Consumption of programmed information threatens to turn us into the human equivalent of social insects. Complexity and emergence leverage automated reactivity and pre-programmed social cues. The system is using playlists of content to manage entire populations, to trigger specific biochemical reactions. I …
Consumption of programmed information threatens to turn us into the human equivalent of social insects. Complexity and emergence leverage automated reactivity and pre-programmed social cues. The system is using playlists of content to manage entire populations, to trigger specific biochemical reactions. I sense we’re in a simulation that is being remotely guided by hormone manipulation and biochemical signaling. See this four-minute clip about neuro-economics and use of oxytocin to induce (or remove) social trust by Elizabeth Phelps of Harvard and Paul Glimcher, a neuro-economist from UPenn.
Ooh. A new one for me. Not far off though. I think Russians are pretty based. Hate Rap but LOVED this song about robots and the new world... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FgLMJSWnzHM
Mattias, the monsters are there:
Consumption of programmed information threatens to turn us into the human equivalent of social insects. Complexity and emergence leverage automated reactivity and pre-programmed social cues. The system is using playlists of content to manage entire populations, to trigger specific biochemical reactions. I sense we’re in a simulation that is being remotely guided by hormone manipulation and biochemical signaling. See this four-minute clip about neuro-economics and use of oxytocin to induce (or remove) social trust by Elizabeth Phelps of Harvard and Paul Glimcher, a neuro-economist from UPenn.
https://youtu.be/7zJG5VvYdVo?si=oToBqKn7KybdmoLx
NEURO ECONOMICS, brother!
It's a two minute clip. Correct one?
Ooh. A new one for me. Not far off though. I think Russians are pretty based. Hate Rap but LOVED this song about robots and the new world... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FgLMJSWnzHM