evidence of loneliness only encouraged by addictive online services and the coronavirus pandemic? I think Im close enough to the subject to offer some insight and help you understand, but in order to really dig deep into why apps like these are gaining popularity, I also asked some experts.

If youre not a fan of K-pop or Japanese idols, you probably havent heard of DearUs Bubble with Stars, which is the app I use, or other similar apps like Universe and Weverse. For around $4 per star per month, I receive around a dozen messages a day from former global girl group IZ*ONE members Kang Hyewon and Kim Minju.

Their messages mostly detail the minutiae of life, like what they had for dinner, how work went, and what the weather is like in Seoul, while also revealing more of their personalities through jokes and comments. You could be forgiven for mistaking this feed for Twitter or Instagram, except these apps are not open to the general public. In fact, most of the apps repeatedly warn against sharing the posts made by artists outside of the app on other social networks, under penalty of permanent bans. Thats why we arent showing you actual message examples here.

Instead, its all presented like a messaging app directly connecting you with an idol. You see a scrollable stream of individual messages and images, some of which are even personalized, like Andy, what are you doing today? You can type out replies to messages and add emojis and stickers. Its just like messaging with your friends.

If the artist is engaged with the app and really understands how to use it, the illusion of directly messaging with them is utterly convincing. But it is still an illusion. The artist is not actually messaging you directly and when you reply, they will probably never read that message. And sorry, but on Bubble, you will never get a real, personal reply sent only to you. Although it may look and feel like a personal exchange, its absolutely not.

None of this is a secret to users. According to Bubbles developer, messages are sent by the idol, but they are not notified of any replies and cannot then send messages to one subscriber. However, replies are stored in a global inbox that can be accessed by the idol, giving a glimmer of hope a message may be read at some point. I know all this, but it doesnt bother me. Im also acutely aware that for those who arent fans, it must seem completely ridiculous. But theres more to it than you think.

I expect theres a good chance you are questioning why someone would want to have an entirely one-sided conversation, and actually pay for the privilege. Every time I send a reply through Bubble, the same question enters my mind. What do I get out of it? I talked about how relatively mundane the chat messages are, and this is actually part of the appeal, but its also connected to what it means to be a fan.

For me, I love the way the artists I follow reference things only a fan really understands, let you in on little jokes, and shares surprisingly personal aspects of their lives. She shares the good parts of her day, and I can reply by saying how good she was in her music show, or in her latest video. Its friendly, supportive, and heartwarming. Its common to receive messages of encouragement too, and because they are often personalized it feels surprisingly special. There are even times where you distinctly get the feeling the artist has read at least some of the replies, due to comments about the conversation made by other fans on Twitter.

The closeness that comes from using these apps is a strong aspect of idol fandom, and to get more perspective, I connected with Nathanial Vibar, a 26-year-old nurse and a fan of Japanese idol group Sakurazaka46, over Twitter to better understand why he sends replies through that groups messaging app.

This is our only way of giving back some of the happiness they bring into our lives,he told me. You do it because you want them to know that theres always someone out there supporting them and watching them grow.

Thismutualexchange of supportfor happinessis acommon threadinidol fandom, butalso of fandom generally.Why do we cheer for bands at concerts?Were expressing how happy they make us, even if we never expect them to spot us individually in the crowdand recognize us.Having an app where youexpress support to an artist, regardless of whether they see the note or not,accomplishes the same thingin a digital venue.

Nathanial gave me an example of what this looks like day-to-day for him. A few weeks ago it was an important anniversary for the group, and [a member of the group] asked in the app for replies from fans, Nathanial says. On that day in particular, I was feeling very sentimental, so I ended up sending her a very nicely worded message about how seeing her up on stage makes me happy. Even though I might not ever hear back from her, the chance that she might see the message and it brings a smile to her face gives me a warm feeling.

Reading fun messages and sending supportive repliesexplains the surface-levelappealofthese apps, but could there be a deeper meaning? I put the question of what it means to have one-sided conversations like these toRebecca Lockwood, Positive Psychology and Master Neuro-linguistic Programming Coach, who didnt pull any punches about her opinion on why someone may do this.

The need to feel significant in life can create the desire to connect with idols and people that we look up to, she wroteviaemail. The need for connection and to feel important can drive people to different kinds of behaviors and actions to try to fulfill it. It is an attempt to fill a need that is empty.

Put this way it doesnt sound like much fun, yet in my own experience, it is fun. Insight and Innovation Executive Natasha Kingdon from theLAB Group, a digital agency specializing in human behavior,believes there are benefits to this type of relationship.

Research has found that forming connections with stars, eventhroughone-sided relationships, can help those with low self-esteem find a support network or kinship that theycan notfind elsewhere, she explained via email.This need to fit in can be attributed to social identity theory,where affiliation with a group actually boosts self-esteem. The benefits of being part of a group (in this case a fandom) creates positivity and confidence in who they are, even without proper responses. The messages that are sent to the K-pop idol are almost secondary to the benefits that come out of being part of the group.

In my experience, K-pop fans are always welcoming and friendly. Positivity is almost as much a part of K-pop fandom as the idols themselves. K-pop groups also tend to organize themselves very effectively, and the group will usually give fans acollective name, further emphasizing the tribal aspect. Forexamplefans on IZ*ONE are known as WIZ*ONE, fans of the group Twice are known as Once, and BTS has its Army. However, Kingdon explained how it could also go a lot deeper than simply wanting to bepart of something.

In aCOVIDworld,there is less face-to-face interaction in real life than ever before. This is especially the case with single-bubble households across the world. With workplaces previously being a reliably social aspect of peoples days, new work-from-home policies becoming the norm has meant any form of interaction, virtual or non-human, is still beneficial.

Ive spent an inordinate amount of time on my own the last 18 months, at least compared to 2019 and before, so this does make some sense. However, its definitely not the only reason I send these messages. Being a supportive fan, as Nathanial described, is just as important to me. For fans who do seek a genuine sense of connection, some apps make it possible to go that step further.

While Bubble, Universe, and others like it all digitally connect you to a real person, you dont get any back-and-forth conversation. But you can if you replace the real person with finely tuned Artificial Intelligence (A.I.). Chatbots and other A.I. creations offer a sense of connection for users who cant, or dont want to, connect with real people.

TakeXiaoice, a massively popular A.I.-powered chatbot with an estimated user base of 660 million people. WhenSixth Tone spoke to people who regularly converse with Xiaoice, some described themselves as introverted and with low self-esteem, echoing Kingdons words, but all also talked about how Xiaoice provides comfort and companionship they cannot get from anyone else.

This need to connect, possibly when the ability to do so isnt an option in real life, is also a big draw of Gatebox, a smart home product along the lines of Google Home and Google Nest. Its due to Azuma Hikari, an A.I. character who lives inside the device. In addition to being virtually in your home, she can also communicate with you by message app. Like Xiaoice, the conversation is light and friendly, but with an intimacy people may not find elsewhere. I wanted to create something I could love, Gatebox CEO Minori Takechi said about the character.

To me, sending one-sided messages to an idol and sending messages to a chatbot arent all that different, and they arent if we listen to the psychologists, either. That both apps generate an emotional response, just like social media, does raise concerns over the effect they have on our mental health though. Internal research from Facebook recently revealed how Instagram has harmed body image for teenage girls in particular, and the harmful effects of infinite scrolling and social media are well documented. Unfortunately, Kingdon suggests similar issues may arise from the use of messaging apps like Bubble with Stars and Xiaoice.

Messages that come through could be interpreted as small rewards, which in turn release small amounts of dopamine. This creates an addiction to the phone messages and dopamine, creating a ludic loop. A ludic loop is when you repeat the same activity because your brain knows occasionally it will generate dopamine the reward, Kingdon explains. This can create unhealthy habits of expectancy and phone and app dependency, as well as being used as a substitute for face-to-face interactions which have been shown to have many positive benefits for mental health.

If chatbots and idol apps are fueled by a cocktail of pandemic loneliness, celebrity worship, and the addictive properties of social media, should we be concerned? Well, only if we focus on the negatives. In an essay for ThoughtCo, psychologist Cynthia Vinney wrote that parasocial relationships, the term given to one-sided connections with someone, are normal and psychologically healthy, and can lead to better real-life social interactions. A 2008 University of Buffalo study showed parasocial relationships can actually help improve self-esteem.

The last 18 months have changed our relationship with technology in many ways, whether its upgrading computer systems for home working, getting to grips with Zoom calls, or streaming movies rather than watching them in the theater. I see apps like Bubble with Stars and theparasocialrelationships they propagate as a continuation of this, just one thats little understood.

Yes, they are definitely the ultimate expression of fandom. But they also seem to help people cope with loneliness and low self-esteem. For me, I like getting messages from Minju and Hyewon. They are always fun, positive, and supportive, always make me smile or laugh, and are never confrontational or emotionally upsetting like social media can be. With those benefits, suddenly the time and money involved seem like a wise investment.

And yes, before you ask, I will send a Bubble message to both the idols telling them about writing this article.

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Typing into the void: The joy of one-sided conversations with K-pop idols - Digital Trends

Major Push Expected This Weekend in Search for Missing Seattle Firefighter – bigcountrynewsconnection.com

A major push is expected this weekend in the search for a missing Seattle firefighter who has been missing in a remote corner of Kittitas County for 10 days.

Seattle Deputy Fire Chief Jay Schreckengost was reported missing on Nov. 2 while scouting elk hunting locations near Cliffdell. Over the last 10 days, multiple agencies from across the region have mobilized in the search for Schreckengost, with daily searches averaging over 100 volunteers. The search is complicated by the steep terrain in the area, which is accessed by state Route 410, as well as snowy conditions at the altitude the search areas is located within.

Kittitas County Sherriffs Office Inspector Chris Whitsett said Thursdays search began before dawn, with search and rescue teams completing their briefing at Whistlin Jack Lodge prior to making the trek to the search area.

Weve got members of the incident command structure, including experts in operations, logistics, and planning, he said. All these people get together and coordinate all their assignments before deciding how to best distribute the resources on any given day.

As the search stretches into its second week, Whitsett said search and rescue teams have become intimately aware of the nuances within the search area, which is parceled out to effectively cover on foot. A search and rescue vehicle from King County contains a state planning team who work on mapping the search area in the push to allocate resources.

To aid in the effectiveness of search teams, Verizon and T-Mobile donated mobile cellular towers to provide coverage in the area, which would normally have none. Whitsett said a relay has been placed in the search area to extend the coverage for the teams on the ground.

They lent these from their own corporate resources, and were not paying a thing for it, he said. Otherwise, there would be zero cell signal.

CHALLENGING LOGISTICS

At the muster point for the search and rescue teams, Whitsett estimated the altitude to be approximately 2,300 feet. Although the center of the search area is approximately three miles from the muster point as the crow flies, he said teams must drive approximately 10 miles of dirt roads to access the area.

In those 10 miles, you gain almost 3,000 feet, he said. Youve got a significant elevation gain.

Whitsett said approximately 50 volunteers were working the search area on Thursday, a lower number he attributed to some crew members taking a break before what he expects to be a major push over the weekend.

Everybody has to take a down day at some point, he said. Weve had to start cycling our people out and telling them they have to take a day off, because people break if you dont do that. Last weekend on Saturday, we had over 150 people. On the weekend, a lot of search and rescue volunteers are able to come from all over the state.

With the KCSO leading the search, Whitsett said the partnerships forged between various agencies throughout the state for the effort to locate Schreckengost are critical, especially since search and rescue resources arent available at the state level.

The state relies on counties, and sheriffs offices are primarily responsible for search and rescue operations, he said. The state provides a support apparatus for the counties, and as this in our county, the incident command structure falls under our sheriffs office.

TRAINED EXPERTS

Although he said the KCSO has gotten immense feedback from residents wanting to help in the search process, Whitsett stressed that search and rescue crews are highly trained in the skills needed to conduct an operation of this magnitude, especially as it pertains to the challenging terrain and weather conditions in the search area.

The 153 people that came on last Saturday, every one of them has worked with, has trained with, and is certified under a formal search and rescue organization, he said. There are several benefits to that. There are liability and safety issues, and they know how to work a search.

Whitsett said team incident and operations commanders are also rotated out throughout the search to give team members a break during the grueling search effort.

There is a benefit to having continuity and having the same person the whole time, but its just not sustainable for anyone, he said.

Over the past 10 days, Whitsett said the incident command team has shifted between distinct phases in the search for Schreckengost. In the first days of the search, he said a team goal was to cover as much ground as possible. In recent days, he said that goal has shifted towards a more meticulous search with the understanding that Schreckengost has most likely taken shelter, making his location potentially more difficult to locate, especially when fresh snow falls in the search area.

He could be very well hidden, Whitsett said. Were going slower and using continual intelligence analysis from the planning folks that have expertise in human behavior in crises, who have studied what people do in survival situations like this. In cooperation with people who know this area, they help us to target where we focus, and then we go over those areas with a fine-toothed comb.

With Schreckengosts family on the ground participating in the search process, Whitsett said the search and rescue efforts will continue indefinitely.

Everybody who knows Chief Schreckengost has told us he has the personal resources and the training to know how to take care of himself in a crisis, he said. We have as much hope as we possibly can that hes been able to do that in this situation.

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Major Push Expected This Weekend in Search for Missing Seattle Firefighter - bigcountrynewsconnection.com

Dogs may not return their owners’ good deeds – Vet Candy

Domestic dogs show many adaptations to living closely with humans, but they do not seem to reciprocate food-giving according to a study.

The researchers trained 37 domestic dogs to operate a food dispenser by pressing a button, before separating the button and dispenser in separate enclosures. In the first stage, dogs were paired with two unfamiliar humans one at a time. One human partner was helpful - pressing their button to dispense food in the dog's enclosure - and one was unhelpful. The researchers also reversed the set-up, with a button in the dog's enclosure that operated a food dispenser in the human's enclosure. They found no significant differences in the dogs' tendency to press the button for helpful or unhelpful human partners, and the human's behavior in the first stage did not affect the dog's behavior towards them in free interaction sessions after the trials.

Previous studies have demonstrated that dogs are capable of directing helpful behaviors towards other dogs that have helped them previously - a behavior known as reciprocal altruism - and research suggests dogs are also able to distinguish between cooperative and uncooperative humans. However, the present study failed to find evidence that dogs can combine these capabilities to reciprocate help from humans. This finding may reflect a lack of ability or inclination among dogs to reciprocate, or the experimental design may not have detected it. For example, the authors suggest that the dogs may not have understood the experiment because humans are typically the food-giver in the relationship, not the receiver, or because the dogs failed to recognize the connection between the human's helpful behavior and the reward.

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Dogs may not return their owners' good deeds - Vet Candy

Would You Trust Teslas FSD Beta After Watching This Video? – CarScoops

Teslas driver assistance systems are currently under the scrutiny by federal authorities, but video footage of its full-self driving package in operation shows just how close it is to replicating real human behavior.

You might even say its a little too human-like after watching this video from AI DRIVR. The Tesla-driving YouTuber has been testing out the FSD Beta software for several months on his Model S and produced a number of videos that show the technology attempting to tackle different real-world traffic scenarios. And the latest video shows just how much more confident FSD has become in its latest 10.2 incarnation.

First, in its recent form it seems much better at predicting the behavior of other vehicles, rather than simply seeing their initial movement something thats always been one of the biggest issue with basic adaptive cruise control systems. We see a mail truck go to make a three-point turn in the road, and instead of trying to fit through the gap that appears when the truck makes the first part of its maneuver, the Tesla waits for the truck to back up and drive away.

But in other situations its assertiveness is genuinely surprising. It creeps forward at intersections on the Berkley, CA, route, and begins to move into the road before the other cars have fully cleared, just as a human driver might. At one junction it even cheekily cuts in front of a Prius, again, like a human might if they were late for work, and is rewarded by a blast of horn from the irate Toyota driver.

Related: Elon Musk Says Teslas Beta Testers Are Ignoring Their NDAs

The Model Seven treats stop signs like humans often do, not quite coming to a halt as it goes to make a right turn, but simply checking the road is clear before moving out. The maneuver is safe, but an officious cop could still pull you over.And when it needs to move wide to give cyclists room it crosses the central lines, moving deep into the oncoming lane, unperturbed by an approaching car. Which a human might do, too, but is a rather ill-advised move.

Tesla has received criticism from some tech experts for relying solely on camera-based systems rather than highly detailed maps and lidar, a technology Elon Musk has described as a stupid, expensive and unnecessary. Instead, it hopes to improve its cars self-driving capabilities by developing a neural network, drawing on the behavior and experiences of Tesla drivers.

Although Musk conceded that Teslas FSD Beta was actually not that great back in August, on this evidence, FSD does a mostly great job of tackling some tricky traffic situations on Berkleys narrow, twisty streets. But it doesnt get everything right, occasionally veering between lanes (fortunately on a quiet bit of road) when it gets confused. And there were a couple of occasions when the driver had to intervene.

Tesla warns drivers participating in the FSD Beta test to keep hold of the wheel at all times, and AI DRIVR claims he does, but you can imagine many other drivers leaving the car to its own devices.So, having seen this footage, would you let a FSD Tesla drive you home?

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Would You Trust Teslas FSD Beta After Watching This Video? - CarScoops

Would We Still See Ourselves as ‘Human’ if Other Hominin Species Hadn’t Gone Extinct? – Singularity Hub

In our mythologies, theres often a singular moment when we became human. Eve plucked the fruit of the tree of knowledge and gained awareness of good and evil. Prometheus created men from clay and gave them fire. But in the modern origin story, evolution, theres no defining moment of creation. Instead, humans emerged gradually, generation by generation, from earlier species.

As with any other complex adaptationa birds wing, a whales fluke, our own fingersour humanity evolved step by step, over millions of years. Mutations appeared in our DNA, spread through the population, our ancestors slowly became something more like us and, finally, we appeared.

People are animals, but were unlike other animals. We have complex languages that let us articulate and communicate ideas. Were creative: we make art, music, tools. Our imaginations let us think up worlds that once existed, dream up worlds that might yet exist, and reorder the external world according to those thoughts. Our social lives are complex networks of families, friends, and tribes, linked by a sense of responsibility towards each other. We also have awareness of ourselves and our universe: sentience, sapience, consciousness, whatever you call it.

And yet the distinction between ourselves and other animals is, arguably, artificial. Animals are more like humans than we might thinkor like to think. Almost all behavior we once considered unique to ourselves is seen in animals, even if theyre less well developed.

Thats especially true of the great apes. Chimps, for example, have simple gestural and verbal communication. They make crude tools, even weapons, and different groups have different suites of toolsdistinct cultures. Chimps also have complex social lives and cooperate with each other.

As Darwin noted in Descent of Man, almost everything odd about Homo sapiensemotion, cognition, language, tools, societyexists, in some primitive form, in other animals. Were different, but less different than we think.

And in the past, some species were far more like us than other apes: Ardipithecus, Australopithecus, Homo erectus, and Neanderthals. Homo sapiens is the only survivor of a once diverse group of humans and human-like apes, the hominins, which includes around 20 known species and probably dozens of unknown species.

The extinction of those other hominins wiped out all the species that were intermediate between ourselves and other apes, creating the impression that some vast, unbridgeable gulf separates us from the rest of life on Earth. But the division would be far less clear if those species still existed. What looks like a bright, sharp dividing line is really an artefact of extinction.

The discovery of these extinct species now blurs that line again and shows how the distance between us and other animals was crossedgradually, over millennia.

Our lineage probably split from the chimpanzees around six million years ago. These first hominins, members of the human line, would barely have seemed human, however. For the first few million years, hominin evolution was slow.

The first big change was walking upright, which let hominins move away from forests into more open grassland and bush. But if they walked like us, nothing else suggests the first hominins were any more human than chimps or gorillas. Ardipithecus, the earliest well-known hominin, had a brain that was slightly smaller than a chimps, and theres no evidence they used tools.

In the next million years, Australopithecus appeared. Australopithecus had a slightly larger brain;larger than a chimps, still smaller than a gorillas. It made slightly more sophisticated tools than chimps, using sharp stones to butcher animals.

Then came Homo habilis. For the first time, hominin brain size exceeded that of other apes. Tools like stone flakes, hammer stones, and choppers became much more complex. After that, around two million years ago, human evolution accelerated, for reasons were yet to understand.

At this point, Homo erectus appeared. Erectus was taller, more like us in stature, and had large brains, several times bigger than a chimps brain and up to two-thirds the size of ours. They made sophisticated tools, such as stone hand axes. This was a major technological advance. Hand axes needed skill and planning to create, and you probably had to be taught how to make one. It may have been a meta-tool used to fashion other tools, such as spears and digging sticks.

Like us, Homo erectus had small teeth. That suggests a shift from plant-based diets to eating more meat, probably from hunting.

Its here that our evolution seems to accelerate. The big-brained Erectus soon gave rise to even larger-brained species. These highly intelligent hominins spread through Africa and Eurasia, evolving into Neanderthals, Denisovans, Homo rhodesiensis, and archaic Homo sapiens. Technology became far more advanced; stone-tipped spears and firemaking appeared. Objects with no clear functionality, such as jewelry and art, also showed up over the past half-million years.

Some of these species were startlingly like us in their skeletons, and their DNA.

Homo neanderthalensis, the Neanderthals, had brains approaching ours in size, and evolved even larger brains over time until the last Neanderthals had cranial capacities comparable to a modern humans. They might have thought of themselves, even spoke of themselves, as human.

The Neanderthal archaeological record records uniquely human behavior, suggesting a mind resembling ours. Neanderthals were skilled, versatile hunters, exploiting everything from rabbits to rhinoceroses and woolly mammoths. They made sophisticated tools, such as throwing spears tipped with stone points. They fashioned jewelry from shells, animal teeth, and eagle talons, and made cave art. And Neanderthal ears were, like ours, adapted to hear the subtleties of speech. We know they buried their dead, and probably mourned them.

Theres so much about Neanderthals we dont know, and never will. But if they were so like us in their skeletons and their behavior, its reasonable to guess they may have been like us in other ways that dont leave a recordthat they sang and danced, that they feared spirits and worshipped gods, that they wondered at the stars, told stories, laughed with friends, and loved their children. To the extent Neanderthals were like us, they must have been capable of acts of great kindness and empathy, but also cruelty, violence, and deceit.

Far less is known about other species, like Denisovans, Homo rhodesiensis, and extinct sapiens, but its reasonable to guess from their large brains and human-looking skulls that they were also very much like us.

I admit this sounds speculative, but for one detail. The DNA of Neanderthals, Denisovans, and other hominins is found in us. We met them, and we had children together. That says a lot about how human they were.

Its not impossible that Homo sapiens took Neanderthal women captive, or vice versa. But for Neanderthal genes to enter our populations, we had to not only mate but successfully raise children, who grew up to raise children of their own. Thats more likely to happen if these pairings resulted from voluntary intermarriage. Mixing of genes also required their hybrid descendants to become accepted into their groups; to be treated as fully human.

These arguments hold not only for the Neanderthals, Id argue, but for other species we interbred with, including Denisovansand unknown hominins in Africa. Which isnt to say that encounters between our species were without prejudice, or entirely peaceful. We were probably responsible for the extinction of these species. But there must have been times we looked past our differences to find a shared humanity.

Finally, its telling that while we did replace these other hominins, this took time. Extinction of Neanderthals, Denisovans, and other species took hundreds of thousands of years. If Neanderthals and Denisovans were really just stupid, grunting brutes, lacking language or complex thought, its impossible they could have held modern humans off as long as they did.

Why, if they were so like us, did we replace them? Its unclear, which suggests the difference was something that doesnt leave clear marks in fossils or stone tools. Perhaps a spark of creativitya way with words, a knack for tools, social skillsgave us an edge. Whatever the difference was, it was subtle, or it wouldnt have taken us so long to win out.

While we dont know exactly what these differences were, our distinctive skull shape may offer a clue. Neanderthals had elongated crania, with massive brow ridges. Humans have a bulbous skull, shaped like a soccer ball, and lack brow ridges. Curiously, the peculiar smooth, round head of adult Homo sapiens is seen in young Neanderthals,and even baby apes.

Similarly, juvenilized skulls of wild animals are found in domesticated ones, like domestic dogs: an adult dog skull resembles the skull of a wolf pup. These similarities arent just superficial. Dogs are behaviorally like young wolves, less aggressive and more playful.

My suspicion, mostly a hunch, is that Homo sapiens edge might not necessarily be raw intelligence, but differences in attitude. Like dogs, we may retain juvenile behaviors, things like playfulness, openness to meeting new people, lower aggression, more creativity and curiosity. This in turn might have helped us make our societies larger, more complex, collaborative, open, and innovative, which then outcompeted theirs.

Until now, Ive dodged an important question, arguably the most important one. Its all well and good to discuss how our humanity evolved, but what even is humanity? How can we study and recognize it without defining it?

People tend to assume that theres something that makes us fundamentally different from other animals. Most people, for example, would tend to think that its okay to sell, cook, or eat a cow, but not to do the same to the butcher. This would be, well, inhuman. As a society, we tolerate displaying chimps and gorillas in cages but would be uncomfortable doing this to each other. Similarly, we can go to a shop and buy a puppy or a kitten, but not a baby.

The rules are different for us and them. Even die-hard animal-rights activists advocate animal rights for animals, not human rights. No one is proposing giving apes the right to vote or stand for office. We inherently see ourselves as occupying a different moral and spiritual plane. We might bury our dead pet, but we wouldnt expect the dogs ghost to haunt us, or to find the cat waiting in heaven.

And yet, its hard to find evidence for this kind of fundamental difference.

The word humanity implies taking care of and having compassion for each other, but thats arguably a mammalian quality, not a human one. A mother cat cares for her kittens, and a dog loves his master, perhaps more than any human does. Killer whales and elephants form lifelong family bonds. Orcas grieve for their dead calves, and elephants have been seen visiting the remains of their dead companions. Emotional lives and relationships arent unique to us.

Perhaps its awareness that sets us apart. But dogs and cats certainly seem aware of us they recognize us as individuals, as we recognize them. They understand us well enough to know how to get us to give them food, or let them out the door, or even when weve had a bad day and need company. If thats not awareness, what is?

We might point to our large brains as setting us apart, but does that make us human? Bottlenose dolphins have somewhat larger brains than we do. Elephant brains are three times the size of ours; orcas, four times; and sperm whales, five times. Brain size also varies in humans. Albert Einstein had a relatively small brainsmaller than the average Neanderthal, Denisovan, or Homo rhodesiensis was he less human? Something other than brain size must make us humanor maybe theres more going on in the minds of other animals, including extinct hominins, than we think.

We could define humanity in terms of higher cognitive abilities like art, math, music, or language. This creates a curious problem because humans vary in how well we do all these things. Im less mathematically inclined than Steven Hawking, less literary than Jane Austen, less inventive than Steve Jobs, less musical than Taylor Swift, less articulate than Martin Luther King. In these respects, am I less human than they are?

If we cant even define it, how can we really say where it starts and where it ends, or that were unique? Why do we insist on treating other species as inherently inferior if were not exactly sure what makes us, us?

Neither are we necessarily the logical endpoint of human evolution. We were one of many hominin species, and yes, we won out. But its possible to imagine another evolutionary course, a different sequence of mutations and historical events leading to Neanderthal archaeologists studying our strange, bubble-like skulls, wondering just how human we were.

The nature of evolution means that living things dont fit into neat categories. Species gradually change from one into another, and every individual in a species is slightly different; that makes evolutionary change possible. But that makes defining humanity hard.

Were both unlike other animals due to natural selection, but like them because of shared ancestry; the same, yet different. And we humans are both like and unlike each other; united by common ancestry with other Homo sapiens, different due to evolution and the unique combination of genes we inherit from our families or even other species, such as Neanderthals and Denisovans.

Its hard to classify living things in strict categories, because evolution constantly changes things, creating diverse species and diversity within species.

And what diversity it is.

True, in some ways, our species isnt that diverse. Homo sapiens shows less genetic diversity than your average bacterial strain; our bodies show less variation in shape than sponges, or roses, or oak trees.

But in our behavior, humanity is wildly diverse. We are hunters, farmers, mathematicians, soldiers, explorers, carpenters, criminals, artists. There are so many different ways of being human, so many different aspects to the human condition, and each of us has to define and discover what it means to be human. It is, ironically, this inability to define humanity that is one of our most human characteristics.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Image Credit: hairymuseummatt viaWikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA)

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Would We Still See Ourselves as 'Human' if Other Hominin Species Hadn't Gone Extinct? - Singularity Hub