Ran Prieur http://ranprieur.com/#9a417fe513f58988c3b5b1e84cfc57397194a79b 2026-02-20T20:20:08Z Ran Prieur http://ranprieur.com/ ranprieur@gmail.com February 20. http://ranprieur.com/#0a58f7195c6224b65d59f30bd330bd57d5484838 2026-02-20T20:20:08Z February 20. Taking a break from techno doom for some woo-woo links. New theory proposes that consciousness is the universe's foundation, not atoms. Yeah, this is not a new theory, and this version doesn't go far enough. They're thinking, first there's the universal field of consciousness, then there's the big bang, galaxies, stars, the earth, humans, the brain, and finally you. I'm thinking, first there's the universal consciousness, then there's you, a fragment or aspect of the universal. Then there's your environment, which is not there until you pull it out of the infinite range of possibilities into this specific thing: humans, the earth, the sky. Then, out of the still wide range of possibilities for the sky, we pull out stars, galaxies, and finally the big bang. Just one step back and we could have an eternal universe in which quasars are spat out of galaxies like seeds.

This is the best NDE thread I've seen on Ask Reddit, People who have died briefly, what did you hear, see, and feel?

Getting weirder, a sub-thread from a thread about unbelievable experiences, with several reports of flipping reality instead of dying

And an unpopular subreddit, TheTruthIsHere, "a database for non-fiction encounters with the unknown from a personal source."

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February 16. http://ranprieur.com/#7cf9e2343ef106c16a3ffe54171d3ee28785f738 2026-02-16T16:40:04Z February 16. AI links, starting with a scary Hacker News thread, An AI agent published a hit piece on me. From the top comment: "The AI companies have now unleashed stochastic chaos on the entire open source ecosystem. They are 'just releasing models', and individuals are playing out all possible use cases, good and bad, at once."

I've written before that one thing AI might do, that I would be excited about, is video game worlds that are as creative as human-made worlds, but with no edges. That's looking unlikely: AI can't make good video game worlds yet, and it might never be able to.

Last year I mentioned a severe AI personality called Absolute Mode. That's Keith's blog post on it, and this is his latest post about wrangling with ChatGPT to actually do it. What I think I understand, is that it is possible, but somewhat difficult, to give an AI a custom personality. If so, this is going to be huge. I mean the whole bubble might pop any day, but if not, someone is going to make a lot of money from slicing and packaging chatbot personalities for mass consumption. Give me a sassy bitch. Give me a Klingon. Give me a golden retriever. Or maybe we won't go down that road because too many people want to talk to a cult leader.

Isn't it funny how talking computers turned out? In old-time sci-fi, they're rational, robotic, precise, and never wrong. Instead, they're like goofy sidekicks, offering encouragement and ideas, but clumsy and unreliable. We thought we were getting the Professor and we got Gilligan.

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February 13. http://ranprieur.com/#4e865063b2a3fd727ea1bcf9456adc9db6d464fe 2026-02-13T13:10:10Z February 13. Today, 2025 films. There were two sprawling political thrillers, both technically well made by respected writer-directors. Paul Thomas Anderson's One Battle After Another grossed over 200 million, got rave reviews, and will probably win Best Picture. It is Hollywood bullshit. Ari Aster's Eddington grossed under 14 million, got middling reviews, and no Oscar nominations. It was the best film of the year.

Sean Penn will probably win best supporting actor for playing the villainous Colonel Lockjaw, and it really is great acting. But that character, like every character in One Battle After Another, is a cartoon with zero moral complexity. Meanwhile, Joaquin Phoenix in Eddington, and Jesse Plemons in Bugonia, got snubbed for awards by playing complex and fully human red tribe characters.

I'm avoiding the words right and left, but Eddington gave me a sense of how a person might be tagged as "right" for finding what passes for the "left" unbearable: cringey teens and politicians who are tools of big money. Also, Eddington is tagged as a satire, but what I see is authenticity. Reality itself is absurd, especially political reality, and any work of fiction that shows it accurately will seem satirical, while any work of fiction that plays it completely seriously will be propaganda.

Some other 2025 films. Most overrated: Frankenstein, which is flat out just a superhero movie, with great set design, total bullshit dialogue, and they even gave the monster super powers. Most underrated: Rabbit Trap, 4.8 on IMDB but it's a solid 7, a weird horror/art film about fairyland. Most enjoyable: Companion, a comedy thriller about a weaponized sexbot. Least enjoyable: Marty Supreme, in which Timothee Chalamet plays the most unlikeable protagonist of all time -- even Jake Gyllenhaal in Nightcrawler was admirable for being cool-headed. Best horror film and second best film of the year: Bring Her Back.

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February 11. http://ranprieur.com/#7f52b01d5492083ec7c90f5a5954fc2ad4b136cb 2026-02-11T23:50:37Z February 11. Not in the mood to post this week. Three Reddit links: What's a book that you feel encapsulates your soul and why?

Couples of Reddit, what's the dumbest 'house rule' you and your partner made as a joke but now both of you are low-key aggressively serious about enforcing?

What weird skill did you accidentally become good at because of a bad job, hobby, or situation?

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February 7. http://ranprieur.com/#c207d4cdf155488a18f0ffa74e2aec783e400be4 2026-02-07T19:10:56Z February 7. One more link on the below subject, a PsyPost article on cognitive debt:

Electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring revealed that participants in the ChatGPT group showed substantially lower brain activation in networks typically engaged during cognitive tasks. The brain was simply doing less work. More alerting was the finding that this "weaker neural connectivity" persisted even when these participants switched to writing essays without AI.

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February 6. http://ranprieur.com/#3c574dfdc32a539a70c91919bb65d6c48bc5546a 2026-02-06T18:00:29Z February 6. Some links about technology and human cognition. Outsourcing thinking is a Hacker News thread with a linked blog post, a careful analysis of the many ways that our own thinking is compromised, if we let LLMs do our thinking for us.

Wirth's Revenge is another Hacker News thread with a linked blog post, this one about programming, and how exactly AI is good and bad at it. From the post: "LLMs don't do reliable, they don't do repeatable.... You don't ask the LLM to perform a repetitive and precise task, you ask it to build a script that performs that task. Except in rare cases, this script does not itself use LLMs."

An archive of a piece from the Atlantic, The Film Students Who Can No Longer Sit Through Films

A deleted Reddit comment, with a long thread below it, about the vanishing middle among grade school students, how there are a few who are really smart because their parents got them reading at a young age, and then a whole bunch who are functionally illiterate because their parents parked them in front of screens.

Also from Reddit, an explanation of P = NP. Basically, even though we can't prove it, we know that P does not equal NP, because coming up with a solution is in a different mind space than figuring out whether a solution is correct, and the more complex the problem, the greater the difference. There's a long comment thread including some stuff about teaching, and how someone who is naturally good at something is the worst teacher, because they can't get in the mind space of someone who finds it difficult.

For me, the difference between finding a solution, and recognizing a solution, bears directly on AI images. If I want a good image on a given theme, it's much easier to have an AI generate a bunch of images and pick the best one (the below image was picked out of about 40) than it is to actually draw an image that's that good. So I save a lot of work, but by taking that road, I am failing to gain an understanding of how to draw. Life is short, and I'd rather not know how to draw than not know how to think.


AI image of Trump as scientist]]>
February 3. http://ranprieur.com/#28be7258b0762cc698674fd4256041254f3489aa 2026-02-03T15:30:22Z February 3. I don't want to write about Trump and just say the obvious stuff. So here's something you don't hear every day: Trump is a scientist, and a good one. For his entire career, not just the presidency, he has been methodically doing experiments on human institutions and the human psyche, to see how they stand up to raw power. The most honest thing he ever said was during a debate with Hillary Clinton, where she accused him of tax evasion and he said something like "It was your job to stop me." That was Trump announcing to the world that he is beyond good and evil. He has the ethos of a fire or flood. ICE is not arresting the most dangerous immigrants, but the most compliant, for the same reason a flood fills in the lowest places first.

If it's our job to stop Trump, how are we doing? Imagine you're a teacher giving out letter grades. Around 30 percent of Americans are currently riding an F. With the long memory of the internet, it's going to be hard for anyone openly supporting the Minneapolis killings to walk it back. (And how weird is it that their names are Good and Pretti?) Europe gets a C for eventually standing up for Greenland. Congress and the Supreme Court might yet squeak out a D. If anyone gets an A it's the people quietly fighting in the courts.

The American media get a flat F. The experiment is how much naked power does it take for them to report it as naked power, and the answer is we don't know yet. Their expectation of normalcy has been Trump's number one ally, the fog of war of the supposedly unthinkable. They swallowed Trump's tale that Greenland is a buffer against Russia, when his actions have made it clear that Europe is his adversary and Russia is his uneasy ally. I used to think propaganda meant lying. Now I know that propaganda is saying stuff that's technically true while never saying the most obvious and important stuff.

Trump's obvious electoral strategy is to stir up enough trouble in the cities to cancel midterm elections. If he tries, the states will turn the tables: We're still having elections, try to stop us. MAGA will have to defend federal power over states rights, further pushing the experiment of how much cognitive dissonance the human brain can tolerate. We don't know yet.

Domestically, Trump doesn't have a lot of cards left to play, which is why he's focusing on Iran, and I appreciate the honesty of his foreign policy. No more iron fist in velvet glove, it's all iron fist, fuck you. If somebody goes nuclear, all bets are off. If not, I expect this to be over soon. Historians will surely say that America caught the same disease as Nazi Germany, but that we resisted it better. I know there are full-on concentration camps right now, but I am confident that Trump's eventual death toll will be less than one percent of Hitler's death toll, unless you count the global poor killed by canceling USAID.

I'm confident because I live in the city. If you don't live in an American city, you might have the idea, from the news, that we're all delicate intelligentsia and gutter trash. What I see are tens of thousands of competent, determined, and cheerful people. Even the homeless are tougher than ICE, give them guns and you'll find out. This feels to me like a very slow mass shooting. The shooter is inside the building, he has the upper hand at the moment, and he's not finished. But he can't win, that's not how this works.

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