All of dares's Comments + Replies

dares00

The minus one must be for not seeing two fallacies and a bias in such a pretty package. Oh well, can't win em all.

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3AdeleneDawner
The -1 was partly for posting a quote that appears to have nothing to do with rationality, but mostly for being a smartass.
dares-20

Please don't hastily dismiss my quote, I haven't had breakfast yet.

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0dares
The minus one must be for not seeing two fallacies and a bias in such a pretty package. Oh well, can't win em all.
dares00

"Please don't disillusion me. I haven't had breakfast yet." -Orson Scott Card, _Children of the Mind

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1Alicorn
What makes this a rationality quote?
0JenniferRM
The email still hasn't been answered. I'm not planning on sending a second if he wasn't into the first.
dares50

Also, "short is good" would narrow this quotes focus considerably.

dares00

New here, sorry for the redundancy. I probably should have guessed that such a popular quote had been used.

dares40

Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.

—Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

7childofbaud
A domain-specific interpretation of the same concept: —Douglas McIlroy
3bcoburn
This one really needs to have been applied to itself, "short is good" is way better. (also this was one of EY's quotes in the original rationality quotes set, http://lesswrong.com/lw/mx/rationality_quotes_3/ )
dares130

“In life as in poker, the occasional coup does not necessarily demonstrate skill and superlative performance is not the ability to eliminate chance, but the capacity to deliver good outcomes over and over again. That is how we know Warren Buffett is a skilled investor and Johnny Chan a skilled poker player.” — John Kay, Financial Times

5Nick_Roy
“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.” ~ Aristotle
dares10

Your post lead me by tangent to wonder, especially in on-line formats, how often people simply don't respond to arguments that they agree with.

1NancyLebovitz
In my case, frequently-- and more so if the argument hasn't added anything to my understanding of the matter.
dares00

This made me think of a sports gambling database and strategy set that I read about in an ESPN magazine at a barber shop. I don't remember the specifics but I recall that the database was shared by invitation only and had an intentional "barrier to entry" level buy in, which seemed high to me. The article claimed the database was in use by only 9 professional gamblers. I'd like to see some performance data on their bets.

dares00

"Cool story bro" is another discouraging phrase that seems to fit what you are looking for.

6NancyLebovitz
Yes, though I'm more interested in distinctions between reasonably competent sorts of attention.
dares10

The church was a good shortcut for me when i was an agnsty teen.

"I don't practice what i preach because I'm not the kind of person that I'm preaching to." sticks out in my quote bank.

dares10

Is Avatar really formulaic?

To me, it seems that Avatar could be taken as a "noble savage" dances with wolves trope on a surface viewing, for sure. But a second viewing really shows it as a post singularity society. Every entity on the planet has a neural up-link as a part of it's organism. The Na'vi venerate a tree called "Eywa" (AI-wa?) that seems to be able to control most of the planet, and even aggressively "seed tags" a known invader only to later invite the invader into a situation that allows for the AI tree to upload ... (read more)