My homunculus is not a dadblasted larva.
Good job by a couple of officers in the US Navy Medical Corps. Two such
physicians did a biopsy on my scaly knee when I was 8. They removed a
pea-sized piece of skin and said that that their presumptive diagnosis of
psoriasis was correct and that there's
I don't know about your Confirmation homunculus, but you mentioned migraines.
Another diagnosis? Could the homunculus be a real *thing*?
https://www.mdedge.com/ccjm/article/132192/imaging/worsening-migraine-due-neurocysticercosis
On 5/8/19, 1:15 PM, "Friam on behalf of uǝlƃ ☣" wrote:
> "I can't help but feel you're waiting to pop out of the horse and hit me
> with something that falsifies my faith in the foxes."
A fox one's faith in which can be falsified is a faux-fox.
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
I knew it! 8^) I would, naturally, extrapolate (or is it interpolate?) from big
systems-level scales down to smaller (but still big, my Confirmation homunculus
argues) scales like that of individual organisms. So, here I am thinking a
person can be foxy about their own narrativity and you pop
Glen writes:
"I can't help but feel you're waiting to pop out of the horse and hit me with
something that falsifies my faith in the foxes."
Their examples were more about (big) systems-level phenomena, anyway. So it is
true by construction that breadth is needed.
Marcus
Ha! I spend all my time arguing for the foxes and against the hedgehogs. And
you've installed yet another trojan horse into my brain by linking to this
article (and the oh so attractive book "Range").
"They took from each argument and integrated apparently contradictory
worldviews. ... Foxes,
Glen writes:
"Even *if* we admit that the accumulation of biological artifacts (like shorter
telomeres) "tells the story of our lives", there are some of us who don't
understand, reflect on, or realize that story and some who do. My headaches
have helped me be more episodic, I think. Maybe you
Worth repeating here:
https://medium.com/@nziehl/coping-with-chaos-in-the-white-house-697fa2ca3ddf
---
Frank Wimberly
Phone (505) 670-9918
On Wed, May 8, 2019, 12:05 PM uǝlƃ ☣ wrote:
> That's a great point. I suppose we do have to separate a psychological
>
That's a great point. I suppose we do have to separate a psychological
narrativity from a physiological narrativity.
On 5/8/19 10:59 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> A poor memory could cause one to fall back on the old habits without
> realizing it.(Not "*Why* did I do that again?!")
--
☣
Glen writes:
"Well, my memory is *terrible*. That helps."
A poor memory could cause one to fall back on the old habits without realizing
it.(Not "*Why* did I do that again?!")
Marcus
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
From the paper: Against Narrativity - Galen Strawson
"The basic form of Diachronic self-experience is that
[D] one naturally figures oneself, considered as a self, as some-
thing that was there in the (further) past and will be there in
the (further) future
...
If one is Episodic, by contrast,
Well, my memory is *terrible*. That helps. I realized the other day, re: one of
my narcissist friends (eg she *consistently* gets bored with our conversations
and starts poking her phone even while her S.O. is talking directly about a
topic she introduced), I don't even remember where she was
Interesting. What is the difference between episodic and diachronic
personalities?-Jochen
Original message From: Marcus Daniels
Date: 5/8/19 19:40 (GMT+01:00) To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity
Coffee Group Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Reasons why we elect
narcissists Glen
Glen writes:
< I recently had an offline discussion with Steve Smith about Galen Strawson's
episodic vs. diachronic personalities. And I definitely identify as episodic. >
The snowflake analogy in another thread seems apt. While I recognize I'm some
form of ice one h, my life history leads
Although I'm sympathetic with characterizing him (and most other
attention-seeking people) as a narcissist, it seems inadequate. I really liked
this characterization, though:
offee Group Subject: Re:
[FRIAM] Reasons why we elect narcissists Well takes a certain kind of person
that's not exactly all their to want to try wrangling 500 egotistical aholes to
even get into the same room much less keep the countery from go careening off
the deepend. So yeah I'd imagine not
Well takes a certain kind of person that's not exactly all their to want to
try wrangling 500 egotistical aholes to even get into the same room much
less keep the countery from go careening off the deepend. So yeah I'd
imagine not to much of a strech that a ahole jerk, and infamous internet
troll
Given that the 45th president clearly shows signs of severe NPD, which we
discussed already 2 years ago, I thought you would perhaps be interested in
this Psychology Today article titled "4 Reasons Why We Elect Narcissists and
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