Other Life
articles / books / lectures / interviews /
2025
  • The Supreme Court Should Be an Ensemble of LLMs
    LLMs can process human language with formal rigor—the function of Supreme Court justices.
  • The Bari Weiss Strategy
    Notes on a $150M playbook that's never been written down
  • In Domestic War, Beware the Rabble
    Notes on an "unfortunate season" of civil conflict
  • Alexander Karp's Iron Cage: A Review of The Technological Republic
    I wanted to love it, but Alexander Karp's new book is a mess of contradictions and a bloody revenge by the Frankfurt School against the school of American Optimism.
  • Deregulation and the State Arms-Race Each Other Into Cyberspace
    Reading Nick Land's Meltdown sentence by sentence.
  • The Body Count Climbs Through a Series of Globewars
    Reading Nick Land's Meltdown sentence by sentence.
  • Markets Manufacture Intelligence, Politics Upgrades Paranoia, and Tries to Get a Grip
    Reading Nick Land's Meltdown sentence by sentence.
  • The Next 5 Years of Other Life (Part 3)
    An annual review in 3 parts.
  • The Next 5 Years of Other Life (Part 2)
    An annual review in 3 parts.
  • The Next 5 Years of Other Life (Part 1)
    An annual review in 3 parts (with a shipping update on The Independent Scholar).
2024
  • Manny Farber's Rhizome
    An exploration of Manny Farber's aesthetic philosophy of 'Termite Art vs. White Elephant Art' and its connection to rhizomatic thinking.
  • On IVF and Embryo Selection
    Why genetic manipulation of babies leads to market slavery and embryonic holocaust, even by secular utilitarian standards
  • Libidinal Economies
    And how masterpieces are made.
  • Dostoevsky vs. Nietzsche
    And the second most fateful bookstore encounter in history...
  • You Can Probably Just Have It
    The right attitude and body language can obtain almost anything through confidence and presence.
  • Walls as a Service
    The removal of walls decreases the fraction of relevant space under your control.
  • How Renaissance Rationalization and Oceanic Navigation Locked Into Commodotization Takeoff
    On the first sentence of Nick Land's Meltdown.
  • Logistically Accelerating Techno-Economic Interactivity
    Reading Nick Land's Meltdown sentence by sentence.
  • The Life of Spinoza as an Independent Scholar
    How did a lens-grinder who published only two failed books during his lifetime become one of the most influential philosophers in history? The keys to Spinoza's success as an independent scholar.
  • No Doesn’t Always Mean No
    Nietzsche, Marinetti, Ecuador, and my new print book coming soon
  • On Angelicism and Post-Academic Futures
    Become imperceptible, not illegible.
  • Angels and Communication
    How the visible world hangs together.
  • The Divorce Revolution: How a Social Tragedy Became a Personal Triumph
    Divorce rates increased from 1960 to 1980, partially thanks to an academic trend led by divorced women. Upper-class divorce rates have stabilized, but working-class divorce rates continue to rise. Divorce harms children in most cases, contrary to earlier claims.
  • Video Game Syndrome
    In the 21st century, it's easy to forget you are not Super Mario.
  • Wittgenstein's Religion
    "The facts of the world are not the end of the matter." —Wittgenstein
  • The Social Mobility Illusion
    On Gregory Clark's 2014 book The Son Also Rises, one of the most remarkable economics book I've read this year.
  • Urbit and the Telos of the Creator Economy
    A long-running historical gradient suggests that individuals will enjoy full control over the creation, distribution, and monetization of their work, eventually evading all centralized platforms and arbitrary constraints.
  • What to Do After the Orgy
    Baudrillard famously asked, "What are you doing after the orgy?" Our answer: Take a leap of faith about the ultimate truth, then harness the chaos of modernity to bring that truth into being.
  • Ask for the Truth: Marshall McLuhan's Catholicism
    "Wham! I became Catholic the next day."
  • Society Is a Corpse That Purges at the Mouth
    On Mary Moody Emerson.
  • The Montaigne Paradox
    The greatest social power is achieved by withdrawing from society.
  • Write to Yourself and Yourself Alone
    Sibi scribere.
  • Looking for Spinoza by Antonio Damasio: Detailed Summary
    Joy, Sorrow, and the Feeling Brain.
  • Bad Therapy by Abigail Shrier: Detailed Summary
    Why the Kids Aren't Growing Up
  • I See Satan Fall Like Lightning by RenĂ© Girard: Detailed Summary
  • Kant, Capital, and the Prohibition of Incest by Nick Land: A Detailed Guide
    The high-water mark of revolutionary Deleuzian Feminism.
  • After Virtue by Alisdaire MacIntyre: A Detailed Guide
    A critique of modern moral discourse and a proposal to revive the Aristotelian tradition of virtue ethics.
  • The Rising Returns to Focus
    And the accelerating rate of paradigm turnover
  • On the Unleavened (A Thought for Easter)
    "Therefore let us keep the Festival, not with the old bread leavened with malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth." —Corinthians 5:8
  • The Height From Which No One Is Cast Down
    Seneca on philosophy as immortality
  • There Is a Time to Polish Your Rifle and a Time to Fire
    Stendhal, Sex, Classics, Jews
  • A Simple View of Bitcoin in Historical Perspective
    What could enjoy the Mandate of Heaven more than an autopoietic truth system offensive to all prestigious consensus and immune to human manipulation?
  • Nietzsche on the Pride of the Philosopher in Contrast to the Slave
    Slavery gets a bad rap, but it had one silver lining.
  • On the Miracle and Scandal of Education
    You are allowed to go straight to true knowledge of the highest things.
  • Diogenes on Excellence and How to Be Unstoppably Happy
    “Many men compete in digging and kicking, but no one at all in the pursuit of human excellence.” —Diogenes
  • On Idea Hoarding
    Stop saving your best ideas for later because later never comes.
  • St. Francis and the Obscure Logic of Cultural Influence
    Do you have what it takes to leave behind a long-lasting institution?
  • Unpopular Truths About Mate Selection
    A man should not seek intellectual satisfaction from his wife, but from the only place men have ever found it.
  • And We're Back... Welcome to Other Life 2024
    A return to the masters, a republic of letters.
2023
  • Nick Land on AI Acceleration
    "The world is becoming hypersensitive to signs."
  • There is No Winning the Culture War
    To win the culture war, leave the culture war.
  • The Independent Scholar's Guide to Twitter/X
    On Algorithmic Publishing with Dignity
  • Emerson's 21 Principles of Self-Reliance
    Why intelligence and knowledge are overrated, while honesty and courage are underrated.
  • On Shakespeare, Wyoming, and Merely Staying Afloat
    “You are hanging on by a very fine thread, and I dig that about you.”
  • Return to the Future of Classical Education
    Three reflections toward the acceleration of traditional knowledge.
  • Generate Subtle Tweets From an Essay in the Style of the Author
    This script will take your essay text, extract key points, and use function-calling to create a subtle thread composed of your ideas. It works and it’s damn better than any tweet generator I’ve ever...
  • How to Build Software With Natural Language
    I’ve built two fully-functioning web apps so far. One is deployed to the web, the other will be soon. They both do things, and they both can take payments that go into my bank account. Each one took...
  • Recursively Self-Improving Writers
    Then, about two weeks ago, I had a real idea...
  • The Delirium of Reason: On William Gibson's Neuromancer (1984)
    "Your business is to learn the names of programs, the long formal names, names the owners seek to conceal. True names."
  • Intent on Truth: St. Augustine's Philosophy of History in The City of God
    "Life eternal is the supreme good, death eternal the supreme evil, and that to obtain the one and escape the other we must live rightly."
  • If You Can Articulate, You’re All Set: Russell, Yeats, Gaddis
    "The things I want are not in any country, nor in any job." —William Gaddis
  • Everything You Know About Audience-Building is Wrong
    And what you should do instead.
  • War as the Truest Form of Divination: On Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian
    Meet the 7-foot albino who says you should petition directly the chambers of the historical absolute.
  • The Solitary Volcano: Four Lessons from the Life of Ezra Pound
    "If a man isn't willing to take some risk for his opinions, either his opinions are no good or he's no good." —Ezra Pound
  • Ezra Pound and the Aristocratic Spirit
    On the Pursuit of Artistic Excellence
  • Signaling Through the Flames: Artaud's Inquisition
    “I cannot conceive any work of art as having a separate existence from life itself.”
  • Catholic Instead of What? By Alasdair MacIntyre
    Transcript of a public lecture by Alasdair MacIntyre.
  • René Girard's Anthropology of the Cross
    Can social science vindicate religion, or should we respect the Cartesian Bargain instituted 400 years ago?
  • On Julien Benda's The Treason of the Intellectuals (1927)
    "The most insignificant writer can serve peace, where the most powerful tribunals can do nothing."
  • The Industrialization of the Mind
    Reflections on the judicious use of social media.
  • Literary Outlaw: Three Lessons from William S. Burroughs
    Never seek to impress, having kids is no excuse, and the absolute necessity of a high-intensity, private friend group.
  • From Self-Pity to Pulitzer: Lessons from the Life of John Kennedy Toole
    Why you should never count yourself out as a writer, especially in the internet era.
  • Reading is Selfish, Elitist, and Anti-Social
    Reflections on Harold Bloom's How to Read and Why (2000)
  • Welcome to the new Other Life
    I am asking you to quit all of your passive media consumption to read great books and write the truth every single day. Or unsubscribe now!
  • A Child is Not the Most Important Thing
    Eames Lounge Chair and Ottoman (1956) by Charles and Ray Eames
  • A machine superintelligence might never display itself
    This seems to me a crucial point not often discussed by the AI Risk folks such as Bostrom and Yudkowsky. Whether it’s a bug or a feature of the AI Risk industry is harder to know, a thorn in the side...
  • A Realm of One's Own: Urbit and the Next Creator Economy
    Holium's new desktop app for Urbit communities
  • A Theory of Verbal Inflation
    “All the perplexities, confusion, and distress in America arise, not from want of honor or virtue, but from the downright ignorance of the nature of coin, credit, and circulation.” —John Adams in a...
  • Abjection
    To be a philosopher one must be abject, and the reason a lot of people don't understand anything about this concept is because most contemporary philosophers want to be respected; they want to be in...
  • AcademiaLeaks, University of Chicago Edition
    I was just sent this by an anonymous reader. It's not private but it's not in the news. The reader says "Haha imminent collapse. For real though, mostly suggestions for more committees..." They went...
  • Advancing to Level 2
    I’ve now been on Patreon for one year. It's been good, but I think I need to level up. Would you like to help? If so, I have a new flashy object with your name on it. Read on.
  • Against the Epistemic Status
    I've been considering the idea of assigning an "epistemic status" to each of my blog posts, in the fashion of Scott Alexander. Basically: adding an addendum at the top of each blog post indicating...
  • Algorithms and prayers
    The mild-mannered socialist humanist says it's evil to use algorithms to exploit humans for profit, but the articulation of this objection is an algorithm to exploit humans for profit. Self-awareness...
  • All men by nature desire to know
    “All men by nature desire to know.” — Aristotle, Metaphysics
  • An automated system for delivering high volumes of exclusive content to patrons
    This took a lot of tinkering, but I think I've finally figured out the best currently available way to manage and deliver a wide variety of exclusive items to patrons.
  • An Effort Allocator for Content Creators
    If you're trying to build a long-term intellectual life on the internet, one of the biggest problems you'll face is figuring out how to allocate your effort. There is no template for doing this...
  • American Cities are Vastly Superior to European Cities
    Somehow, Americans have gotten the impression that European cities are paragons of intelligent urbanism.
  • Are Politically Correct Students Better or Worse Students?
    In my current book project, one of my goals is to provide the fullest possible empirical accounting of the strange new persona sometimes derisively called the "social justice warrior."
  • Are the greatest beneficiaries of Effective Altruism its proponents?
    [I’m not sure how much I believe this, this just barely passed my threshold of post-worthiness.]
  • Audience structure on the Left and Right of new indy media
    It looks to me like the audience structure of public intellectuals and/or "content creators" differs across the Right and Left. Right-leaning writers/creators in contemporary culture seem to enjoy a...
  • Barbarians Past the Gate
    2 million full-time “content creators,” outside any professional sanction; the election of Donald Trump against an airtight media consensus certain of its impossibility; mass, hysterical preference...
  • Bear Traps
    It is very clever how Moldbug chooses extra-provocative phrases and examples—for instance, extended reflections on the successful infrastructure projects of the Third Reich. He likes to purposefully...
  • Becoming Imperceptible (1)
    Deleuze and Guattari repeatedly stress the importance of becoming imperceptible, but the idea remains poorly understood.
  • Beware, rationalism!
    A fatal flaw of rationalism is that the spread of rational thinking often causes a net-decrease of rationality across the population. For every type of logical fallacy, for instance, there is a...
  • Bioweapon
    A few months ago, Martin Shkreli wrote a blog post from prison entitled, "Love is a Battlefield." It was about the stock market. The post never mentions love or battlefields. I've been wondering what...
  • Calling all indie thinkers (literally)
    Over the past week, I’ve conducted more than ten private Skype interviews with a diverse group of internet intellectuals, “content creators” of the higher-brow variety, cancellation-vulnerable...
  • Camping in Bear Country
    Timothy Treadwell in Werner Herzog's Grizzly Man (2005)
  • Can you do a PhD if you have ADHD?
    I received this question recently from a reader. Here is how I replied. I also made this video if you’d prefer to hear my thoughts that way. This post and the video are not exactly the same.
  • Catholicism as Nomad War Machine (Deleuze and Chesterton)
    Oddities do not strike odd people. This is why ordinary people have a much more exciting time; while odd people are always complaining of the dulness of life.  Imagination does not breed insanity....
  • Caviar Cope
    I watched The White Lotus because my wife told me about it, and I saw people talking about it. I didn't really enjoy the first episode, and I didn't learn anything, but I figured it would get better,...
  • Communism Is Pay-What-You-Want Pricing and Nothing Else
    Money is a trap, but how? For many years I believed that radical intellectuals and political revolutionaries (interchangeable terms, I thought) should simply eschew instrumental calculations...
  • Cyber-Hype Techonomics: The CCRU and Crypto
    The endpoint of the digital revolution is cyber-hype techonomics, the confluence of cyber-hype (the digital coordination of collective desire around the promise of a future outcome) and techonomics...
  • Database Animals, Financialized
    Broadway Boogie Woogie (1942) by Piet Mondrian
  • Decouple intellectualism and intelligence
    Speak of the intellectual life and a lot of people will think you’re pretentious; they think you’re calling yourself intelligent.
  • Defacing the Currency (How Academia Got Pwned #9)
    This is the ninth post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life. This will probably become a book. If you'd like to hear...
  • Deleuze, Cybernetics, Evolution, Academics
    Alexander Galloway thinks that Deleuze sees cybernetics as an enemy, or even the enemy:
  • Deleuze’s Troublesome Inheritance (Excerpt from Based Deleuze)
    Now that the book is a little more than 75% done, I figure I should start posting some excerpts. Did you know Deleuze’s parents were both fascists? Good son that he was, though, he never disavowed...
  • Democrats wanted strongman rule way more than Republicans — until Trump arrived
    That graph is from the new book by political scientists Pippa Norris and Ronald Inglehart (2019), Cultural Backlash: Trump, Brexit, and Authoritarian Populism.
  • Depressive capitalist realism
    I recently received an email challenging some of my past comments on depression and public political theorizing. Here is the main gist of the email and beneath it is my response.
  • Disconnected
    Once again, I'm absolutely plagued with a desire to quit everything normal, to mentally and socially withdraw from everything one is supposed to know...
  • Disrobed Academics, Crimethinc Anarchism, and the Resurrection
    Thanks to some good questions in last night's livestream, I managed to give a relatively concentrated hour of talking, with a surprisingly high signal/noise ratio (relative to my average, which isn't...
  • Does a country's separation of powers affect its status culture?
    I was recently wondering whether countries with more centralized executive and legislative powers (less checks and balances) might have more status-intensive cultures — or in some way a qualitatively...
  • Dr. Samuel Johnson: Hustler, Savage, Grifter, Great
    Samuel Johnson's Club. From the left: Boswell, Johnson, Reynolds, Garrick, Burke, Paoli, Burney, Wharton, Goldsmith
  • Durkheim Meltdown
    The French sociologist Émile Durkheim believed that one defining feature of a profession is that the attitudes and behaviors that count as "professional" within it are of no interest to the general...
  • Early Days of Defacing the Currency (How Academia Got Pwned 10)
    This is the tenth post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life. This will probably become a book. If you'd like to hear...
  • Educated Errors? On Perceptions of Trump's Ideology
    More educated individuals generally know more than less educated individuals. If you test what they know about any random political issue, for instance, uneducated individuals are more likely to give...
  • Eichmann in Oxford
    I have recently been assigned to an Ethics Reviewer position, and I just had my first training. One of the lecture slides for this training was quite audacious: It placed the UK's current academic...
  • Emerson on the American Scholar
    I've recently taken to the life and work of Ralph Waldo Emerson because he was arguably the first world-class public intellectual of a distinctly American type. Of course there were great thinkers...
  • Empty Pockets
    Electronic Superhighway: Continental U.S., Alaska, Hawaii (1995) by Nam June Paik
  • Eric Weinstein's Error
    Eric Weinstein has released his highly self-aggrandized anticipated research paper on geometric unity.
  • Evaluating Exit Modes: Resign or Be Fired? (How Academia Got Pwned 11)
    This is the eleventh post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life.
  • Every Angel is Terrifying by Riva Tez and Praxis Society
    Riva Tez and Praxis Society just published a really lovely video, which I think deserves to be read as text. I transcribed it for my own archive, so I figured I might as well post some of my favorite...
  • Exponential Satanism: Girard and Digital Technology
    Christianity invented the concept of defending the victim. In pre-Christian societies, collective violence against innocent scapegoats was commonplace. With the revelation that humans would kill God...
  • Explaining Who Gets to Speak at Universities
    I recently received the following question from a journalist (paraphrased): "Universities host many Islamist extremists as speakers, but they order comedians performing on campus to not offend...
  • Ezra Pound and the Curse of Genius
    I mentioned last week I've been reading about the life of Ezra Pound, which is somehow both inspiring and sobering.
  • Fascism over yourself is called autonomy
    When I recently sketched out a system for bootstrapping a libertarian communist society from a combination of AI and blockchain, I was genuinely surprised to receive so many indignant accusations to...
  • Fear and Dissembling
    Philosophically, it is impossible to ground claims about the ultimate value or quality of living entities, e.g. genetic quality.
  • Flannery O'Connor and the Mysterious Secrets of Writing
    In 1955, Harvey Breit asked the great Irish-American writer Flannery O'Connor, "What is the secret of writing?" She said:
  • Free Hierarchy
    Libertatem hierarchia. What we call European feudalism was the becoming–patchwork of the Roman Empire. As the control structures of the Roman Empire atrophied, and the de facto liberty of its...
  • From the Imperceptible Country
    The Other Life community is also known as the Imperceptible Country. Think of it as a Web2.5 community.
  • Fully automated personal brands
    Right now, it’s still seen as bad taste to overly automate your personal social media — and for good reason. But taste changes, and it always follows the money.
  • Fully Automated Luxury Communism as Rousseauean Techno-Commercial Cyber-Manorialism
    My take on Fully Automated Luxury Communism is that — if it is anything — it should probably look something like a Rousseauean techno-commercial cyber-manorialism. In short, think The Four Hour Work...
  • Garden State Cybergothic
    I grew up in New Jersey, but I got out as soon as I graduated high school. Never really did much site-seeing or interesting travel within NJ, I mostly just skateboarded in the Asbury Park area and...
  • Genetic research disrupts racist views of welfare
    Following on my post from yesterday, I've been thinking about how the widespread and often racist views of "welfare" in the United States — especially among poor whites — fester on top of the...
  • Getting High on Easter Sunday
    I got high in the morning, for the first time since I can remember. There exists a defensible Christian opposition to drugs, no doubt, but it's poorly calibrated to the Information Age.
  • Hallow be thy name
    To say that one believes in God is to be stupid and wrong by the definition of these words in modern secular culture. And yet I believe that I believe, so how? The word “God” does not mean what...
  • Hard Forking Reality (Part 1)
    TLDR: Environmental complexity increases the cost of adjudicating interpersonal disagreements about the true model of reality, while information-processing power increases the payoffs (and decreases...
  • Gunslingers and Iconoclasts
    More shootouts have occurred in Texas than any other state in the US.
  • Hard Forking Reality (Part 2): Communication and Complexity
    This post is the second in a three-part series. You can also read Part 1 and Part 3.
  • Hard Forking Reality (Part 3): Apocalypse, Evil, and Intelligence
    This post is the third in a three-part series. You can also read Part 1 and Part 2.
  • Hateful Silence
    What's great about modern tolerance is that we're rarely confronted with negative judgments about our personal choices (notwithstanding the resultingly elevated sensitivity to negative judgments,...
  • Heard Mentality
    The trial of Johnny Depp vs. Amber Heard is like a magical keyhole into the hidden realities of Hollywood power politics and modern gender relations. It’s like a little wormhole in the Hollywood...
  • How Academia Got Pwned (1)
    This is the first post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life.
  • How accurate social valuation of individual characters generates true communism
    But how would this create communism, you ask? Well, first of all, the small number of highly productive people would want to pay for a comfortable and dignified subsistence for everybody else! Why...
  • How I'm Successfully Digitizing Another Professorial Function: Consulting
    [Update: Much of this turned out to be prescient, in fact so prescient that a lot below has been transcended by the creation of IndieThinkers.org. So I'm not really helping many people personally and...
  • How many readers do you need? Kierkegaard only hoped for one
    From Copenhagen on his 30th birthday (May 5, 1843), Kierkegaard wrote the following in the Preface for his first book, Two Upbuilding Discourses:
  • How to Deal With Punishment According to Nietzsche and Spinoza
    I was just reviewing my copy of Nietzsche's The Genealogy of Morals, before I send it off to someone through Version 2 of my book recommendation experiment. The person said they wanted something I...
  • How to kill the grump in your head (Deleuzean #NiceRx?)
    I can sometimes sense inside of myself, already, the early stirrings of elderly grumpiness. Needless to say, I do not like this, and so at this relatively early stage in my life, I must do everything...
  • How Urbit Wins
    Philip Monk co-authored the Urbit whitepaper with Curtis Yarvin in 2016. He's now one of the top engineers working on Urbit.
  • Hunger Games But Really Slow
    Une Passion Dans Le Désert (2017) by Antonio Recalcati
  • Hyperstition Americana
    I like Lana Del Rey. She’s not super hot, and she's not a great singer — but she’s become an entity that is “super hot” and “great singer.” That’s true art.
  • I Have a Dream (How Academia Got Pwned 6)
    This is the sixth post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life. At some point, I will very likely edit and compose this...
  • I think I built a Liberal Arts college on the internet
    I've spent the past 2 years building a business.
  • If education is signaling, does moral signaling become a viable major?
    In a recent post, I encountered an interesting empirical fact about the college wage premium accruing to low-ability college grads over the period 1979-1994. Looking at a 2003 article by Tobias,  I...
  • Inscrutably Obvious: A Paradox of Technological Change
    In 1997, everyone thought the cable industry was dead.
  • Intelligence as a political cleavage
    Intelligence is increasingly a political cleavage, thanks to the phenomenon of skill-biased technological change.
  • Introducing Deleuze vs. Heidegger on Technology, Enslavement,‹ and Escape
    That’s the title of an online course I’m developing with Johannes Niederhauser. You may remember Johannes from his widely admired appearance on Other Life: “Heidegger, Ecstatic Time, and the...
  • Introducing Statistical On-Chain Analysis
    Impulse Response Functions exemplify the insightfulness of proper time-series analysis, showing the expected effect of X on Y over time. Graph by Kevin Kotzé.
  • IRLmaxxing Against the Soydevs, Indie Magazines, Filmmaking, Urbit
    Today I want to share some highlights from the last few episodes of the Other Life podcast.
  • Is Facebook the Largest Corporate Fraud Ever?
    Jaw-dropping new post up today on Naked Capitalism, “Facebook: Mark Zuckerberg’s Fake Accounts Ponzi Scheme,” by Aaron Greenspan.
  • Is it racist to use the Kekistani flag?
    I was recently queried by a reporter in Arizona covering a story about some conservative university students who caused a scandal by displaying a Kekistani flag. It turns out that I am now the...
  • It's rational to move somewhere beautiful to write
    Having unique and true ideas is, pound for pound, the most valuable human resource in the world. If you are blessed with periodically arriving flashes of insight, in the long-run it is economically...
  • Is parental social status a mixed blessing? On toleration for occupational drudgery
    Many people assume that coming from parents with high social status is an advantage, because it would appear to increase the probability of gaining high social status for oneself. But what if...
  • Left Singularity
    
modern political history has a characteristic shape, which combines a duration of escalating ‘progress’ with a terminal, quasi-punctual interruption, or catastrophe – a restoration or ‘reboot’. Like...
  • Let’s make personal computers rugged, dignified, and enduring
    A Sol LeWitt wall drawing in construction
  • Lessons from Nietzsche’s Awful Publishing Results
    Independent intellectuals today should study closely one of the most profound and impactful thinkers in all of modern philosophy: Friedrich Nietzsche. I’m not referring to his ideas (although one...
  • Life update from the Sunshine State
    It's been about three months since I set sail from all currently existing institutions. After finalizing our business in the UK, saying goodbyes, and flying back to the United States, it's now been a...
  • Logistically Accelerating Techno-Economic Interactivity
    "Logistically accelerating techno-economic interactivity crumbles social order in auto-sophisticating machine runaway." —Nick Land, Meltdown
  • Make Communism Elite Again (Corralling Desperate Hordes Is Not a Blueprint)
    Any serious theory of communism needs to have not only an account of how and why communism has always failed, but also an account of how and why it could work differently now. Ideally, a parsimonious...
  • Millennials, Migrate to Mountain Mansions
    [In less than 30 days my wife and I are packing up our few belongings and driving up into Colorado, Utah, and/or Montana. We haven’t decided where yet, but we’re going to be renting somewhere,...
  • Modern Liberalism Is Not Peace, It's Pacification
    Readers of my work over the past few years will know that I have long been interested in how natural human rebelliousness gets pacified (1, 2, 3).
  • Multiple heuristic equilibria (cognitive patchwork)
    If we are living through a “semantic apocalypse,” a likely implication is that the signal-to-noise ratio in most explicit political debates is not only lower than it might seem, but asymptotically...
  • Mushrooms, Modafinil, and Mass Shooters (How Academia Got Pwned 2)
    This is the second post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life. Tell me: Would you like to read the whole story, edited, in...
  • Mussolini: A Wormhole in the Fabric of History?
    Hyperrealistic fashion photograph Benito Mussolini in Balenciaga puffy coat, Moncler, walking the streets of Rome natural outdoor lighting --ar 16:9 --v 5
  • Not everyone needs to be heard
    One of the worst mistakes I made as a younger man was believing that everyone just “needs to be heard.” Some do. I don't relinquish at all my conviction that exhaustive, collective, emotional...
  • NXIVM was a rationality cult
    From 1998 to 2018, Keith Raniere built one of the most rationally optimized private enterprises in recorded history. NXIVM was a private company that synthesized all of the most powerful and...
  • Now, wars start themselves
    Major wars have become less frequent, but a curious feature of the wars we still observe is that almost nobody starts them. When wars occur today, they appear to start themselves, or are started by...
  • Not making progress or losing motivation?
    As I wrote a few weeks ago, I was recently hired on a monthly retainer to do some intellectual consulting. Basically, a very smart person just needed to some help getting a project off the ground —...
  • Occupations and Their Ideologies
    Occupations are strongly sorted by ideology. Political scientist Adam Bonica has produced reliable and consistent estimates of ideological placement for a huge number of individuals, politicians, and...
  • On British Reservedness and American Boisterousness
    The British are known be to reserved, and Americans boisterous, but I don’t think Americans communicate more in their higher volume of noises and gesticulations. If one could somehow measure the...
  • On Agnes Callard
    Greek Girls Playing Ball (1889) by Frederic Leighton
  • On Intellectual Twitter Beefs
    Smart and capable people spend vast amounts of time engaged in useless, circular debates on a platform that is arguably designed to thwart intellectual illumination. Why? No sane person would ever...
  • On Not Being Fired (How Academia Got Pwned 12)
    This is the twelfth post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life. This will probably become a book. If you'd like to hear...
  • On the business model of the private intellectual
    I built my business in order to run a successful research program, including for the analysts that work at Bismarck. The priority often there is intellectual growth, accumulation of this type of...
  • On Those Who Worship the Big Other
    Nina Power just lost her gig at The Wire because of her appearance on my measly haphazard experimental one-man Youtube channel with no particular identity and a whopping ~2k followers. (Feel free to...
  • On Writing in the Age of Machine Intelligence
    On taste and brand in the face of AI acceleration.
  • Open Letter Concerning Luke Turner
    In a paranoiac and libelous screed written recently against Nina Power, yours truly is mentioned several times. The so-called "open letter" calls me a neo-reactionary, among other things I am not....
  • Other implications and observations
    Now, for all the anti-communist right-wingers out there, you might still strongly doubt all of this. And indeed, you have some good reasons to fear that in such a situation the Masses would...
  • Paid Vacation Begins (How Academia Got Pwned 3)
    This is the third post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life.
  • Personal Computer or Personal Enemy?
    The personal computer has become a personal enemy.
  • Paul Skallas Is a Scammer and I Called It in 2020
    I just have to take a little victory lap on this one

  • Peter Thiel's Theory of California
    I'm constantly hearing about California’s acute mismanagement problems, but I haven't heard any good, general theories of what's going on. Until recently.
  • Post-Structuralism and False Authority
    A major epistemological foul in Continental Philosophy is that it often treats concepts as if they were tested and validated empirical models, when they are not. People routinely speak as if X’s...
  • Progress report for first book project
    I launched a pre-order form for Based Deleuze a little more than a month ago (June 20, 2019). I committed to publishing a short book of about 20k words by September 20 at the latest.
  • Quick note on a site change
    For those of you who've subscribed to receive my blog posts via email, you'll notice my posts are now coming from a different email address. This is just a quick note to let you know, in case you're...
  • Radical Europeans of the Twentieth Century — In Color
    Machine-learning techniques for automated colorization are increasingly effective and accessible. I came across a Python library by Algorithmia that makes colorization very easy. If you have a...
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson, Self-Reliance, and Intellectual Strategy
    In 1836, when his Twitter profile still showed nothing but some obscure username and the face of a Roman statue, Ralph Waldo Emerson published a badass blog post called Nature. The day before he...
  • Rap is not art but it’s cool
    Rap is not art, it’s stylized abjection. Same with punk. Indeed, this is one reason why it has been possible for rap and punk to merge today, musically and sociologically. Who ever would have...
  • Reasons not to start an online magazine
    TLDR: The magazine model is not the best choice for indie intellectuals trying to start something. Two reasons: (1) Accelerating digital culture requires you to move fast and group projects move...
  • Religion, guilt, and creativity
    One feature of religion a lot of secular people do not understand is that, although religion can make one feel guilty at times, it also prevents one from feeling guilty about trivial matters. Secular...
  • Religion is an extra-rational condition for the possibility of rationality
    G.K. Chesterton happily understood in advance what the Frankfurt School theorists only observed with great horror after the fact. Namely, that without an authority such as the Catholic Church, placed...
  • Remodeling the Units and Flows of Intellectual Production (How Academia Got Pwned 8)
    This is the eighth post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life. This will probably become a book. If you'd like to hear...
  • Reputation (How Academia Got Pwned 5)
    This is the fifth post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life. At some point, I will very likely edit and compose this...
  • Respectability Is Not Worth It (Reply to SlateStarCodex)
    I've had some vague notion of trying to contribute more to other intellectual communities, but whenever I start to write a quick reply, I end up hunched over in a room gone dark from nightfall with a...
  • Rethinking intellectual production models (How Academia Got Pwned 7)
    This is the seventh post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life. This will probably become a book. If you'd like to hear...
  • Review of Based Mansion LA: Observations, Finances, and Bibliography
    On the weekend of February 28, I rented a mansion in Los Angeles for two nights and stayed there with about 15 people from the internet. I facilitated a mini-conference; everyone there presented some...
  • Satisfice Money, Maximize Freedom
    Welcome to today's issue of Other Life. If you received this from a friend, subscribe here. Instead of paywalling posts, we offer a unique community membership.
  • Riva Tez on Epistemological Freedom
    I recently sat down with Riva to talk about the philosopher of science Paul Feyerabend, why the brain might be an antenna, why she moved away from Transhumanism, why Rationalism is cringe, how she...
  • Scientific introspection and the analytical advantage of average people
    When you have thoughts and feelings and drives, note them and try to understand which variables about yourself cause them. The best way to do this is to compare yourself to others, and the best way...
  • Segmentation and personalization for philosophers and scientists
    The techniques used by today's marketing professionals, such as "customer segmentation" and "web-page personalization," would appear to be emblems of instrumental, exploitative communication. Today,...
  • Sell Outs and Sell Ins
    It's interesting to note that, since I've shifted a lot of my intellectual energy to autonomous work on the internet, I've received a fair number of accusations about "selling out" or "pandering."
  • Shared roots versus hard forks
    I’m reading with interest the recent comeback post by Curtis Yarvin. I might have some longer thoughts later, but for the moment I just wanted to quibble with part of his empirical model.
  • Show Me
    Leptis Magna, a prominent city of the Carthaginian Empire (Libya).
  • So what if I’m afraid of death
    I must admit to feeling afraid of death. I am drawn to religious belief, in part, because I think I do want help with my fear of death. I don’t see why it would be an intellectual violation to want...
  • Social AI is Coming
    It's never been possible for an arbitrary number of average people to combine Turing-complete computation and financial liquidity within one seamless, integrated operating system and graphical user...
  • Some news and updates resettling
    I'm now back in the United States, for the foreseeable future. My last two weeks in the UK were possibly my favorite two weeks in my 5.5 years there. On February 28, we went up to London with only...
  • Some personal reflections on Jordan Peterson
    If you've been following me for some time, you'll know that current affairs commentary is not exactly my strong suit. I don't really keep up on the news and my own thoughts and ideas are quite...
  • St. Augustine, the Kernel, and the Long Run
    In The City of God, St. Augustine points out that philosophers can very well establish a rational system of ethics, but we humans suffer from infirmities that prohibit us from consistently executing...
  • Stream Theory
    As a livestreamer, you ignore the entire world to focus your attention on a subset of people who are genuinely interested in you. Entrance into the practice of livestreaming immediately leads you to...
  • Student debt is worse than a bubble
    I've often thought about higher education today as a kind of economic bubble, though I've always wondered if that's quite right. It seems to have the traits of a bubble: It seems overpriced, herd...
  • Study finds the relationship between genes and earnings increased after 1980
    Someone sent me a recent NBER working paper by Nicholas W. Papageorge and Kevin Thom on polygenic scores and educational attainment/earnings. Most pertinent to my theoretical interests is that the...
  • Suicide should be slightly stigmatized
    For people on the brink of suicide, struggling with excruciating suffering, no good would ever come — and wanton cruelty would certainly result — from stigmatizing their difficult situation. I wish...
  • Technocommunist Vectors: Radar Edition
    When I first laid out my idea for a neo-feudal technocommunist patch, I only waved my hand at the coming technological pathways to my proposed polity. In that first talk, I just hypothesized that...
  • Technology, Class, and Ideological Realignment
    I appreciate Michael Lind's model of the contemporary American class structure. He asks us to visualize two horseshoe structures:
  • Terre Thaemlitz on why you should just stop
    Woker Nexus in my Discord server recently introduced me to the work of Terre Thaemlitz aka DJ Sprinkles. (If Woker Nexus sounds familiar, Woker is one of the more active participants in my Youtube...
  • Testosterone is declining because it's illegal
    A lot of people wonder why testosterone levels have been decreasing for decades.
  • The Billion Dollar Personal Server
    The City Rises (1910) by Umberto Boccioni
  • The Case for Annexing Mexico and Canada
    My first argument is Manifest Destiny—the most Alpha political theory doctrine ever conceived.
  • The Categorical Dual of the Blockchain
    Ted Blackman is a senior engineer at Tlon and one of the most advanced Urbit engineers in the world.
  • The Catholic Coordination Game
    [Disclosure: I don't actually know that much about European feudalism. Most of my posts contain a fair bit of speculative guesswork and imagination, but after finishing this I felt compelled to make...
  • The Crypto Reformation
    In my latest podcast with former historian Joshua Rosenthal—The Crypto Reformation—there were some gems I want to share with you.
  • The Cybernetic Trinity
    The Trinity is one of the more vexing doctrines in all of the Catholic tradition. God is one, and yet God is three: the father, the son Christ who walked on earth, and the Holy Spirit. To make...
  • The Cyberpositive AI-aligned Communism (CAIC) Protocol
    In Atomization and Liberation, I began to outline a vision of small-c communism divorced from the corruption of modern Communism as most people know it. As I've explored many times before, the entire...
  • The Devil Is in the Denial
    The religious, who possess only tacit knowledge of the pragmatic truths inhering in religion, should be forgiven their occasional intellectual backwardness, for the same reason we forgive the idiocy...
  • The First Problem of Being Perceptible Is Being Manipulated (Becoming Imperceptible 2)
    This is the second post in a series, on the concept of "becoming imperceptible" in Deleuze and Guattari. The first one is here.
  • The Facts of the World Are Not the End of the Matter: On Wittgenstein's Religion
    Wittgenstein’s hut (restored) in Skjolden, Norway. All photos courtesy Jon Bolstad and © Wittgenstein Initiative.
  • The Freedom-Specificity Tradeoff
    When it comes to internet writing, a highly specific brand will grow faster than a vague or mysterious brand.
  • The Highest Human Activity
    Welcome to today's issue of Other Life. If you received this from a friend, subscribe here. Instead of paywalling posts, we'll give you a new sovereign computer.
  • The Highest Reason is Always the Truest: Emerson's Method
    According to Ralph Waldo Emerson in his first book Nature, everyone enjoys equal access to a kingdom as great as Adam’s or Caesar’s.
  • The Highest Ranking Non-Player Characters (How Academia Got Pwned 4)
    This is the fourth post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life. I'm curious: Would you like to read the whole story,...
  • The Great Flaw in West Coast Thought
    Welcome to today's issue of Other Life. If you received this from a friend, subscribe here. Instead of paywalling posts, we'll give you a new sovereign computer.
  • The Human Cartel, Part 1: The Working-Ruling Class
    Why do so many people in large bureaucratic organizations spend so much time doing meaningless paperwork that has no effect on anything? One possible answer, suggested by David Graeber, is that the...
  • The Imperceptible Country
    How I Gained Creative and Financial Independence. "The Paul Millerd episode and subsequent discussion has prompted me to share my experience & perspective in hopes that some will find it helpful and...
  • The Imperceptible Mechanisms of Deep Community
    I started noticing this about three years ago.
  • The Improvement Illusion
    Have you ever had a great idea and thought to yourself, "I need to write an essay about this," but then you never wrote a single word about it?
  • The interaction of education and race on Trump approval
    The correlation between education and support for Trump is very different across the black-white divide. The graphs below I have taken from Civiqs.
  • The Key Ideas of Leo Strauss
    Below is the text of an interview I conducted with political theorist Michael Millerman, PhD. Listen to this interview on the Other Life podcast or watch it on Youtube. We cover all the key ideas of...
  • The Long Run is Getting Shorter
    St. Augustine says there are two cities: The City of God and the City of Man.
  • The New Cyberpunk
    Original photographs by the author. Urbit Assembly 2022 in Miami.
  • The net-negative utility of Utilitarianism in the long term
    Utilitarianism, taken as a world-historical arrival at the level of civilization itself, might very well have a net-negative utility. It is perfectly plausible that an overly refined awareness of,...
  • The Next Men of Letters
    "Fine minds are seldom fine souls." —Richter
  • The Non-Fungible Aristocracy
    Fidenza #531 by generative artist Tyler Hobbs. At time of writing, $11,362,995.
  • The non-linear effect of ability on earnings in the computer age
    A reader/watcher/listener has brought to my attention another paper, which shows that, for college-educated individuals, earnings are a non-linear function of cognitive ability or g — at least in...
  • The Other Deplatforming
    There is increasing awareness that social media can be bad for the mind—we use words like "addiction" and "distraction"—but we rarely discuss how social media can reshape the contents of the mind.
  • The Psychology of Prohibiting Outside Thinkers
    This post was first published on May 15, 2017 on my old personal site. I'm republishing it here because it will be new for a majority of Other Life readers; it was widely shared in 2017; it remains...
  • The Psychology of Supporting Open Borders
    Angela Nagle makes the case that open borders are not consistent with leftist politics. The wonderful thing about the intensity of the culture wars right now is that, with a little bit of courage,...
  • The Patchwork Intellectual
    Patchwork intellectuals do not protest or endorse technological acceleration; they ride the waves of destruction wrought by disintermediation. They fall forward, sacrificing the twin pillars of...
  • The rich are more communist than they're allowed to be
    When I talk about aristocratic communism — the idea that a functional communism might be achieved by organizing and enforcing respect for the rich, on condition they distribute wealth — many...
  • The Second Golden Age of Blogging
    Many people say that “blogging is dead,” but dead for whom? Blogging remains powerful, just not for the same type of person who found it powerful in the “golden age of blogging” (roughly 2003-2009)....
  • The Second Problem of Being Perceptible Is Motivational Highjacking (Becoming Imperceptible III)
    Another problem with being perceptible is easy to understand in our current digital context. It is a problem we might summarize as the motivational problem. Being perceived triggers dopamine, and...
  • The Singular Importance of Being Correct
    Technocapitalism increases returns to judgment relative to labor.
  • The Struggle of the Independent Scholar
    Welcome to today's issue of Other Life. If you received this from a friend, subscribe here. Instead of paywalling posts, we'll give you a new sovereign computer.
  • The Sweet Smell of Success
    I'm the first to admit I usually don't love movies from before the 1970s.
  • The time to withdraw
    "Being, as the most unique and most rare, in opposition to nothingness, will have withdrawn itself from the massiveness of beings, and all history—where it reaches down to its proper essence—will...
  • The Two Meanings of Reaction (Excerpt from Based Deleuze)
    The following is an excerpt from my short book Based Deleuze, which will be published on September 20th. Pre-order here and you’ll receive it by email as soon as it’s released.
  • The Univocity Debate in a Nutshell
    From Lecture #3 in my video course for Based Deleuze:
  • The Two Paths to Power
    There are two paths to power: top-down and bottom-up.
  • The Unreasonably Negative Effects of Podcast Listening
    The feeling of listening to podcasts approximates the feeling of having original thoughts.
  • The Violent Focus of Francis Bacon
    Francis Bacon’s studio at 7 Reece Mews in London. 13x20 feet. Bacon probably designed the large mirror himself in the 1930s when he worked as a furniture designer. Image scanned from Margarita...
  • The Vortex of Tiny Effects
    This is a story about eggplants, do you have the courage to read it? 🍆
  • The worst that can happen is nothing
    If you’re genuinely seeking the truth and you put something crappy into the world, nothing happens. There is no punishment for crappy content. It’s one of the simplest and most profound facts of...
  • Theology and experimental method
    I think tomorrow morning I will take the Sacrament of Reconciliation (Confession). It will be the first time for more than 15 years. Why not? I will do it with absolute sincerity, but also reflect on...
  • The Young Balzac: Disordered Knowledge, Strange Student
    I'd like to share with you some biographies of great writers, artists, maybe some inventors—people who represent the other life ethos—people who have produced great work from the fringes, or in weird...
  • There are no humans on the internet
    The best way to build community and make friends on the internet is to treat all internet interlocutors as if they are real humans in a real-life, local village. If you do this, over time many people...
  • Thousands of Lovers Executed for AI Safety
    Death of Chatterton (1856) by Henry Wallis
  • To Become Rich and Famous, Take a Vow of Poverty and Anonymity
    When the famous documentarian Ken Burns first started doing his long, historical documentaries, he thought he was taking "a vow of anonymity and poverty,” he recalls.
  • Truth = Joy = Power: Spinoza's Galaxy Brain
    We live in a bourgeois culture where people hate intellectuals, the truth is. So, yes, of course there are stupid people on the internet who are really pretentious and think they're really smart....
  • Tools, sequences, and workflows
    Automatic editing and uploading with Auphonic
  • Two kinds of hustle
    To get the kind of life I want, or anywhere close to it, I realize I'm going to have to hustle like crazy. But one thing that's become immediately clear to me is that working hard has profoundly...
  • Unfair Competition (How Academia Got Pwned 13)
    This is the thirteenth post in a series about the glorious completion of my academic career, the internet, and the future of intellectual life. It's going to become a book, so for updates be sure to...
  • Urbit and the Telos of the Creator Economy
    Urbit is a new kind of networked operating system that turns your computer into a “ship” that can network and exchange data and computation with any other person or group on the network (like the...
  • Utilitarianism incentivizes suffering, or victim culture as a child of rationalism
    Insofar as people live according to its suggestions, Utilitarianism strangely incentivizes suffering. In a society where utilitarianism operates as the governing philosophy, the accommodation you...
  • Virtues of the Desert
    Here is Joseph Ratzinger, formerly Pope Benedict, on St. John the Baptist.
  • Wang Yi's Other Life
    A listener of the podcast writes me about a Christian pastor in China who was recently detained. The pastor Wang Yi has released a personal and theoretical statement that followers of my work (and...
  • WASP Microaggressions (MY #METOO MOMENT)
    I've noticed I strongly favor words beginning with intense, brash sounds. Words which invite you to say them quickly and loudly. The paradigmatic example might be the greeting: "WHAaat's up, DUuude?"...
  • We Are All Conspiracy Theorists Now
    The collapse of trust in mainstream authorities is discussed as if it is only one of many troubling data points. It's not. People are still underestimating the gravity of the interlocking trends that...
  • We Still Don’t Understand the Attention Economy
    Simone Weil's ID card working for the French resistance
  • What am I doing?
    Many different people are asking me what's going on with me. In different languages, sometimes gleefully and sometimes worriedly, I have been asked some variant of "what are you doing?" so many times...
  • What Happened to National Geographic?
    For today's issue we have a rare guest post, actually our first ever guest post—by the doctor and soldier Cornelius Stahlblau, author of The Outpost on Substack.
  • What I'm reading: Ernst Jünger
    I've been exploring the work of Ernst JĂŒnger, which I've never really read until now. The most cursory searching confirms a high likelihood of this man entering the Other Life pantheon. Consider the...
  • What is an "image of thought" for Deleuze?
    From Lecture #3 in my video course for Based Deleuze:
  • What Would I Do Without This World
    faceless incuriouswhere to be lasts but an instant where every instantspills in the void the ignorance of having beenwithout this wave where in the endbody and shadow together are engulfedwhat would...
  • When does blogging become worth it?
    A misconception about blogging is that one needs X number of readers before it's worthwhile, where X is some dauntingly high number. But actually, you only need Y readers, such that when you write...
  • When not to go with the flow
    The task of identifying the line between good and evil is like infinitesimal calculus. Mere intuitions are insufficient, which is why "going with the flow" so easily ends in evil. Many marriages fail...
  • When Kipling Met Twain
    Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) in his writing cabin at Quarry Farm in Elmira, NY. 1903. Photograph by Thomas E. Marr.
  • Why Do Muslim Immigrants and Western Leftists Like Each Other?
    It's fairly well known that Muslim immigrants in Europe tend to support left-wing political parties, but it's not obvious why, given that Muslims tend to oppose key planks of Western social...
  • Why I’m interested in blockchain tech for creators
    I’m becoming more bullish on crypto, in particular the long-term value of Bitcoin and the shorter-term value of blockchain infrastructure for content creators.
  • Why no depiction of Hitler is evil enough
    Robin Hanson thinks it the result of a signaling spiral, "wherein people strive to show how moral they are by thinking... even more lowly of standard exemplars of bad..." Certainly possible, and...
  • Why Virtue Ethics is Probably Correct
    Die Römische Ruine in Schönbrunn (1832) by Ferdinand Georg WaldmĂŒller
  • Why Write One Book When You Can Speak 18 Volumes?
    Have you ever wondered how and why The Life of Samuel Johnson is so damn long (and influential), even though he's just rambling like a livestreamer on adderall? Some thoughts on the current frontiers...
  • Will the pandemic have partisan effects on voter turnout?
    Election forecasts will probably err systematically in some way, given the unique shock of the pandemic. But in which direction might the forecasts err?
  • Will the University of Austin Succeed?
    I’ve been asked a few times now what I think about the new University of Austin.
  • Writers are Losers
    We live in a strange era where words and dreams and realities constantly crisscross in befuddling ways.
  • Write to Yourself and Yourself Alone
    Self-Portrait in the Workshop (1882) by Ramon Casas i CarbĂł
  • Writing is a Single-Player Game
    If you can figure out the truth, you should share it. You might help someone.
  • WYRD PATCHWORKSHOP
    I was recently approached by Diffractions Collective in Prague, who are working with a group called Sdbs, about hosting a discussion event on my livestream. The topic is patchwork. I don't know...
  • You can be neutral on a moving train
    There's a popular idea that one can't avoid taking some political position because having no position is to support the status quo. In the words of Howard Zinn, "You can't be neutral on a moving...
  • You can’t be smarter than you are
    This might sound obvious, but it’s not: You are only as smart as you are. People get stuck because they aspire to be smarter than they are. People refuse to produce until they are as smart as they...
  • You don’t have writer’s block, you’re just being evil
    If you are unable to think and express words, something is certainly wrong, but you are not “blocked.” Your brain is a ceaseless machine. It identifies and creates connections. When it gets blocked,...
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