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    Free Guy

    enAugust 23, 2021
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    About this Episode

    https://www.letusthinkaboutit.com/step-45-free-guy/

    Part I

    This week, we were offered a story of an NPC, non-player character, in a video game called Free City. And what happens when Guy, played by Ryan Reynolds becomes sentient. He is triggered awake by seeing a girl. Shocker right? He becomes a sentient algorithm, able to see his desires, take action, and even judge the relative value and merit of his actions. 

    Well, the backstory is, the two programmers, a girl and guy, develop an AI, artificial intelligence engine, that allows characters to grow and change without human input or interaction. 

    Naturally, the programmers are maybe in love, but are maybe too immature to know how to express it. A totally rad, bro capitalist buys the AI and scuttles their “pure and sweet dreams”, basically an AI “garden of eden” terrarium.

    NOTE: two young, awkward genius programmers, who can’t get out the words to get someone out of their pants, frustrated, make a petri-dish to grow life in… so, yeah, they made a baby making machine, because they couldn’t get past their emotional immaturity to make their own baby… so now, we have sentient NPCs crying in the garden to two clueless parent/gods. 

    Long synopsis even longer: The female programmer falls for the NPC, of course, and eventually has to tell his creator he is simply “a love letter from the author.” 

    Yuck. Gross. Bleh. 

    FIRST THING: The moral

    Romance and Capitalism. The moral?  pursue Noble Passions, do not cave to the temptation of the base and mean, though it surrounds you. 

    The reward is beyond money, and will reward you more deeply for longer, and who knows? maybe you will get the girl, or guy, or hunky algorithm… or the dopey, buff algorithm. 

    SECOND THING: Work, Labor, Action

    Why do we need an AI? (This is answered at the end, but given “human idiocy” making anything like us is bound to be a failure.)

    To comment on the story and AI, we will borrow Hannah Arendt’s terms for WORK, in which she distinguishes between the drudgery of labor, the productivity work, and the self-becoming of action.

    • Labor is the NPC without sentience repeating tasks over and over. This is like a robot making the same widget over and over or humans having to get food and eat it over and over… then poop over and over.
    • While work is the effort to create a new AI engine, or make a factory, something that will outlast you and supersedes nature.
    • And finally, action is to engage in the world in such a way that you create a story of yourself in the world. ~ SO, this is kind of the notoriety Guy receives in the movie, moving from repetitive, endless labor of the NPC into work to level up and get the girl, into being a Contender, which affects the world and alters other people’s understanding and actions.

    The AI is a challenge progression: from robot labor to creative work mimicking human behavior to self-aware action… to create something that can meta-cognate and make value distinctions.

    We are just attempting to leap the uncanny valley, and hoping the artificial grass is greener. 

    Ryder

    But, what if we get past anthropomorphization?  If the AI can see that Goodness, Love, and Purity are really our Kryptonite… then when you dangle some lovey, attractive cuddly thing in front of us we go stupid. The best way an AI could get protection is to exhibit cutesy love. And, of course, this is the plot of many sci-fi books and movies, such as Ex Machina or Vivarium, where the true test for an intelligent machine or species is to prey on the human weakness of emotions and love. 

    This is that ugly deep sea fish, the angler, with the little dangling light it uses to attract the other fish. The little light is the dangling Ryan Reynolds… 

     

    THIRD THING: Differnce

    Pursuing Desire (once you have it, generally from discontent) takes work and action . To create your own story, where your actions effect the world is your will to power. A negative (discontent) moves us from our Contentment, that banal sameness that produces nothing new. however, difference… difference produces change.

    This where in Nietzschian terms we begin to move beyond good and evil, because the fascinating thing is, negative and positive are both forms of difference, they actually mirror and contain their contrariness in each other, they are just categorized by degree and distance. The more difference, the more transformative it becomes. 

    Sameness, contentedness, can be when we are subservient to the same illusions… it is not really being alive, it is merely enacting historical, conservative values repetitively: these are phantasms. That’s what movie projectors and shadows on cave walls are… They are the flattened, inverted forms of life.

    To escape this flattened category is to increase the difference, negate the sameness, even if it is through radical repetition.

    We thought we had an identity before… but this big “D” Difference is beyond the lame-ass category of identity: by enacting such a difference, we break the category… we approach transcendence, we manifest the beautiful soul, and enter the Eternal Return. 

    In Free Guy: The hapless coders produce an AI, the crooked capitalist produces douchery and employs tons of people, and the awestruck NPC levels up to get the girl, then transcends that ~ all of them go to extremes of difference, they power through, and to each there is an affirmation. We are talking about Action, and Difference… about being aware, being motivated and taking action. We are talking about breaking the script. 

    At the end of the day, why are we trying to make an AI that is sentient or aware?

    Because we lazy humans would like to stay at the WORK level, never taking the  ACTION to become AWARE ourselves. We will build a machine, an AI, to achieve enlightenment for us. 

     

    Call now, and for a limited time we can get ship you three cans of Deleuzian Difference Spray. Stand out. Smell difference, be difference. and watch her eternal return to you…. 

     

    Now, we mentioned caves and movie projectors… These are Representations of the world, the re-presentation of the same. These re-presentations mediate everything.

    Adding more, an infinite repetition of forms with infinitesimally tiny differences, keeps us trapped in the same point of view. It is the logic of the simulacrum, with no grounding, fractally expanding and dispersing with no purpose. Capitalism and the market feed us small consumable changes: over-valued, over-marketed. This incepts (or coopts) our desire to move beyond the sameness, feeding us infinite multiplicity as novelty. It is saccharin, artificial fulfillment.

    As Anthony DeMello says, “We must wake up.” Drop your illusions.
    As Deleuze says. Quit becoming the Representation, become an experience. (pg 51?) 

    THING 4: Leviathan

    Let’s talk about the state, or the government. People set up these frameworks that are meant to serve the citizens, yet they are rife with contradictions: the state has coercive power over us, yet it allows us liberty. This is Isaiah Berlin’s Positive and Negative Liberty.

    Setting up an AI and a State have similar problems… namely intentions and the blind spots of the authors.

    The NPC in FREE GUY is constrained by the limits of the game… the limits of the state… and in this way, government limits and shapes us, because even when we enact our highest state of Action, self-actualizing within the community, that happens under an umbrella of the state, in response to the state, whether we choose to acknowledge it or not. 

    The state is the story in which our story begins. It is our terrarium in many ways.

    Thomas Hobbes, who wrote Leviathan, is one of the earliest ideas of a modern state, a state that recognizes individuals wanting freedoms rather than a sovereign’s dictates determining people. It uses artifice, a bit of deception, to constrain and balance for human brutishness, but overall, it’s goal was to serve individuals. So… the key innovation here is individualism.

    Hannah Arendt, seeing what the Nazi regime perpetrated, despised Hobbes’s “mechanistic” reduction of the citizens turned into subjects… and the subjects turned into cogs. Because she saw the evil a cog, a bureaucrat like Eichmann, could perpetrate. Her notion of how the state could serve individuals was radically different.

    We now have Representative Democracy here in the US, and a fascinating idea is not to think of “Democracy” as the key point, but “Representation” as the key point. This points out that the founders were quite fearful of true democracy, the “tyranny of the majority” as Tocqueville says.

    When our founders built the political AI engine, that we call a constitution, it appears to be based on premises of “equality” and “liberty” that actually never allowed for equality or freedom. The contradictions within the system means that as it evolves, particular points increase in prominence and divergence. These points come, in part, from author bias.

    conclusion

    One thing I have not discussed too much, but is key: for Arendt, to take ACTION is to manifest your story in public. Not private. The path should be open for you, but it often isn’t for many people. 

    There is a friction here, often between the Story told (individualism and freedom) and what will be tolerated (reality, law). There exists an interstitial GAP between the story and the law, society and privacy, spaces that some people occupy and work to expand. 

    As GUY found out in the game, as an “NPC” his actions were not explicitly denied, because they were new… never considered. He was not considered, because he was not a “he” or any type of human. This gets into some concepts I recently learned from Charles Mills, The Racial Contract, where colonizing imperialists saw indigenous people as “sub-human” thus not human.

    The logic is, someone like Kant, the Western world’s preeminent moral philosopher, could be extremely racist because his morality only applied to “civilized men” which were by default posited as “white men.” His categorization blinded him. 

    So will it be with Artificial Intelligences. 

    The NPC is a soft entry to this concept of how we treat the sub-human.

    In the movie, Guy the NPC, due to not being “seen” as sentient or intelligent was at first unrecognized, then written off by incurious system admins. This allowed a modicum of Freedom, wiggle room in that interstitial space, until his difference became so pronounced that people had to take notice.  As he took action, his “difference” became excessive, beyond the category of NPC, which at first is negative for the game but affirmative for him, and as Deleuze and Neitzsche may say, “The extremes of difference are productive.”

    And thus, we fall back into capitalism: Excess production is a value to be captured. 

    Recognize, extract…. Love produces excess, and in this case, frustrated love produced a new type of sentient being, that is now not only producing love in the world but introduces a novel untapped resource to be colonized for the capitalist. 

    Capitalism collapses love back into a category, rather than BEING. We tend to allow capitalism to stimulate and feed our DESIRE for Love: It multiplies and reflects back desire but without the Love itself

    But, to wrap this up as a Hollywood Ending:

    The warmth of new love, in this story anyway, created something new in the world… the reciprocal feedback loop of difference between two people made something new rather than replicating suffering. And capitalism itself, with its infinite multiplicity of redundant permutations is really a shambling zombie, merely feeding on the products of frustrated love, but unable to produce anything itself.

    Recent Episodes from let's THiNK about it

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    Essay, Deck and Transcript can be found at 
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    Kant and the rise of subjective relativism

    Kant and the rise of subjective relativism

    https://www.letusthinkaboutit.com/step-81-kant-and-the-rise-of-subjective-realism/

    Reality, belief, and the apocalypse. 0:00

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    • Kant's false dichotomy between freedom and determinism is questioned, with a focus on the historical context of Thomas Hobbes and Galileo's views on a mechanical reality.

    Kant's philosophy and its impact on understanding reality. 4:10

    • Kant introduces philosophy that squares God observation conundrum.
    • Kant argues that objects in reality interfere with self-governance, leading to a moral argument that demonizes reality.

    Kant's philosophy and its implications. 8:46

    • Ryder Richards argues that our perceptions are limited to appearances and cannot account for reality, leading to the idea of a "noble realm" beyond our understanding.
    • Kant suggests that this inaccessible realm, the "nomina," contains the truth of objects beyond what we can know, but is beyond physical laws and changeable.
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    Free will and agency in Kant's philosophy. 15:43

    • Kant's philosophy on freedom vs. determinism challenged by Matthew Crawford.
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    Kant's philosophy and its impact on modern society. 19:45

    • Ryder Richards critiques Kant's moral philosophy, arguing that it leads to self-entitlement and diluted agency.
    • Ryder Richards argues that society's tendency to believe in self-important truths can lead to scapegoating and denial of implications, despite the appearance of novelty and esotericism.
    • Ryder Richards argues that Kant's philosophy led to overconfidence in transcendent visions without evidence.

     

    Transcendent Escapism

    Transcendent Escapism

    In this episode of Let's Think About It, host Ryder Richards examines the relationship between truth, reality, and abstraction. He proposes reality filters profound ideologies like religion and science, which rely on belief, from superficial falsehoods like marketing propaganda that obscure reality. Richards argues both sides undermine truth, but marketing inflames desire and bypasses reality altogether. Using quantum physics and art as examples, he shows how we use weighty abstractions to escape reality's limits. Ultimately, Richards says our tendency is to use fantasy to disregard reality, envisioning catastrophe to then deny it through rigid universal rules that validate our desires.

    https://www.letusthinkaboutit.com/step-80-transcendent-escapism/

    Richards begins by reminding us that while seeking transcendent truths, religion and science require belief, making them vulnerable to subjectivity. Next he discusses how marketing contains truth but uses it to inflame desire and promote amnesia. From here Richards explores how quantum physics appeals precisely because it hints at being free from reality's rules. He shares an anecdote about artists citing ungrasped quantum concepts as justification for unrelated work. Finally, Richards applies Slavoj Žižek's ideas about imagining catastrophe to then envision rigid orders that deny reality. Our escapist visions allow necessary blindness to humanity's failings but spawn dangerous universals.


    0:00 Truth, abstraction, and manipulation. 
    4:22 Reality, science, religion, and marketing. 
    7:57 The relationship between science, reality, and abstraction. 
    11:50 Epistemology, science, and art. 
    15:44 Escaping reality through abstraction.

    Skipping Reality

    Skipping Reality

    Ryder Richards builds on thinkers like Kant, Rorty, and Baudrillard in this podcast to argue that reality can filter problematic abstractions. He proposes reality as a net separating transcendental truths and superficial advertising. Without reality's grounding, these abstractions reinforce each other's weaknesses.

    Part 1 - Reality as a Net for Abstractions

    Richards lays out the idea of reality as a net dividing two types of abstraction. On one side is a transcendental ideology or truth claim, such as religion or science. On the other is superficial simulacra like advertising. Usually, reality forces these to grapple with concrete pragmatism. But as reality's power fades, these abstractions intertwine dangerously.

    Richards relates this to Plato's cave - the shadows are lies, but the light of the exterior, truth itself, can also be an abstraction. Modern thinkers like Rorty argued truth and reality are separate. So, going from cave to light just shifts one abstraction for another.

    Part 2 - Disneyland as an Example

    Richards uses Baudrillard's concrete example of Disneyland as an abstraction slipping into dangerous territory. Disneyland pretends to be fiction but reveals a desire for moral truth. However, this yearning abstracted into blind faith leads to fanaticism and policing "outsiders." The virtues represented become ways to enforce arbitrary hierarchies. In this case, the morality play of virtuousness, combined with fictional advertising, exemplifies Hofstader's 'hyper system," or tangled hierarchy, without referencing reality. 

    Part 3 - Lowering Abstractions' Power

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    Way 1 - Communicative Rationality

    The first way is Isiah Berlin's communicative rationality - agreeing on language, intent, and logic tied to reality. This raises the "net" by grounding thought in the concrete.

    Way 2 - Meditation

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    Conclusion

    In sum, abstraction untethered from reality breeds instability and vulnerability to facile beliefs. Reality anchors us against these excesses. In future episodes, Richards will continue exploring pragmatism, AI, and the limits of language.

    The Parallax View

    The Parallax View

    https://www.letusthinkaboutit.com/step-78-the-parallax-view/

    Ryder discusses the concept of Slavoj Zizek's "The Parallax View" in three parts.

    Part 1: Ryder defines the parallax view as the convergence of seemingly parallel perspectives. He draws a connection to optical illusions of perspective and discusses how the parallax view involves looking beyond the central focus point. The author also touches on its use in astronomy.

    Part 2: Ryder discusses Slavoj Žižek's use of the parallax view in his book and how it reconsiders the traditional Hegelian dialectic of synthesis or sublation. He explains how Žižek's approach doesn't seek to overcome oppositional positions but acknowledges their inherent contradictions as perspectival points. (This involves Lacan, Freud, Marxism, and Levi-Strauss's sociology, and more.)

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    Perspective Framing

    Perspective Framing

    Welcome to the problematic realm of perspective framing. Ryder Richards will be your dubious guide through this profound exploration of self-awareness and understanding. Central to our journey is the parallax view, a powerful method of finding our place in the world by establishing reference points by Slavoj Zizek. But first, we must challenge hegemonic narratives and reconsider Hegel’s notion of negation, as breaking free from (or subsuming and overcoming) conventional beliefs allows us to envision new possibilities.

    As we progress, we’ll examine how psychology analysis, meditation, and Buddhism provide tools to reshape our perspectives and alleviate societal discontent. Psychoanalysis will offer unique insights into the human psyche, highlighting the potential for multiple points of fixation as normalcy which creates markers to allow a fixed identity.

    Moreover, we’ll consider all of these topics related to the “desiring self” and its role in identity. Most pointedly, we will look at Christianity’s perspective on sin related to desire, and how desire is necessary to align with God.

    Stay tuned for the next post, where we will dive deep into the intricacies of the Parallax View, a possibly revolutionary approach to subjective positioning that allows understanding without always negating the negation, as deconstrcutionism does.

     

    0:00 Introduction of the parallax view.

    • Introducing ryder richards and the concept of the parallax view, which is a means to find a position by establishing points of reference.
    • The next episode is all about the next episode.

    2:19 Breaking the power of hegemonic narratives.

    • Post structuralist or deconstructionist. All of their arguments today can arguably be post-structuralist or post-deconstructionist, where brains are trained to be creatively destructive.
    • Hegel's notion of negation, the ability to negate impact or power of something.

    4:28 We must retain the positions we've just cancelled.

    • Hegel makes his point that cancellation preserves the positions that were just cancelled, but that there is a need for a visual goal to position ourselves in society.
    • Hegel argues that every cancellation is a new position, so every cancellation adds more gravel to the pile.

    6:44 Why we need to break traditional beliefs.

    • How modernist thinkers broke traditional beliefs to avoid the totalitarian narrative and nationalistic mindset that was sweeping through Europe 100 years ago.
    • Two dispositions in the rubble of the rubble.

    8:47 How to choose a new perspective.

    • Society is more unhappy, anxious and despairing than it was in the past, according to the studies.
    • Psychology analysis and therapy are tools for relief from the society that we live in and what we feel we deserve, and help pull us out of instant reactions

    11:23 Psychoanalysis is more about sizing the psychotic subject than the ego.

    • Zizek, Lacanian psychoanalysis is more about hysteria sizing the psychotic subject. To be non-psychotic is either to have multiple points of fixation or never know exactly who you are.
    • Buddhism and meditation.

    13:41 How to become an individual subject without ego.

    • CBT therapy and meditation help reframe how you fit into the world and how you see your position in the world. It allows you to prioritize your desires differently.
    • Buddhism is ridding yourself of attempting to desire anything at all.

    16:18 To sin is to miss the mark.

    • To sin is to position yourself further away from god, to miss the mark, and to be aligned with god to grow near the object of desire.
    • Christianity uses desire rather than negates it.

    18:44 Reframing the problem into parallax.

    • Walking us through the conundrum of the desiring self and the methods of reframing it and positioning in it.
    • Instead of the negation that is a deconstructivist rubble that has created an apocalyptic landscape, there might actually be a solution that is apparent here.

    Concrete Universal (trash and art)

    Concrete Universal (trash and art)

    🗑️ Garbage represents the concrete universal of waste.

    🎨 Picasso's art exemplifies the concrete universal through different periods and works.

    🌌 Failures and contradictions can lead to transcendence.

    🎭 Art expresses both expression and concealment simultaneously.

    🔀 Concrete universalism combines the concrete and the abstract into one concept.

    💡 The concept of concrete universalism challenges fixed definitions and highlights the dynamic nature of objects, people, and ideas.

    🔄 The concrete universal constantly expands, while the defining object fails to fully capture its totality.

     

    ---- TIMING/CHAPTERS----

    0:00 Welcome back to the show.

    • Fiction is bleeding into reality and confusing.

    1:34 Relating to god through the son.

    • How god was impossible to relate to.
    • Concrete universalism and the food processor.

    2:53 How can something be concrete but applicable to everything?

    • Concrete universalism vs abstract universalism.
    • Kantian antinomies or even Hegelian antagonisms.

    5:04 The apex of the movement is the definition.

    • Overcoming the other side, overcoming their limits.
    • The movement has an extreme peak, which defines it.

    7:20 A new more robust form of universalism.

    • New universalism founded on a very real thing, trash.
    • Example of concrete universalism, garbage.

    9:02 Definition of the concrete universal.

    • The concrete universal and the black sack of trash.
    • How to use the concrete universal.

    10:53 The central problem of art.

    • The central problem of art, referencing Picasso.
    • How art expresses the inability to clearly express.

    12:33 The antagonisms in Guernica.

    • Back to the concrete universal in the case of Pablo Picasso.
    • The antagonisms in Guernica.

    14:18 The problem with the object definition of the universal.

    • Deification of objects, people and ideas.
    • The parallax gap.

    holy to holy s***

    holy to holy s***

    Christianity operates through a lack: we cannot know God, so a “gap” must be filled between God and Humans. Christ is God splitting from 1 into 2, allowing us to identify and get closer to the mystery of God, but in so doing, Christ was subjected to the filth of this world. (Zizek) 

    The reversal of the one God splitting into two (only to mysteriously re-unify us) is the process of poop: taking all values and reducing them into one homogenous, non-mysterious pile. (Bataille) 

    Growth can occur from this filth (otherwise known as manure), producing roses. Beauty from secular waste, rather than an excessive effort towards mysteries that only slip away as you approach them. (Hegel) 

    {{This is a continuation of Step 74: Symbolic Victory}} 

    https://www.letusthinkaboutit.com/step-75-holy-to-holy-s/

    ---

    0:00 Introduction to this episode.

    • Introduction to the episode.
    • How symbols create a mystery which drives us.

    1:16 Limitations of the self and the symbolic unknowable.

    • The gap between being human and achieving the transcendental.
    • The symbolic unknowable and god's sacrifice.

    3:41 How we identify with the filth and alienation. 3:41

    • God forces himself to become a fragment of himself.
    • The shape of conflict.

    5:30 The fragmentation of the monolith.

    • Division creates a distance in the one god.
    • The holy nature of shit.

    7:30 Moving the sacred to the secular.

    • Moving the sacred to the secular in pop culture.
    • Non-mysterious, non-motivation unification.

    9:39 Solving the mystery leads to more mysteries.

    • The attempt to resolve the mystery is the point of failure.
    • Mimetic desire, scapegoating and sacrifice.

    12:16 How mimetic desire works.

    • Mimetic desire and the hedonic treadmill.
    • The steam valve of society is sanctioned murder.

    13:41 Moving from the real to the symbolic.

    • Moving from the real to the symbolic for stability.
    • The egyptians and their claims to permanence.

    15:29 We shun the real shit and believe bullshit.

    • We shun the real shit and believe the bullshit.
    • The beauty of the poop pile.

    Symbolic Victory

    Symbolic Victory

    0:00 The contradictory injunction of double binds.

    • The contradictory injunction in double binds.

    • The binary trap in cyberpunk.

     

    2:15 The death drive of determinism.

    • The death drive of determinism.

    • How to transcend the binary.

     

    4:44 How the capitalist system capitalizes on our stress.

    • The capitalist system surprisingly capitalizes on stress.

    • The anxious revolt is fuel for the bureaucratic nightmare.

     

    6:33 Intro to the show.

    • America and political symbolic winning, and camouflage.

    • The wild west of America.

     

    8:55 Virtue signaling to win elections.

    • Virtue-signaling to win elections.

     

    10:58 Trump's anointed tool.

    • Trump as an anointed tool of the Christian right.

    • Winning dignity is absurd.

     

    12:54 How symbolic acts can function in reality.

    • How the symbolic act can function in reality.

    • Culture of honor, reputational honor.

     

    14:30 Protecting your reputation through overreaction.

    • Protection through overreaction

    • The reversal of the reversal.

     

    16:10 You become what you fight you become.

    • The unseen aspect of antagonistic opposition in step 65.

    • Respect for native americans over time.

     

    17:47 How we grasp and use models.

    • Mimetic desire to dissimulate thoughts into the real.

    • Symbolism as a faulty translation.

    • Symbols can become an affectation.

    • The danger of the symbol that is mistaken

    Camouflage (sex and trust)

    Camouflage (sex and trust)

    0:01 Why camouflage is like a rhizome.

    • The complexity of camouflage and abstraction.
    • Why camouflage is a better survival strategy.

    2:44 The servant as master.

    • How to become low like water and remain powerful.
    • Master as servant - martyr. 

    5:16 The boss who tries to also be your best friend.

    • The parent who guilts you. 
    • Undermined core self: camouflage needed for shame concealment. 

    6:56 The ubiquity of repetition and mass media.

    • The ubiquity of marilyn monroe as a sex symbol. (Andy Warhol)
    • Society normalization disperses desire: at once object and landscape. 

    9:18 Desire has become decentralized and dispersed

    • Mimetic desire has become decentralized and mimetically dispersed. 
    • The role of libido in camouflaging.

    12:13 The decentralization of the self.

    • Camouflage through subject, context, confusion or dispersal at scale.
    • Decentralization of self: the self or desire as a rhizome.

    14:45 Disguise is the facade that shelters the self, but also enables psychopathic killers. 

    • The digital world lacks trust, artificial intelligence, and the travails of insecurity.
    • Crowdsourcing wikipedia is a battleground.

    16:57 We no longer trust the image.

    • The attention economy and the loss of trust.
    • The destabilization of America, 

    19:28 Do you still have the power to focus or just act?

    • Focus is the only thing that can determine who we are.
    • Hunker down and live dangerously. 
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