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May
22nd
Thu
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Why did Hillary and Obama stop calling me? They were leaving me messages like three times a day for the past two months, but ever since the election I haven’t heard from them. I thought we were BFF, but now I just feel used.
May
21st
Wed
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sesquipedalian

adj (of a word) polysyllabic; long
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Proper distance

Excerpt from this excellent editorial by Slavoj Zizek in the NYT:

“Culture” has commonly become the name for all those things we practice without really taking seriously. And this is why we dismiss fundamentalist believers as “barbarians” with a “medieval mindset”: they dare to take their beliefs seriously. Today, we seem to see the ultimate threat to culture as coming from those who live immediately in their culture, who lack the proper distance.

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fainting goats
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Anti-government conservatism turns out to be a strange kind of idealism — an idealism that strangles mercy.
— Michael Gerson (former Bush speechwriter)
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On cooking as a literary stream-of-consciousness device

Excerpt from a New Yorker article entitled Cooked Books, Real food from fictional recipes, by Adam Gopnik:

While you are doing all this, I was reminded as I did it, you are thinking about the bouillabaisse, not about life in our time. Or, rather, you are not thinking about the bouillabaisse, or about anything: you are making the bouillabaisse. And here, I suspect, lies the difficulty with using cooking as the stock for the stream-of-consciousness stew. It is that the act of cooking is an escape from consciousness—the nearest thing that the non-spiritual modern man and woman have to Zen meditation; its effect is to reduce us to a state of absolute awareness, where we are here now of necessity. You can’t cook with the news on and still listen to it, any more than you can write with the news on and still listen to it. You can cook with music, or talk radio, on, and drift in and out. What you can’t do is think and cook, because cooking takes the place of thought. (You can daydream and cook, but you can’t advance a chain of sustained reflections.)

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Paradoxically, it is the specificity of expertise that makes expert forecasts unreliable. While experts outperform novices and machines in pattern recognition and problem solving, expert predictions of future behavior or events are seldom as accurate as Bayesian probabilities. This is due, in part, to cognitive biases and processing-time constraints and, in part, to the nature of expertise itself and the process by which one becomes an expert.
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