Scattering many pieces, dumping my bucket of Legos
When I was a kid I often built things from Lego blocks. I kept my unassembled Legos in a gallon-sized plastic bucket. Whenever I began a new Lego building project, I would sit down and dump the entire bucket of blocks all over the floor in front of me. Scattering a gallon of Legos takes up considerable floor space, but it seemed the easiest way to find the pieces I wanted to assemble. That, and they made a satisfying whoosh, roar, and clatter as they tumbled out.
I knew folks who took a similar approach to assembling large picture puzzles. I have several essay projects that I intend to construct here eventually. Since I consider this blog as a staging area for my other web site, I thought it might be helpful to dump my bucket of Legos here so that we can easily find the building blocks for future essays. So, here we go: (Whoosh! Roar ... clatter)
Strategy
Tactics
Probably not.
But it can be difficult to perceive the difference.
projection
locus of control
in-group / out-group
Lord of the Flies
self-esteem
We all believe we're doing the right thing at the time we do it.
People who say they are "open-minded" usually are not.
People who say, "My door is always open", often say they are also open-minded.
People who say, "You don't have to like me, you just have to respect me" don't really know how liking or respect actually work.
memes
On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog.
On the Internet, nobody knows if you're a 14 year old boy.
Or a 40 year old man.
Or 40 going on 14.
Nobody knows -- but one often suspects.
mature
becoming aware
conscious participation
Trying not to participate is a form of participation.
The most basic task of every human is to be human.
Everybody thinks those two statements make them look good.
open door
Defending a castle of belief
Swimming in a lake of information
Understand
Profess
Persuade
economic theory
economic reality
Kurt Vonnegut's Galapagos
high-maintenance beliefs
low-maintenance beliefs
habits
attitudes
habits
decisions
behaviors
Strict Father
exploitation
abusive relationships
disparity by design
altruism
prosocial behavior
evolutionarily stable strategy
Ants know how to live like ants.
Bees know how to live like bees.
Some fish swim in schools, but they don't attend school to learn how.
Humans evolved as a social species.
Look for a bigger picture.
There's usually a bigger picture.
connection
Gaviotas
tribe
Ethan Watters
What do the Amish understand that the rest of us do not?
voluntary simplicity
preventing involuntary simplicity
The Fifth Discipline
lessons from the beer game
control
power
influence
steering a sled
anthropology
psychology
climatology
learn the rules of the game
see the mechanism
then turn the system inside-out
possibility
confidence
imagination
probability
unintended consequences
Be careful what you wish for.
Experience is what you get when you don't get what you want.
Policy makes a poor substitute for sound judgment.
We probably look pretty silly from the point of view of an anthropologist from Mars.
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