#meaning-space

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Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

The loneliest sentence in the English language isn't 'I'm alone' - it's 'never mind, it doesn't matter' - Silicon Canals

Emotional retreat leads to self-rejection and disconnection in relationships.
#philosophy
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Speaking and Being: Languages and Experiences Are Linked

Metaphors influence perceptions and behaviors through embodied cognition, affecting social proximity and honesty in various environments.
Artificial intelligence
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

AI learns language from skewed sources. That could change how we humans speak and think | Bruce Schneier

Large language models limit human language representation, risking changes in communication and thought patterns due to increased AI-generated text exposure.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

Doing Philosophy in a Borrowed Tongue

Experiencing a second language can create a profound sense of self-difference and challenges in communication for international students.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
3 weeks ago

What About Knowledge That No Longer Knows What It Is For?

Knowledge and education have become distorted by managerial frameworks, leading to a superficial understanding of their true purpose and value.
Python
fromAntocuni
1 month ago

Inside SPy, part 2: Language semantics

SPy aims to enhance Python's performance while integrating static typing, balancing between an interpreter and a compiler.
Berlin
fromFast Company
1 month ago

How distance changes perception: The making of an observer

Understanding the United States involves navigating complex cultural and institutional landscapes shaped by personal experiences and global interactions.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 month ago

Distracting Metaphors

Metaphors can illuminate or obscure understanding, but some, like Holocaust comparisons, can provoke discomfort and controversy.
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Ideas We Aren't Ready to Understand-Yet

Collect ideas you don't understand but sense are important, as they trigger deeper cognitive processing and eventual insight through incubation.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Are There Linguistic Conspiracy Theories?

The term "conspiracy theory" calls to mind a variety of dubious claims and controversies, like rumors about Area 51, claims that the Earth is flat, and the movement known as QAnon. At first blush, these phenomena would seem to have little in common with bogus word origins. But there are a variety of false etymologies that spread virally and refuse to go away, in much the same way that stories about chemtrails, black helicopters, and UFOs refuse to die.
Writing
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How Shared Symbols Create Lives Worth Living

Shared cultural meanings form a second inheritance system that accumulates knowledge rapidly and shapes institutions, norms, and human cognition.
Mental health
fromNature
2 months ago

Daily briefing: What people with no 'mind's eye' can tell us about consciousness

Vividness of mental imagery, handwriting practices, psychiatric-diagnostic revisions, and emerging brain–computer interfaces shape memory, creativity, education, mental-health classification, and technology development.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

A Surprisingly Enjoyable Show About Critical Theory

Echo Delay Reverb examines French critical theory's influence on American art, highlighting Francophone thinkers and artworks addressing labor, incarceration, materiality, and formal contrasts.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Architecture of Identity: How the Brain Builds a Self

Attention is the brain's filtering mechanism; what passes through that filter is what gets encoded. What gets encoded becomes memory. And memory is the raw material of identity. So in the architecture of your identity, attention is the doorway.
Miscellaneous
Artificial intelligence
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Anti-Intelligence: When Language Operates Without a Mind

AI generates language through a fundamentally different structural architecture than human cognition, not through inferior intelligence but through inverted processes detached from lived experience and stakes.
fromBig Think
2 months ago

How our view of "fundamental" has evolved over time

In antiquity, many opined about "the elements" in combination. Around 2500 years ago, Leucippus and Democritus founded the idea of atoms. Perhaps everything, they opined, was composed of indivisible building blocks. In the late 1700s, hydrogen and oxygen were discovered. Circa 1804, John Dalton revived atomism to explain chemical behavior. Then in 1869, Mendeleev developed the periodic table: organizing the atoms.
Science
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

Words Without Consequence

For the first time, speech has been decoupled from consequence. We now live alongside AI systems that converse knowledgeably and persuasively-deploying claims about the world, explanations, advice, encouragement, apologies, and promises-while bearing no vulnerability for what they say. Millions of people already rely on chatbots powered by large language models, and have integrated these synthetic interlocutors into their personal and professional lives. An LLM's words shape our beliefs, decisions, and actions, yet no speaker stands behind them.
Philosophy
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The (Perhaps) Unsolvable Mysteries of Consciousness

Consciousness remains unresolved: neuroscience has advanced many insights, but the subjective 'hard problem' linking brain activity to experience still eludes explanation.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Seeing Is Not Always Knowing: The Limits of Visual Authority

Humans' biological impulse to help others misfires when sighted people use mental shortcuts instead of listening to blind people's expert knowledge about navigating their own needs.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 months ago

The Humanities Challenge: Expanding the Circle of Philosophy

Philosophy offers transformative insights and vision into human life, and public humanities must evolve beyond traditional academic formats to make philosophy accessible to broader audiences through innovative, engaging methods.
Philosophy
fromThe Philosopher
2 months ago

On Being and Appearing: Social Reproduction and the Family Form

The family operates as the social form of appearance that conceals and shapes unwaged reproductive labour within capitalist value relations.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

If Justice Doesn't Exist, Then Numbers Don't Either

A drawn circle is at least something physical. You can see it, touch it, erase it. The skeptic can still say, "Circles are grounded in physical reality. Justice is different; it's just an idea in your head." So let's talk about the number two. Point to it. Not two apples, not two fingers, not a numeral on a page-that's just a symbol.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

A Commonsense Critique of A Priori Metaphysics

Claims that metaphysics, rather than science, is the necessary foundation for scientific knowledge are false and revive pre-Enlightenment mystic scholasticism.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Cave You Didn't Build

Plato's choice of this word is deliberate. He is not describing neutral carriers. He is describing people whose job is manufacturing a convincing reality for an audience that cannot see behind the curtain. Here is what matters clinically: the conjurers are not necessarily villains. They may be devoted parents, conscientious teachers, or well-meaning community leaders.
Philosophy
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