en.osm.town is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
An independent, community of OpenStreetMap people on the Fediverse/Mastodon. Funding graciously provided by the OpenStreetMap Foundation.

Server stats:

248
active users

#thinking

4 posts4 participants0 posts today

Após mais uma leitura de Fahrenheit 451, achei interessante uma reflexão que o livro me trouxe. Naquela sociedade, as pessoas estão sempre "se divertindo" com suas telas e conteúdos vazios. Em um diálogo, surge a seguinte reflexão quanto aos livros e à aquisição de conhecimento: É importante termos acesso à conteúdo de qualidade, livros de qualidade. O segundo ponto, é pensar. Refletir e digerir o que lemos. O terceiro passo é que tenhamos a liberdade para aplicar o que aprendemos. Esse é o poder dos livros, é sobre o que Fahrenheit fala. Os bons livros nos ensinam a pensar o mundo. E, como em Fahrenheit, as pessoas hoje em dia estão, em grande maioria, sendo impedidas de pensar por conta própria devido à constante distração em forma de entretenimento. Eu trago uma problemática com isso: até que ponto as futuras gerações estarão aptas à refletir e questionar? Se seguirmos daqui em diante como estamos agora, o futuro será composto de pessoas que pensam ou autômatos?

How New Ideas Arise via The MIT Press Reader [Shared]

While discussing the problem of how ideas arise in his “Science of Logic,” Hegel stated that “the beginning must be an absolute, or what is synonymous here, an abstract beginning.” Therefore, a new beginning “may not suppose anything, must not be mediated by anything,” but “must be purely and simply an immediacy, or rather merely immediacy itself.” In other words, Hegel declares the utter necessity of intuition, renouncing the control of the rational mind in favor of unconscious foresight. This is perhaps motivated by the fact that self-censoring doesn’t exist in the unconscious or in ideas, which are free to combine in improbable and ever-mixing associations.

Read More

welchwrite.com/blog/2025/04/24

#School in the age of #AI
It cannot be about sorting children into achievers and nonachievers anymore.
Because that will be about who is best with #ChatGPT.

If you want an answer without chatgpt, it has to be written or oral.

If you want materials that cannot be copypasted, they need to be in print.

And if we want motivation, school has to be about tasks that make a difference in the world.

School needs to manufacture #critical #thinking, not proficiency with tools.

open.spotify.com/episode/3nCpd

SpotifyRethinking School in the Age of AIYour Undivided Attention · Episode

The 4 Types of Luck by Sahil Bloom [Shared]

The 4 Types of Luck
In 1978, a neurologist named Dr. James Austin published a book entitled Chase, Chance, & Creativity: The Lucky Art of Novelty.

In it, Dr. Austin proposed that there are four types of luck:

Blind Luck
Luck from Motion
Luck from Awareness
Luck from Uniqueness
Here's how to think about each type:

welchwrite.com/blog/2025/04/15

Curiosity: The neglected trait that drives success via BBC [Shared]

On 7 January 1918 at New York’s Hippodrome, the incredible illusionist Harry Houdini unveiled one of his most famous tricks – the vanishing elephant – in front of thousands of spectators.

The beast in question, Jennie, reportedly weighed 10,000 pounds (4,536kg). She raised her trunk in greeting, before a stagehand led her into a huge cabinet and closed the doors behind them. After a dramatic drum roll, the doors reopened – and the cabinet was now empty. To the thousands of spectators, it seemed that she had vanished into thin air. 

How could Houdini have managed to hide such an enormous animal? No one at the time could provide a definitive explanation of what had happened, though there is one predominant theory.

welchwrite.com/blog/2025/04/11

She stopped in the midst of placing the pin in her hair, suddenly struck by a thought that she needed to intently run through in her mind.

Have you ever done that? Needed to think something through so fixedly that you can't move anything beyond the blinking of your eyes?

Truly amazing, are the human mind and spirit.

The Hairpin canvas print -- 2-steve-henderson.pixels.com/f

#art#artwork#mastoart

How To Be More Intelligent 101 via Nicholas Bate [Shared]

1. Read staggering amounts, regularly returning to the classics both fiction and non-fiction.
2. Write your own notes of your daily learnings aiming for super concise summaries. In that way you must squeeze and reveal the essence of a subject.
3. Stay active during the day. That’s not just ‘go to the gym’. Stay active; you’ll notice the ideas flowing so much more quickly and easily.

Plus 100 more!

welchwrite.com/blog/2025/04/07

A lot of what people are calling #FOMO is actually something else.

When you go to bed and within 5 seconds of not falling asleep you grab your phone for some light entertainment, thats not fear of missing out!

Its FOT - fear of thinking.

You fear that thinking will make you feel sad about the world and your part in it.

#mindfulness doesn't teach you to stop thinking. It teaches you to stop fearing your thoughts, to stop judging your emotions and to turn your negative feelings into positive actions.
Empowerment is the only antidot for powerlessness.

Miss out on the distractions and concentrate on solutions.

Today I finished a mala using bodhi seeds a friend gave me when he came back from China. I've had it for at least six months would do a little and then stop and today I said "I'm going to finish!" And what did I notice right as I was tying the last knot? The tassel had fallen apart! I tried to no avail to put it back together and back on. Anyway, it's finished now, tassel or not, and I'm sure there's a lesson in there somewhere
#buddhism #zen #zenbuddhism #sunday #lessons #life #thinking