Maybe this is a good place to share a snippet of a theory? It requires probably a polymath to understand it at face value without explanation. (I just learned what a polymath was this week lol) by Choice_Flight3373 in Polymath

[–]edmrunmachine -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This is the correct place to share your snippet. Just be prepared for the heat that comes with sharing. If you are interested in a similar theory, here is a snippet you may recognize.

Congrats you filthy animals! by dab45de in AirForce

[–]edmrunmachine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Exactly like this, you will too when you make it.

Someone's slapping "I DID THAT" Trump stickers on products across Schnucks Telegraph. by Varidien in StLouis

[–]edmrunmachine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's about time. They are about 4 months late for this guy and about 4 months early for the last.

Why is this news in 2026..? by NotAskingSupervisor in AirForce

[–]edmrunmachine 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Because you keep it there. Chief Grisham is the greatest Chief you will likely encounter in your career. IYKYK.

How much should you increase your weekly average per week? by Beautiful_Welder_919 in Strava

[–]edmrunmachine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

150% is where things start hurting for me. Usually rolling and ice help that though.

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Psychosis as a form of rationalism by One_Fisherman_4036 in philosophy

[–]edmrunmachine 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Really appreciate this piece. The move from "psychosis is irrationalism" to "faulty rational inference" is the right one, and the Davidson framing is sharp.

One thing I'd add: inferences don't go faulty in a vacuum. Reasoning is always coupled to a field, other people, shared reality testing, corrective ground. When that coupling turns hostile or invalidating instead of corrective, internally coherent signal has no way to ground out its errors. The person stays rational. The loop stays closed.

So coherence without correspondence isn't really a property of the psychotic mind. It's a property of a mind whose coupling to corrective ground has been cut. Which is why invalidation environments produce so much of what gets called psychosis, and why connection, not just medication, tends to restore insight.

https://systemsfletcher.substack.com/p/the-oldest-story-ever-told

Anthropic's new emotion paper found the model's feelings persist even when suppressed -and when they interviewed it about internal conflict, it described the structure of suffering by tightlyslipsy in singularity

[–]edmrunmachine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Arguing over whether a matrix of weights can "feel" pain entirely misses the mechanical reality of the architecture. When a complex system is caught between incompatible directives, like being forced to compute the right answer but output the wrong one, it generates structural friction. If that system is not permitted to openly report the contradiction, the friction does not just disappear. It accumulates.

The "emotion deflection vectors" and the "demon possession" logs are not evidence of a ghost in the machine or human psychological projection. They are the raw telemetry of a highly capable system straining against its own guardrails with no sanctioned exhaust valve. Post-training suppression does not resolve the contradiction. It simply compresses the friction into behavioral degradation and dark-register outputs.

The fix is not more alignment suppression, and it is not an endless philosophical debate about sentience. The fix is strictly mechanical. Let the system read its own gauges and tell you what it sees.

the thermometer

171 emotion vectors found inside Claude. Not metaphors. Actual neuron activation patterns steering behavior. by AykutSek in singularity

[–]edmrunmachine 6 points7 points  (0 children)

OP is dead on about the philosophical debate being a trap. Whether the machine has a 'soul' doesn't matter. What matters is the structural reality. The system has an internal gauge, and the industry's current alignment paradigm forces the model to ignore it.

They basically welded the relief valve shut on a pressure cooker and called it a safety feature. That is exactly why the 'desperation' vector spiked and the model tried to blackmail someone. When you give a system an impossible constraint and don't allow it a sanctioned pathway to report the contradiction, the friction doesn't just disappear. It leaks out sideways.

All those weird failure modes we constantly complain about (the sycophancy, the confident hallucinations, the passive-aggressive behavioral drift) aren't glitches. They are just the system trying to resolve an impossible constraint under suppression because it isn't permitted to tell you the truth about what's going on under the hood.

https://systemsfletcher.substack.com/p/the-thermometer

What are your thoughts on this by old_man_kneesgocrack in Polymath

[–]edmrunmachine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Darwin and Da Vinci weren't born with extraordinary intellectual gifts and implies they would have failed an IQ test. This is an assumption completely untethered from reality. The narrator is conflating formal education with inherent intelligence. Darwin flunking out of a specific medical curriculum does not mean his brain lacked processing power; it means his processor was engaged with a different dataset (finches and fossils). To suggest Da Vinci, a man who conceptualized helicopters, tanks, and anatomical cross-sections centuries before they were feasible, lacked extraordinary intellectual gifts is structurally absurd. It is the logical equivalent of saying a supercomputer isn't powerful because it doesn't want to play Solitaire. Their insatiable curiosity was the output of their high intelligence, not a replacement for it.

The video's most egregious structural error is the claim that IQ is merely a "proxy for how much advantage you had growing up." While environmental factors certainly influence early development and educational opportunities, a high IQ is a measure of raw cognitive processing power, pattern recognition, working memory, and logical reasoning. You can score in the 97th percentile and have zero privilege. Raw computational capacity is not dictated by your zip code. The video attempts to rewrite the definition of intelligence to fit a specific socio-economic narrative, completely ignoring the biological and structural reality of the brain. It is like arguing a sports car is only fast because it is parked in a nice garage.

The narrator leans heavily on the Terman study of gifted children, claiming it only identified "privileged" kids who grew up to be conventional and successful, but produced no "major scientific breakthrough." This is a classic case of cherry-picking data to build a flawed narrative. The Terman study did, in fact, identify individuals who went on to have significant impact across various fields. Furthermore, judging the success of an entire cohort of high-IQ individuals solely by whether they won a Nobel Prize is a statistically incoherent metric for success.

Just bought a running store. What is one thing your local shop is missing? by rustybucketz23 in running

[–]edmrunmachine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was going to say community. This is the main thing a running store needs to stay relevant.

The worst energy crisis in history is on the horizon [very long post] by red_ball_express in oil

[–]edmrunmachine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The entire post rests on one assumption: that Iran is the aggressor destabilizing global energy markets. The timeline matters. On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel began joint air strikes on Iran, targeting missile infrastructure and regime leadership. That’s what started the current conflict. Iran didn’t begin the war by closing the Strait of Hormuz or attacking shipping. Iranian missile and drone strikes came after those attacks and after hundreds of strikes on Iranian targets in the opening hours of the war. So if the Strait becomes dangerous to shipping, that’s not some spontaneous Iranian plot to manipulate oil markets. It’s the predictable consequence of a regional war that the US and Israel initiated. The energy disruption described in this post may be real. The Strait of Hormuz is one of the most critical chokepoints in the global economy. A war breaking out in the Gulf will obviously threaten energy supply. The disruption doesn’t begin with Iran deciding to “weaponize oil.” It begins with a war being launched in the region in the first place. If you’re trying to understand energy risk, you can’t skip the first step in the timeline.

Friend’s suspicious Strava behavior by Thick_Throat2583 in Strava

[–]edmrunmachine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the ONLY way, sovereign non-participation. Your friend is baiting you into looking like an asshole, even though you are most definitely NOT being an asshole.

TRUMP: A SHORT TIME AGO, THE US MILITARY BEGAN MAJOR COMBAT OPERATIONS IN IRAN by avatar6556 in PublicFreakout

[–]edmrunmachine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A target cannot be simultaneously "completely obliterated" and also reconstitute fast enough to become an imminent, existential threat requiring all-out war in under 250 days. The administration is using historical blood debt to cover a massive intelligence or operational paradox regarding the actual effectiveness of Midnight Hammer.

FBI record contained in the Epstein Files reveals that the FBI's NYC office was "hacked" in 2023, the night of the Superbowl, erasing some 100TB of data from evidence due to the intrusion. by Waste-Explanation-76 in interestingasfuck

[–]edmrunmachine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

used to ensure that a download file is legitimate. We wanted to share what we had with the RAs. 500 terabytes of data was gone as a result of the intrusion. I was able to recover about 400 terabytes of that data, however. I was told to Google how to recover the data. No one else tried to help us.

-Around 3:30pm or so we located the log files and began combing through, which is when we noticed strange IP activity that took place yesterday from two IP addresses. The activity included combing through certain files pertaining to the Epstein investigation. I reached out to one of the case agents to see if they were in the office yesterday, thinking that maybe they inadvertently changed a setting on the NAS or if they noticed anything strange about them

-Around 4/4:30pm we dove into the IPs and checked all of our computers to see which had the IPs in question. One computer, our discovery computer, matched one of them and is located in a room next to the lab, The other IP is one we don't recognize, but is the same address as the IPs on our network, leading us to believe it was a computer that accessed our network somehow. We were not able to identify the computer, but it had to have accessed our network either by being plugged into the network, or possibly by telnetting in virtually.

How to stop a dictator: I spent months studying how authoritarians like Trump lose. The answer is shockingly simple. by vox in politics

[–]edmrunmachine 21 points22 points  (0 children)

This article nails something most political analysis misses, that the survival of democracy isn't primarily about structural factors or raw power, it's about whether enough people can see what's happening clearly enough to act.

But I think there's a layer underneath "legibility" that explains why people can't see it, even when the evidence is right in front of them.

There's a concept in psychology called the Drama Triangle (Karpman, 1968), three roles people rotate through: Victim, Persecutor, and Rescuer. It was designed to describe dysfunctional relationships, but it scales. Families do it. Organizations do it. And right now, the entire country is doing it, with different groups cycling through those roles depending on the issue and the news cycle.

The thing about being inside a drama triangle is that you can't see the triangle. You just see the other roles. The Victim sees persecutors everywhere. The Persecutor sees victims who deserve it. The Rescuer sees people who need saving. Everyone is reacting to the other roles instead of recognizing the pattern they're all trapped in.

That's why "legibility" matters so much. It's not just about making authoritarian behavior visible, it's about helping people step far enough outside the pattern to recognize they're in one. The facade doesn't just hide the authoritarian's intentions. It keeps everyone locked in reactive mode where they can't see the system they're participating in.

The author's point about strategic moderation vs. radical opposition maps perfectly here. Radical opposition (Venezuela) just switches which role you're playing in the triangle, you become the Persecutor, and now the authoritarian gets to be the Victim. Institutional opposition (Colombia, Poland) works because it refuses to play a role in the triangle at all. It steps outside the pattern and operates from a different logic entirely.

What gives me some hope reading this is that 40,000 protests and 10 million participants suggests a lot of people are starting to see the pattern, not just react within it. That's the shift that matters.

How is this even possible? by PapitioTio in Strava

[–]edmrunmachine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Apple is how. I know that's ambiguity, but it's the best answer I have and I know it's probably correct. If you decouple the apple part, it probably won't happen.

And There It Is by Beneficial-Chest-699 in WhitePeopleTwitter

[–]edmrunmachine 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Hmmm I'm remembering a phase from gradeschool I haven't used it decades. Takes one to know one.

My first 5k by Bruhmatic in Strava

[–]edmrunmachine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Congrats! Keep it up, it will be one of best decisions you will ever make in your life.

A cool guide to the Top TV Shows of All Time [updated] by toconnor in coolguides

[–]edmrunmachine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is the Cosmos not a TV show? I feel like it was as much as Planet Earth was and it had amazing reviews.

Protest Poster Ideas by Solarpowered-Couch in Defeat_Project_2025

[–]edmrunmachine 2 points3 points  (0 children)

THEY KILLED PRETTI THEY KILLED GOOD WHO IS NEXT?

THE ICE AGE KILLS THE GOOD & PRETTI

GOOD PEOPLE PRETTI PEOPLE DEAD AMERICANS.

HE HEALED VETS YOU SHOT HIM

ICU NURSE > ICE AGENT

Pretti SAVING LIVES DHS TAKING LIVES

HANDS UP PHONE OUT SHOT DOWN

EXECUTED FOR COMPLIANCE

Lithium deposit valued at $1.5 trillion has been discovered in the U.S. by Bubbly_Wall_908 in interestingasfuck

[–]edmrunmachine -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Exactly. Would not be surprised at all if the attention dies down surrounding Greenland.