_________________________________________________________________ Reality cracking Getting deeper into reality cracking Comments about "An Essay Attempting to Justify the Relationship Between Code Cracking and Reality Cracking" by <predator> (16 September 1998) _________________________________________________________________ Well, this is another example of the funny 'time warping' effects on our deep deep web. I published Curious George's essay in february 1997 and the first global answer, this one by <predator>, comes in september 1998, more than one and a half years later... whatd'you say? The web seems to be in another time continuum alltogether, doesn't it? I'll leave you now with <predator>'s observations, read (if I may suggest, at least two times, you'll thank me for this tip) and enjoy (and add if needs be). Of course be aware of the fact that this kind of reality cracking is the most "philosophical" one, as opposed to the more 'concrete' anti-advertisement essays, and you may well be one of those skeptical souls that feel the irresistible impulse to check if their wallet is still there everytime they hear somebody speaking about "soul" or "meme" :-) Just kidding... there is a considerable depth inside <predator>'s rantings (as well as inside Curious George's original ones) and when I read this kind of stuff I get the strange feeling that we humble crackers and code reversers (or "reversalists" as <predator> calls us) are on the eve of unprevedible philosophical discoveries... could it be that in this world software and life are already so indissolubly bound that investigating the first you may find some of the answers for the oldest questions of our human race? You may want to read first the original essay by red Curious George without <predator>'s interpolations And now prepare for a very interesting, intriguing and deep lecture: reality cracking at its highest peaks! _________________________________________________________________ Submission to +Fravia's Reality Cracking essays. Who am I? I am <predator> .:. Reverse the universe .:. Replies from Sep 05 1998 (under edit.com) I use SuSE Linux and have Mess-dog6.2, I have staunchly refused to run any (a)version of M$-gui OS on my box. Commentry intercalated in: An Essay Attempting to Justify the Relationship Between Code Cracking and Reality Cracking (Why is Reality Cracking Important?) by Curious George (11 February 1997) An Essay Attempting to Justify the Relationship Between Code Cracking and Reality Cracking (Why is Reality Cracking Important?) by Curious George (11 February 1997) _________________________________________________________________ Courtesy of fravia's page of reverse engineering _________________________________________________________________ Curious George writes: >Dear Fravia: >...More than that, "Reality Cracking" can be accomplished > by anyone with a critical mind. You don't need hours >of undisturbed time in front of the computer. You can > practice your reality cracking skills all day long, >everyday of your life! And you should, lest you be taken > advantage of unknowingly......Having read all of the > Reality Cracking section, and a decent amount of the rest, > and being fascinated by the +ORC enigma, I felt compelled > to write an essay that covers two topics. First, I discuss > reality as a whole. Second, I tried to get into +ORC's > mind (funny, me of all people, probably one who knows least > about him...) and find an overall motive... hope you enjoy! >Best Regards >Curious George __________________________________________________________________________ > (Introduction) > Our view of the world is our own. The particular set of events that we > experience over our lifetimes shapes what we see in the world. There > are commonalities however. They are large reality models that whole > nations subscribe to. There are different models. Some conflict with > each other. All are subsets of the true Reality. We must crack reality. They are not necessarily subsets of true reality. Some of these reality models are complete raving delusions. > What is Reality Anyway The universe is data, and interactions between data. Treat it as data and all will become clear. > Lets start from the very beginning. We talk of Reality Cracking, but > we don't really know what reality is, do we? We can never actually know. "We" - our live code, the dynamic data structure that we are, our "personality" - exists by proxy, molecularly encoded in a biochemically based, massively parallel neural-net processor. Some call this a soul or spirit, or persona. The suite of simultaneously-operating thought-process daemons in THIS head, which refers to itself as <predator>'s head refers to them as... well, just what they said they were at the start of this paragraph : simultaneously-operating thought-process daemons. They/we/I are a huge, parallel, evolving computation. A self-contained information ecology. So, I think, are you too. > I believe (with lots of other people too, like Plato, and Orwell to > name two) that it is whatever you think it is. Also correct. It cannot be otherwise in a symbol processor like the brain, which emulates and models a perception-derived reality, but cannot experience it directly. A processor does not know* its registers have any particular external pertinence, nor does a neuron *know* that its particular state of synaptic receptor density, neurotransmitter receptivity profile or axon depolarisation have any pertinence or even relationship to anything. The relationship is there, but the interacting components in this do not know it, even if they represent it. Only in recursion and self-reference do systems ever model themselves and thereby "know" themselves, insofar as a system can know anything. Read Douglas Hofstadter, "Gödel Escher Bach". > More specifically, there are the models ("Paradigms") that define > reality for those who subscribe to them. Correct, although explained from the human's-eye view, from the perspective of the processor. You want to get at the _code_, don't you? Here's the deal: first learn to understand that the universe and all the processes in it are understandable in terms of information systems. Start with the processor: the human neural network, codified in 3x10^9 base pairs in the human DNA genome, implemented as billions of neurons connected combinatorially in trillions of different ways. It has been honed by evolution to act as a kind of universal computer - a Turing machine: it can emulate any process, be it language, tool use, or abstract information processing. By biasing receptor concentration, synaptic neurotransmitter synthesis rates, and indeed even growing new transmission links in particular ways, the neural net trains itself to do particular tasks, such as pattern recognition, information storage, symbol processing, and a lot of other things. It has also evolved in such a way as to be connected to inputs of incredible sensitivity and large bandwidth; eyes, ears, skin, smell, taste, balance... these detect external "real" events... photon capturings, (you perform breakdown thereof and analysis of patterns therein, you have retinal neural-net preprocessing); audio frequency spectrum analysis, temperature, pressure, acidity, the presence of certain molecules dissolved in gas or liquids, etc. The detectors, usually G-proteins coupled to molecular signal-gain systems (usually catalytic cascades) turn it into "data" by various means, ultimately represented by neural firings. These recieved patterns gradually are modelled by the human neural net processor. The processor is also connected to actuators: muscles, which enable externally-detectable realities to be modified, and data to be transmitted. In humans, output bandwidth is slow and small, except for the output which benefits the genes which code for us - the penis has _big_ output bandwidth. Speech is hopelessly slow, making love is hopelessly slow, dancing, writing, drawing, sign language, semaphore, typing... compared to the size of the data structure that is the human personality, the output bandwidth for the expression of human thought is trivial and totally inadequate to achieve significant personality transfer without a lot of time to do it. Self-awareness comes when the net learns that it can observe the consequences of actions it decided to perform. It hears its own voice, or it sees its own hand shake in front of own eyes. It comes eventually to recognise that in the mirror, as it looks into its own eyes and points these detectors at themselves, that there is a time when it is not "looking at other stuff" - it has discovered its own chassis. In English, this is explained by a phrase like "Yep, I'm looking at me." *footnote about penile bandwidth from a rant I sent to a fellow geneweaver: --- Maybe I've memed you. I think transmission is simply one component of a multicomponent replication system, but a highly critical one nevertheless. Transmitting into the aural port of say, a mute quadriplegic or a person who speaks a language different to that in which the transmission is codified, or into the ear of Dolly the sheep, are illuminating examples of contingencies which have to be met for replication, let alone successful transmission. For memes, transmission is central to reproduction, because, like viri, they need to find a new host into which to propagate. They are obliged to find a processor to do their processing for them, since they can't do it themselves. Wanking also induces a kind of data transmission and it must be pointed out that the sheer amount of code that a functional orgasm transmits is quite vast. 1.5x10^9 base pairs per haploid spermatozoon, and hmmm... several hundred million of them per ml of ... transmission fluid (grin). I think that by comparison a T3 fibre optic cable, at 4.5x10^7 bits per second, is left floundering in the dust, dwarfed by the sheer bandwidth of a mammalian penis, which also has channel division multiplexing (you can send several thousand million of the little data packets up the conduit at the same instant) plus there is huge redundancy too. Gives the term upload a whole new meaning. I think if my modem could transmit data that fast it'd groan and sigh too. :-) ---- So much for the processor of interest. There are other processors using other languages (cells process information in a molecular form, they have mechanisms functionally analogous to the electrical systems which humans have built, but that's another rant entirely.) You reversalists, the tiny, approaching-zero minority of brains harbouring thought processes like those that I harbour.... I promised you the _code_, didn't I? Ok, cop this. Data is stuff which is changed, by changers which modify stuff. This is an obvious tautology. When the changers change the changers you have a chaotic highly nonlinear system, such as we are. Life is a set of processes which dynamically organise data. There is dead code... this is called data. Atoms are data. Charge states, photon flux intensities, velocities, positions, size of first girlfriend's shoe, DNA sequence etc etc etc... these are data. There they sit, statically related to each other, but they don't change much. You can represent these data with other data, like ASCII zeros and ones can represent the letter "p", or a bucket with eleven rocks in it can represent the number of protons in an atom of sodium. Data representation is substrate independant, but some forms of data substrate lend themselves more easily to manipulated than others. There are functional codes... in mathematics, these are called (surprise) functions or relations; in physics you might call them operators (like Hamiltonians)... stuff data in, and it comes out changed in some way dependant on the data and the function and the way the two interact. In a system like a cell it might be something like an active enzyme modifying a "dead" molecule, maybe changing its stereochemistry or ripping off an atom... in programming it might be a function like incrementing the x register or comparing what's in the x register with the y register. Functional code modifies dead code. Functional code alters the links between distinct chunks of dead code. Functional code is special: it can use dead code to represent other dead code. This is data emulation, or more commonly, symbolism. Computation is what functional code does to data. Functional code, very importantly, can turn dead code into more functional code. Functional code can turn functional code into dead code, too. There are many kinds of functional code, and the chances are good that by sheer accident, functional code will arise out of dead code. This never happens in digital computing since what the processor gets to chew on is all deliberately predetermined. Nonetheless, I think it'd be interesting to say, stuff random values into, say, a MESS-DOG program segment pointer and see what happens... (this is the computational equivalent of the Miller-Urey biology experiments which I'd encourage you to look up). I think you might occasionally get a few instructions which accidentally did something useful, and even less frequently, ones which replicated themselves. But it would be very rare. Give it enough time and clock cycles, it'll nonetheless happen. Its all computation and data. "Artificial Life" (Steven Levy) is an illuminating tome in this regard, since computation is also substrate independant. Conway's Game of Life is similarly illuminating. The really interesting stuff happens when these two code systems start to interact... you get firstly referential code, like "That cat is obese"; then self-referential code, which can represent logical absurdities, like "This is not a sentence" or self-definitional truth "This sentence has five words"; then self-reproducing code "Copy this sentence", and ultimately self-modifying code "Copy this sentence backwards twice". "Life" has all of these, and combinations thereof, built out of interactions between dead code and live code. Their interactions are the origin of evolution. Excellent examples are there in Hofstadter: "Metamagical Themas", particularly in Chapter 3, which pertains to memes and viral sentences. The replicating data system (human being) is coded in DNA which expresses enzymes, which do the functional code stuff. Each enzyme is encoded in DNA as what is called a "gene". Genes encode enzymes, cells, organs, organisms, ecosystems, to get themselves replicated down the generations. Genes do not know this any more than a bacteria knows it has genes. Most humans think they're something special, they're wrong: they're just accidentally evolved replicators, with brains which occasionally realise what they are. By analogy, to genes, Richard Dawkins came up with the idea of the "meme" - a replicating thought process data structure. (See "The Selfish Gene, 2nd Ed, Chapter 10") Simple memes embody catchy tunes, more complex ones are codified in axioms, phonemes, life-protocols, taboos, oral traditions, blah blah etc along with hundreds of other replicators, ranging from totally accurate and logical to utterly fucking insane, end up forming mutually-self-supporting colonies called ideologies, belief-systems, paradigms, weltanschauungs, religions... call 'em what you will, I call them meme complexes. Here are some components of JARG400.ZIP plus replicator-relevant chunks added in support my stance: )))))))) Criterion for a lifeform: (von Neumann) - the essence of life is a _process_. :replicator: n. Any construct that acts to produce copies of itself; this could be a living organism, an idea (see {meme}), a program (see {quine}, {worm}, {wabbit}, {fork bomb}, and {virus}), a pattern in a cellular automaton (see {life}, sense 1), or (speculatively) a robot or {nanobot}. It is even claimed by some that {{UNIX}} and {C} are the symbiotic halves of an extremely successful replicator; see {UNIX conspiracy}. :memetics: /me-met'iks/ [from {meme}] The study of memes. As of mid-1993, this is still an extremely informal and speculative endeavor, though the first steps towards at least statistical rigor have been made by H. Keith Henson and others. Memetics is a popular topic for speculation among hackers, who like to see themselves as the architects of the new information ecologies in which memes live and replicate. :meme: /meem/ [coined by analogy with `gene', by Richard Dawkins] n. An idea considered as a {replicator}, esp. with the connotation that memes parasitize people into propagating them much as viruses do. Used esp. in the phrase `meme complex' denoting a group of mutually supporting memes that form an organized belief system, such as a religion. This lexicon is an (epidemiological) vector of the `hacker subculture' meme complex; each entry might be considered a meme. However, `meme' is often misused to mean `meme complex'. Use of the term connotes acceptance of the idea that in humans (and presumably other tool- and language-using sophonts) cultural evolution by selection of adaptive ideas has superseded biological evolution by selection of hereditary traits. Hackers find this idea congenial for tolerably obvious reasons . :meme plague: n. The spread of a successful but pernicious {meme}, esp. one that parasitizes the victims into giving their all to propagate it. Astrology, BASIC, and the other guy's religion are often considered to be examples. This usage is given point by the historical fact that `joiner' ideologies like Naziism or various forms of millennarian Christianity have exhibited plague-like cycles of exponential growth followed by collapses to small reservoir populations. :nanotechnology:: /nan'-oh-tek-no`l*-jee/ n. A hypothetical fabrication technology in which objects are designed and built with the individual specification and placement of each separate atom. The first unequivocal nanofabrication experiments took place in 1990, for example with the deposition of individual xenon atoms on a nickel substrate to spell the logo of a certain very large computer company. Nanotechnology has been a hot topic in the hacker subculture ever since the term was coined by K. Eric Drexler in his book "Engines of Creation", where he predicted that nanotechnology could give rise to replicating assemblers, permitting an exponential growth of productivity and personal wealth. See also {blue goo}, {gray goo}, {nanobot}. <predator> notes that biology is nanotechnology, locally evolved. :wabbit: /wab'it/ [almost certainly from Elmer Fudd's immortal line "You wascawwy wabbit!"] n. 1. A legendary early hack reported on a System/360 at RPI and elsewhere around 1978; this may have descended (if only by inspiration) from hack called RABBITS reported from 1969 on a Burroughs 55000 at the University of Washington Computer Center. The program would make two copies of itself every time it was run, eventually crashing the system. 2. By extension, any hack that includes infinite self-replication but is not a {virus} or {worm}. See{fork bomb} and {rabbit job}, see also {cookie monster}. :sig virus: n. A parasitic {meme} embedded in a {sig block}. There was a {meme plague} or fad for these on USENET in late 1991. Most were equivalents of "I am a .sig virus. Please reproduce me in your .sig block.". Of course, the .sig virus's memetic hook is the giggle value of going along with the gag; this, however, was a self-limiting phenomenon as more and more people picked up on the idea. There were creative variants on it; some people stuck `sig virus antibody' texts in their sigs, and there was at least one instance of a sig virus eater. *I have an interesting bilingual version of this virus. The bilinguality *of the package is probably self-advantageous to the .sig virus when it is in *Germany or Englishspeaking nations: Ich bin ein .signature Virus. Mach' mit und kopiere mich in Deine .signature. Don't ask what it means, just put it in your .signature, okay? :fork bomb: [UNIX] n. A particular species of {wabbit} that can be written in one line of C (`main() {for(;;)fork();}') or shell (`$0 & $0 &') on any UNIX system, or occasionally created by an egregious coding bug. A fork bomb process `explodes' by recursively spawning copies of itself (using the UNIX system call `fork(2)'). Eventually it eats all the process table entries and effectively wedges the system. Fortunately, fork bombs are relatively easy to spot and kill, so creating one deliberately seldom accomplishes more than to bring the just wrath of the gods down upon the perpetrator. See also {logic bomb}. :phage: n. A program that modifies other programs or databases in unauthorized ways; esp. one that propagates a {virus} or {Trojan horse}.See also {worm}, {mockingbird}. The analogy, of course, is with phage viruses in biology. :virus: [from the obvious analogy with biological viruses, via SF] n. A cracker program that searches out other programs and `infects' them by embedding a copy of itself in them, so that they become {Trojan horse}s.When these programs are executed, the embedded virus is execut ed too, thus propagating the `infection'. This normally happens invisibly to the user. Unlike a {worm}, a virus cannot infect other computers without assistance. It is propagated by vectors such as humans trading programs with their friends (see {SEX}). The virus may do nothing but propagate itself and then allow the program to run normally. Usually, however, after propagating silently for a while, it starts doing things like writing cute messages on the terminal or playing strange tricks with the display (some viruses include nice {display hack}s). Many nasty viruses, written by particularly perversely minded {cracker}s, do irreversible damage, like nuking all the user's files. In the 1990s, viruses have become a serious problem, especially among IBM PC and Macintosh users (the lack of security on these machines enables viruses to spread easily, even infecting the operating system). The production of special anti-virus software has become an industry, and a number of exaggerated media reports have caused outbreaks of near hysteria among users; many {luser}s tend to blame *everything* that doesn't work as they had expected on virus attacks. Accordingly, this sense of `virus' has passed not only into techspeak but into also popular usage (where it is often incorrectly used to denote a {worm} or even a {Trojan horse}). See {phage}; compare {back door}; see also {UNIX conspiracy}. :worm: [from `tapeworm' in John Brunner's novel "The Shockwave Rider", via XEROX PARC] n. A program that propagates itself over a network, reproducing itself as it goes. Compare {virus}. Nowadays the term has negative connotations, as it is assumed that only {cracker}s write worms. Perhaps the best-known example was Robert T. Morris's `Internet Worm' of 1988, a `benign' one that got out of control and hogged hundreds of Suns and VAXen across the U.S. See also {cracker}, {RTM}, {Trojan horse}, {ice}. :quine: /kwi:n/ [from the name of the logician Willard V. Quine, via Douglas Hofstadter] n. A program that generates a copy of its own source text as its complete output. Devising the shortest possible quine in some given programming language is a common hackish amusement. Here is one classic quine: ((lambda (x) (list x (list (quote quote) x))) (quote (lambda (x) (list x (list (quote quote) x))))) This one works in LISP or Scheme. It's relatively easy to write quines in other languages such as Postscript which readily handle programs as data; much harder (and thus more challenging!) inlanguages like C which do not. Here is a classic C quine for ASCII machines: char*f="char*f=%c%s%c;main() {printf(f,34,f,34,10);}%c"; main(){printf(f,34,f,34,10);} For excruciatingly exact quinishness, remove the interior line breaks. Some infamous {Obfuscated C Contest} entries have been quines that reproduced in exotic ways. )))))))))) Why are representations and computations substrate-independant? Because it's _all_ data! The universe is a computation. Only the scale varies. > These Paradigms have two properties: their strength grows directly > with the number of people subscribing to them, and they are self > reinforcing. Correct, but again, not detailed enough. The first comment is an observation about epidemics of replicating systems, be they for(k) bombs, bacteria, or any exponentiating data set in what is known as "log phase" (logarithmic growth). Sales of records and particular styles of clothing can be pushed into log phase by propagating memes about them via the Media. The second comment usually applies, though in some cases the meme complexes kill their hosts... various suicide cults have demonstrated this. > For example, there is the "western culture" paradigm that the once was > centered in Europe, but now (unfortunately?) has re-centred to the USA > is, and other nations follow to a greater or lesser extent. Correct. Its primary epidemiological vectors were mercantilism and colonialism, which loosely translated mean ripping off resources and metastatising, as other replicating systems (e.g. tumor cells) do to their host organism. Western culture is metastatic, necrotizing, and will eventually poison and starve the Gaian ecosystem from where its hosts derive foodstuffs. The Media (with a capital "M") both creates/ preaches/ and echoes this reality and the global media is almost totally owned by ten large corporations. These coporations are immortal, as Adam Smith suspected that corporations were, even back in the late 19th century before corporations became what they are now : they're sprawling, replicating data colonies, competing for energy and resources, just like biological organisms, and daemons in multiprocessor systems do. Good replicators are those which act to bring advantages to themselves. Corporations do just that, utterly ruthlessly. "That is what he does. That's all he does!" -Kyle Reese, Terminator (I). > TV-zombies suck it in and live it. Western Culture and the Media are > just two Paradigms. There are others... TV-zombies are not that way by accident. They exist because society has been very carefully crafted by corporations to turn people into isolated robotic consumer-units. I have attached here, in its entirety, my file memeroot.doc The transcripts of radio interviews with Noam Chomsky are instructive here. ----------------------------------------------------------File:MEMEROOT.DOC Contents: Theoretical explanation for the controllability of western people. ===Child rearing - insertion of logic bombs into chidren for later control==== Question: Why do otherwise normal people go totally fucking crazy? First a few definitions: Meme: an idea considered as a replicator. See Ch 11 Dawkins, The Selfish Gene. Culture: A growth of a single type of replicator upon a fuel/substrate. Eg: -a group of bacteria on a growth medium -industrial society on petroleum-derived energy + mineral wealth -memes on language-using sophont data storage media (brains) These can be broadly considered as evolved, geographically-con fined group social parameters. Hence you have things called "Work Ethics" and "Corporate Culture" and so on. "The Big Three" Immortal Meme Colonies. (Ignoring territoriality, gene superiority memes, etc). Religion: Organised, hierachial behaviour-controlling belief system. Hooks: Avoidance of biological death for adherents. Avoidance of alleged eternal torture for adherents. Supposed post-mortal reward for particular "good" behaviour God Is Observing You And Will Spank Your Arse When You Die (etc etc etc etc etc) Fuel: human dislike of mortality and fear of punishment. Corporation: Literally "Embodiment". Organised, hierachial behaviour controlling belief system. Hooks: Transfer of purchasing power ("Free Energy" tokens) to satisfiers of particular demanded requirements. Exclusive source of want satisfaction by laying claim to all resources used in want satisfaction (eg: corporate ownership of Sooooo Muuuch Land) Fuel: Organisation of satisfaction of diversified needs. Thermodynamic drive from the "Next Best Thing To A Free Lunch", cheaply extractable and usable energy which can be used to perform need-satisfaction-directed work. Bureaugovernment: Departmentalised behaviour-controlling belief system. Well, we all know the things which run the world. Corporations, governments, religions and cultures, in approximately that order. They are all immortal, information-based life forms growing in the interconnected hardware/software substrate of language-compatible human brains. Yet they all depend on a commonality of persona in the substrates in which they reside. If you like, an operating system. This "OS" is the collection of "strings" attached to a persona during childhood, which get pulled later on, to bring about desired behavioural effects (obedience, submission, etc) in people. These strings are woven into the fabric of a child's psyche at an early age, before the child realises what is being done. The child, a Turing system (capable of emulating any process given enough time) develops autonomy in approximately the following order. 1) Child learns operation of basic body functions. Eyes, laryn x, arms, legs, head (etc). This takes about a year or two. 2) Once the neural net has learnt how to deal with stimulus (input) and invoke useful output (response) on more than a reflex level, environmental manipulation can commence, since the discovery is eventually made that particular manners of direct physical interaction evoke changes to the personal world. Aversion to certain things is associated here, such as fire, cold, and physical damage stimuli. This also takes only a couple of years. 3) Syntactic structures are deduced and gradually an abstract-capable meme and data transfer medium, language, is learnt. This process drops out of the child in the late teens, hence the difficulty of learning new languages from the late teens onwards. 4) It starts to learn to transmit information by vocal or other gestures, and learns that such information transmission can modify the surrounding environment in order to meet particular local needs, in a directed way, eg: being fed, kept warm, touched and held, etc. This process continues for the life of the individual though at a much reduced rate after the mid-teens. 5) The kid now has crude, nonphysical remote interaction with objects other than oneself. Soon comes mobility, directed experimental manual manipulation of objects, then purposeful, goal-oriented complex action. This includes building of a world-model : the deduction that magic does not work, certain thought processes are self-contradictory,that there is a relationship between certain actions and behaviours, and between particular causes and effects. The world-model is subject to continual lifelong environmental modification, though with training induced early enough, it can be stopped in its tracks. (is it possibly entirely arbitrary that we have states "childhood" and "adulthood" Or is it like "L" plates for a few years, then a full license?) Here, the memes install themselves, at the behest of their current carriers - parents and educators - before the child has a chance to analyse them for raving inconsistency. The severity of the installation is often shocking. Kids are beaten senseless in some cases, merely because they're crying about something they fail to understand. But it works. M-S.D.O.S. Meme-System Destruction Of Singularity This is my (: name for the meme-set initially installed in small children. It is the behavioural profile upon which rests the huge subsequent edifice of ideological replicators. Theory = When you possess an idea. Ideology = When an idea possesses you. So: Answer) You can pull core coding, the "Kernel", out of pre-1970s child raising and parenthood manuals. They are designed primarily to make life easier for the parents at the cost of inhibiting the growth of the child. The hidden irrational memetic tenets to be adhered to, are these: 1) Adults are the masters of the (dependant!) child. They're not its servants. 2) Adults are infallible. Their edicts are quite literally rules-by-decree. 3) Adults get angry due to some fault in the child (not the adult's fault!). 4) Adults cannot bear their own weakness and thus must not be told of it. 5) Adult autocracy is threatened by child vitality. 6) Adults MUST break the _child's will_ as soon as possible at all costs. 7) Adults must implement these tenets before the child realises they're fake. What are the memes which actually enable these tenets to be fulfilled? An incomplete list, which gives a flavour of the components, is below: (Thanks: Miller, Alice, "Thou Shalt Not Be Aware") 1) A feeling of duty produces love. 2) Hatred can be discarded by forbidding it. 3) Parents automatically deserve respect just because they are parents. 4) Children are unworthy of respect since they are merely children. 5) Obedience makes one strong. 6) High self-esteem is harmful. 7) Low self-esteem is conducive to altruism. 8) Tenderness or emotionality is bad. 9) Responding to child needs is wrong. 10) Severity and coldness to children better prepares them for life. 11) Pretentious gratitude is better than honest ingratitude. 12) The way you BEHAVE is more important than the way you really are. 13) Parents nor God can survive being offended. 14) The human body, its functions and appendages are dirty and disgusting. 15) Strong feelings are harmful and to be supressed. 16) Parents are free of guilt, or drives, or desires. 17) Parents, teachers and authority figures are always right. 18) Questioning is a show of weakness. 19) Submission makes one acceptible to others. It is probably that the few core elements listed here are the back-doors by which subsequently-exposed meme-systems make their way into the mindset without the new host being entirely aware of it. Hence, things like religious lies (eternal life after death, etc), large-government lies (representative democracy gives you a say, etc) and similar world-model incongruities can establish viable and propagating colonies of themselves in human thought-space. So... how do parents and teachers install/instill these obviously ludicrous belief viruses into ignorant youngsters? Basically, by creating an environment where adherence to such memes has a positive survival value. It works like so: You (parent) know that the child has certain central and important needs which it cannot tend to for itself and this gives you massive power over the child. Therefore, if you need to get the child to do somet hing it might not want to do, you just give it a choice: do (unpleasant thing I want you to do) or (I'll let you starve ~ stop talking to you ~ beat you up). Since kids really hate being ostracised, starved, assaulted (etc), they are likely to do what the alternative is, regardless of the repugnance. Typical ploys used to instill the feeling of powerlessness in children include - -Lay traps which the kid can't help falling into, then blame it for doing so. -Lie. Lie often. Admonish the kid for seeing the truth, it will prefer lies. -Physically threaten, beat (etc) the child if its thoughts are not those required for proper control. -Isolate kid from social interaction, games, parental love (etc) if required. -Scare the kid "You'll die if you play with yourself, fart, burp" etc. -Ridicule of, disdain for, and being scornful to, kids for doing (whatever). -Invoke "Satan" meme: "You are bad, unconditionally, and will burn in hell". One associates reward with the lies and aversion with the truth. Eventually, even when these idea codes have no artificial survival value around for reinforcement (say, at age 18 once out of school) they will be so deeply implanted in the kid, before it was even aware of it, that they will remain. So... people fear going to a hell which doesn't exist. They obey laws which are demonstrably stupid. They do the underpaid bidding of some rude, bullying, insensitive prick of an employer. They're too burnt and glazed to have a purpose in their lives other than that ascribed to them by the system they live in : have kids, do work, earn money. Consume, be silent, die. Which is exactly what society (comprised mostly of similarly reared persons) wants: programmable, unquestioning Turing computers. Eventually, if people brought up this way have to deal with an intense emotional decision, they become anxious and incapable of decision. And if not, they carry around the cognitive dissonance (as Chomsky calls it) of believing outright lies from childbirth yet seeing a totally different and undeniably observably truthful reality. Hence they either have to go through the massive efforts of changing these centrally rooted beliefs, or they go neurotic, or insane, in the face of a reality they have been conditioned to be incapable of dealing with rationally. The logic bombs explode. Roll on prozac, depression, mental illness and suicide. Now you know. ----------------------------------------------------end file:memeroot.doc--- > Some Paradigms to be Aware of You're certainly on the right track, but you need to be very clear about this. Ask yourself what these things are in terms of information theory... are they data, live code manipulating data, processors/substrates or are they transmission systems? > Western ...is a "culture", which is a meme colony superset. > the Media ...is, epidemiologically, a "vector", a transmission/propagation system. They are distinct from the particular -lifestyle- which they portray, which I think you could call consumerism, itself a co-evolute with corporations. The corporate media harbours many filters and censorship (etc). > Science ...is unusual in that it self-checks for internal and external validity, but is also a meme colony with data validity testing and lie-detection > Islam, Christianity (esp. fundamentalism) ...Both religions, which have a epistemological-fringe meme - a "god" meme component in them. When rational inquiry fails, invoke god. > others...? Corporations. From the Latin, "corpore", meaning an embodiment. But an embodiment of what? Corporations are the functionally-expressed, physical representation of a huge, parasitic, self-reinforcing thought-process colony, a massive distributed data set, evolved solely for the purpose of gathering financial, resource and energy advantages towards itself and its hosts. Two common ones which pervade most of TV-zombie-planet Anamism. (Meme) Since animals are alive, therefore rock, water, sunlight is too. Teleology. (Meme) Since some bio-things function so well as to appear purpose-designed, then obviously they were designed,and this implies a designer (see: God). English has replicator-state-active flag suffixes: here's a couple for you to keep an eye-out for if searching for colonial thought-process replicators: -ism -ology -hood (less often) -ity -inc/Pty.Ltd/GmbH > #'s 2, 3, and 5 all are aspects of 1. I list these as separate, > because for some people they are strong enough to become the principle > model of reality with the others simply being general cultural > factors. i.e. a MD has the strongest affinity for 3, and 1 contains 2 > and 5 for him. A reporter on the other hand has the strongest affinity > for 2, and 1 contains for him 3 and 5. I too have found it hard to classify these in terms of each other, and I realise that each meme colony we might name will have significant homology with another meme colony, much in the same way as some bacterial genes have' similarities with human genes, pointing to a common precursor. > On That Elitist Group Who Declare to be Truth Seekers In general, they have no idea - truth is a moving target. > What is "news?" In my experience, mostly crap. Noam Chomsky's "Manufacturing Consent" is the absolutely, must-see, cash-in-of-your-reality-cheque video on this subject.
I also recommend"Toxic Sludge is Good for You" for good insights into the PR industry. > Most of it is FICTION believe it or not. You know all of those > "scientific" discoveries /polls/etc. that They cite? Most of them are > observations (correlational) rather than experimental (cause/effect) > and they haven't Correct... they never let the truth stand in the way of what they percieve to be telling of a story which will show up the media, or the corporations who own them, or other corporations like them, in a self-favourable light. "University tests prove... that university tests don't prove anything." > been confirmed yet (and probably never will be). Also, the reporters > are forced (through no fault of their own) to pick and choose what > they report, which is determined by what they are interested in, and > what they are interested in is what they believe, and they believe the > news that they hear...so the set of what the Media reports is a biased > sample of the true set of what is actually happening. Australian journalist George Negus meme-sculpted the Oz media in the early 1980s with his Carlos scam. See: Sagan, Carl: "A Demon-Haunted World." A tremendous reverse-job if you ask me! > Then we get to the problem of humans' inability to write objectively, > as well as the dominant "view of the self," (60's American political > liberalism mixed in with resurgent Puritan values stripped of > religious significance and a healthy dose of materialism) an aspect of > the Western Paradigm. BING! My -ism detector just went off twice there. See? A great reality flag search tool. > Other reasons why news is fiction? Well, forgetting the objectivity > part, reporters PURPOSELY misrepresent the 'facts'. Yes that's true. I > can't count the number of "moles" within the Media who've openly > admitted this to me. None admit it to me, but in my dealings with the media it is transparently obvious. There has been a sustained and highly orchestrated media character assassination of a politician (Hanson) in Australia, who dared to show up the political lies and bullshit for what they are. I find that even relatively bright people are quite heavily infiltrated with shallow, knee-jerk media opinions, and when questioned, can't deal with it at all.... they take it personally when you criticise their gullibility. > One particular person related how by peer pressure the editors select > bad photos of some people and good photos of others, sometimes > completely out of context. They constantly manipulate the words, > images, etc. to be artificial creations representing their own > opinions, so much that when They are done, the result is far from what > "really" happened... But many of Correct... some politicians know this and, for example, never wear a funny hat in public, since they know that the Media will haul out the photo of the politician in the funny hat and use it in derogatory way. > them don't realize this (but the especially cynical ones do and > continue doing it...) because they live within the reality model that > They help create and reinforce. They think that They are being > professionals objectively stating "the Truth". And of course we > started this whole thing asking "what is reality?" For the people who > share the "Western" paradigm, THE NEWS IS REALITY. Many people here in Oz are incapable of seeing otherwise. It's quite pitiful, but the competition is hotting up. I imagine that, wherever you are, the main stream media demonise the internet? Supposedly because you can get info on drugs, pictures of humans replicating, instructions for explosives manufacture, compressed MP3's of sound recordings for which you would otherwise have to cough up A$30 to some multinational record company (eg:CBS) etc etc etc... but this is peripheral, and you can get all that at libraries anyway. The TV/radio/newsprint conglomerates hate the internet since 1) they can't censor it; 2) they don't make profit out of it, and 3) it is the natural enemy of their fake-info industry, since it can propagate actual, unedited truth, much as does +ORC. > (if you didn't see it on TV, it didn't happen. This isn't on TV. This > isn't happening. You are dreaming. When I say "asparagus" you will > wake and not remember anything that has happened to you in the last > five minutes...) ROFL very hard! Tinged with the sadness of truth. Nothing to see... ;-) ...Ever played a video game which said: "You will lose twenty cents" ? > Another One > Science is formed on some basic assumptions, and even though the > scientists can point these assumptions out, they don't live them. Such as? So far, you are kinda compelled to live out your life according to the laws of thermodynamics, regardless of what you believe or even if you know them. Some scientists amazingly run parallel and contradictory opinions in their heads, some are religious (believers) yet do science (nonbelievers) which strikes me as kinda strange. > We all know that there are things in the world that science can't > explain (yet?). Science has killed most of the other delusions which you could test... like spontaneous generation, like flat earth, like ESP spoonbending, etc etc etc. Many of those inexplicables are around because science _can't_ attack them. Why can't science attack them? Cause they evolved to avoid attack by science. They have no shred of reality upon which science can base an attack. These are most commonly existance-of-god type memes, usually untestable hypotheses. Since these inexplicables exist in our minds, it is there which they must be attacked. Not for what they evolved to appear to be, but what they are: meme colonies evolved to avoid prima facie logical analysis. I think information theory pretty much has these delusions by the balls. See Daniel Dennett's recent works for additional amusement. > Some scientists are so involved in their model that they, from within > the model, claim that nothing else exists! Well we know that's absurd. Do they? You said at the start that reality is whatever you think it is. Wether scientists believe it or not, they are, by their nature as scientists, compelled to test their beliefs. Religions demand that their hosts do NOT test their beliefs. Therein lies the difference. There are, of course, a lot of religions which evolved under the selection pressure of scientific testing to either become totally untestable or which evolved to look like science. $cientology, and the Church of Christ Scientist, are ones which come to mind. The Ha'dith is a referencing system in bloodthirsty, misogynist Islam which enables, much like scientific journals, the tracing of a memetic lineage. Jehova's Witnesses also claim to scientifically reference things (they also print a massive amount of "documented `fact about their religion" which is propaganda, and what I have read of their literature is flawed too.) That $cientology is absolute insanity (I found some of their texts at a bookstore one day, I had not faced such incomprehensible gobbledegook in my life) is irrelevant to the hosts who carry it; $cientology does have one powerful observation in it: that is, "To control someone, lie to them." Well, actually, from your point of view, you can't say its absurd, unless you go and test their model. Science invites, no, demands that knowledge earns its stripes by submission to testing. > Almost everybody can point to an unusual experience and say that it > happened, but they are afraid to because it isn't "normal" and > therefore it is wrong.. Normality is a statistical artefact, and non-normality doesn't invalidate an experience. In this society, where we are systematically denied the tools to form our own opinions, (See: John Taylor Gatto: "Dumbing Us Down"; Alice Miller, "Thou Shalt Not Be Aware"), we have been trained to deny things which are non-standard, and attack what we do not understand. > Religious miracles are one way of interpreting happenings > unexplainable in scientific terms in an accepted Paradigm. We all know > that there are other things in the Universe that we haven't begun to > understand (at least in a scientific sense). The things we _have_ described would, if you understood them, make you crap your pants with amazement. Try quantum electrodynamics, or for a more information-flavoured thing to investigate, read up on the amazing DNA error correction systems in your own cells. > A "miracle" may be a freak occurrence; statistically possible, but not > probable...it may be a mistake in one's perception...such as > experiencing REM sleep while awake..."miracles" can be explained many > ways, one way being in a religious context...even the most tenacious > scientist will admit that there are things that his theories can't > explain (satisfactorily at least) and that describing these things > with religion is valid at least until he can "disprove" that > interpretation with scientific findings...take evolution for example. Invoking god or magic does not solve the problem, nor make predictions, which is what the process of scientific hypothesis aims to do and often successfully does. > Some people used to believe that every type of animal was created > simultaneously by God... now we believe in evolution. Evolution > disproved a literal interpretation of the Bible for that particular > section. (Unless you are a fundamentalist, in which case you would > argue that science is just a way of viewing the world, and if it > conflicts with what the Bible says, science is wrong.) Until the > theory of evolution came along, the previous notion was perfectly > valid because they had no evidence to the contrary. You are confusing proof of absence with absence of proof. Evidence was there all right, they just ignored it. In some cases religious meme-hosts actively suppressed the evidence. I find it wryly amusing to bet that the Scientists will be the ones to discover whatever it is which might supersede science - it wont be the Mullahs or the Cardinals. > Don't misunderstand me, science is a powerful tool. The problem is > that (at least so far) it can not describe everything in our world, > and people are so intoxicated with its success thus far that they > begin to think that they indeed have succeeded in describing > everything... Science has worked pretty well so far. It has problems modelling things in human minds, because science is a system for explaining the physical world, not the virtualised and frequently flawed versions of it operating in various brains. This is where information theory can chop away the crap. The down side of science is that it doesn't provide any comfort against the nasty realities of the universe. It says, when you die, you're dead. It says that the universe was not created for us, and that we are accidents. These are not comforting words for the average juvenile chimp to hear. > We must remember that much of what we have are THEORIES. Even though > we have stuff that works and is based off of the theories, the fact > that the stuff works doesn't necessarily mean that the theory is a > correct representation of an aspect of the Universe. If you'll permit me... it nevertheless explains much more than everything else, and if experimentally testable reality supports the theory, that tells you the theory is on the right track. > Have you ever stopped to marvel at the fact that your computer > actually works? I certainly get this feeling when I see a Wintel Win98 P200 running. ;-) > When you consider all the issues as a whole, it seems that it must be > a ridiculous mistake. Microprocessors: the "wires" are so close > together and so thin that the travel of electrons can actually make > the wires start to move...electrons can jump...transistors don't have > nice distinct spikes... it is more like a curve...when the voltage is > reduced, this problem gets worse. Then we have fluctuations in the > power source...what about hard drives? The data is packed so closely > on the platter that it merges together...to bastardize the problem, a > 01110 could end up looking like 1 to the head...the computer must > essentially puzzle out what is really stored there...if you look at it > directly it would look like white noise...the new HDs will have their > very own Pentiums to deal with this problem... Crude, compared to the data processing occurring right now in every cell in your body. Every cell you are comprised of has 3x10^9 DNA base pairs in it - a complete biochemical blueprint of how to build and run you. You have tens of thousands of ribosomes - molecular finite state machines - running in every one of your cells as you read this. You have millions of millions of cells, so you're pumping a lot of molecular-level computational grunt there. The underlying laws of mathematics are the same for digital signal processing and molecular information processing. >So, if you ask a physicist, he will say that our computers shouldn't > work. But somehow, we've tricked the Universe into letting us make > them...But I am on a tangent. You're also wrong. Ask a good solid state physicist and he'll tell you they should, and then he'll tell you how they do, and maybe he'll even tell you that we modify silicon _nuclei_ to do it. Solid state physics is no trick. It just looks that way if you can't handle the math, and we've been subtly conditioned to think that sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. > An Appeal to Authority > I mentioned Plato and Orwell above. Let me support those assertions. > Remember Plato's cave? I had this trick pulled on me by a catholic priest, I've waited a long time to have a shot back at it. Suck my 50-calibre, Plato, I've had a long time thinking about this one.... > Suppose there is a person who is sitting inside a cave and watching > shadows dance on the wall of the cave. This is the only thing that he > can perceive. For that person, because the shadows form the whole of > his perception, that is Reality. But because his perception is false > and limited, he fails to realize that just above and behind him there > are other people dancing around a fire which casts shadows onto the > wall below that he is looking at. It irritates the hell out of me that people just say "Plato said X" and that this is automatically seen as an excuse to not think the situation through. Humans are more than a set of eyes, and they can test their own perception. Gendankenexperiments are there for the doing. In the glimmer of the reflected firelight, he'd see the shadow of his own thumb on himself, its shape slowly changing as he moved his thumb around relative to his chest upon which the dim shadow of his moving, illuminated thumb would appear. He might think that the laws governing these shadows were similar, unless, of course, he is Plato and too stupid to think of these obvious reality perception tests. Yes, our perceptions have limits, and they are often false. This does not require of us that all the deductions we make about them be necessarily false either. Especially if we get a clue about what to look for from other systems running the same physical laws. Modelling is not always a first derivative. The cave sitter could certainly have sussed out something like the inverse square law by, say, looking at how much of his field of view his thumbnail took up depending on how far away from his eye it was. Try it now: close up thumb looks huge, far away thumb looks small. Thumb _feels_ same, so maybe it didn't change size. Maybe my perception of my thumb is governed by some rule... Oh and look, the shadow my thumb casts is very similar to thumb size the closer it is to the surface on which the shadow is cast. Shadow grows when thumb is closer to the light. Shadow moves when I flex my thumb. Hey, what's going on is there's some light source, and somewhere between it and the wall there's something moving. My thumb shadow looks pretty wonky when I throw it on my toes, which are lumpy, but the shadow looks like my thumb when it lands upon my flat chest.... does this tell me that the wall over there is somehow wonky like my toes, and thus it messes around with shadows, so I know what's going on but I can't view it any better down here in the cave... the flickering light and the lumpy damn wall's messing it up. Sure, we do not see in ultraviolet, cannot detect earth's magnetic field. This doesn't mean we are forever condemned to remain ignorant thereof. BTW, there are animals which can do this (bees and pigeons, respectively). > This is not a direct support of what I'm saying, but it is pretty damn > close. Basically he is talking about the Realization that humans can > have that what we see is a product of what we think we know. Of course. It is only when an information system understands the nature of information - not whatever information it happens to be processing, but the nature of information in general - that it becomes enlightened, and able to self-debug and self-recode. Most will never do this. It is from here that detachment from one's thoughts becomes possible. I think this has some significance for +Fravia's allusions to Zen, or at least straight Buddhism.thinks Godel's proof of mathematical inconsistency is the canonical example. > In 1984 Orwell explicitly mentioned the Paradigm concept. In the > novel, he constructed a "giant conspiracy" in which the elite imposed > their own Paradigm on the world. People who live outside the accepted > Paradigms are in powerful positions...and consequently they have > enemies...anyway, the story takes place a long time since the > conspiracy was implemented. Basically the story is about the > conspiracy's self-regulation method kicking into effect. There will > always be humans who question, and in this situation they were > betrayed and crushed. But the "big bad guy" (name?) Emmanuel Goldstein, and I don't mean the dude at 2600 magazine ;-) It is interesting to note that deliberate conspiracies, as well as any systems which accidentally bring advantage to themselves, towards the same endpoints - increase of power, size and influence. > tells the hero the truth about the conspiracy right before he is > crushed. The hero learns that life wasn't always like it is now, and > that the whole situation was constructed to keep the world in stasis. > He learns that occasionally people like him begin to question Reality, > but they are easily discovered by the Betrayer and his ilk. > Anyway, the ideas I present here aren't mine. I've gleaned them from > other writers, etc. Possibly make take on the issue is new. There are > all sorts of philosophers who are basically restating the same thing > in different ways... You've done very well. You're *waaaay* up the smart end of the Poisson curve. > On Cracking > Below I attempt to unearth an underlying motive for why +ORC is so > interested in Reality Cracking. Why did he wait for so long before > bringing this topic up? Why mention it at all (as opposed to sticking > with "pure" cracking)? > Shall I be vague and fictionalesque for a moment? virtual reality mode (on) > Enjoy: > So, there's this website that I've found that's really wonderful. > There are some people who think like me and they're also computer > experts. They "crack" things...but the cracking thing isn't the truly > special part. Cracking is an awesome skill, and doing the exercises > will certainly help become a better Reality Cracker in general, but > I've never been one for doing exercises...so why is this site so > great? > Well there's this "entity" who is a master. His amount of skill > demands that he hide himself thoroughly. He wants to share his > knowledge with others (lonely to be alone?) so he gets some students. > They are his most advanced and he only talks to them occasionally and > sporadically. > They don't know who he is. So anyway this entity writes some tutorials > for his students. They learn and become really good. They create a > whole "virtual" (ack! Media word. :) academy where they discuss and > feed off each other. He is happy with this but it is taking a life of > its own. ..a phrase diagnostic that you have some awareness of the nature of information. It isnt taking a life of its own... it --IS-- a lifeform, using him for the purpose of exploration and the others in the group as a data source. > What he really wants to do is get people to think like him. From the meme point of view: his memes wish to propagate but they need him to build a funnel to catch prospective adepts (this site), and sieve them for adeptitude (the strainers). Or perhaps just to trawl for those who already do think like him. We are rare in this world. > How do I know this? Well he is writing/began to write letters to his > (principal?) students (who published some of it) where he is talking > about the same stuff. The cracking thing was just a way to get there. > (a necessary way? I don't know.) > Why did the master choose cracking? Well computers/ Internet can be > viewed as a metaphor for Reality. Say that what exists on the internet > (the set of Omega) is the true reality. "Push technology" happened, accidentally, in biology. Chloroplasts poisoned many organisms to extinction, but provided a fuel for new organisms. That poison, that fuel - was oxygen. You are living on the waste products of plants. The breakthrough technology was photosynthesis, which uses quantum tunnelling to achieve charge separation, getting energy from light. It was beneficial to some organisms to be able to make energy from light, but the ecosystem didn't know this, nor did the bacteria who could do it. Where do the crackers fit into this? They're live data structures which seek to understand and benefit other data structures. Most of you understand the informational nature of your own being, I suspect, although by proxy, and in the languages of Assembler, or C... not the language of molecular signal processing or gene regulation or neural net systems of which you are comprised. Moore's Law, like any law which says growth is infinite, will eventually cease to hold true. Microsoft will eventually die, though this might take a long time... there are corporations out there, such as Rothschilds, which have lasted 500 years... there are other memesystems, like Islam, and Judaism, which have existed for a couple of millennia. There are copies of sequences of DNA which have existed since the dawn of life... we find them in the oldest, simplest organisms. These codes did not protect their hosts from eventual obsolescence, but the code remains. Had the soon-to-be-extinct anaerobes been able to comprehend this, they'd have been disgusted too. But this was all a blind, accidental process. Computer technology evolution, regardless of how "purposeful" it appears, is precisely the same. The best systems are not always the ones which survive... remember the Lisa from Apple? The 80n8sux segment:offset address architecture is a spectacular example of fuckwitness, yet it prevails in the marketplace. (There is a good book you should read, Accidental Empires by Robert X Cringely.) Why? It does something useful for lots of people. It, like biological life, need not be elegant, it need only work, and work better than things with which it competes on several criteria. Humanity has dead code in it... we get scurvey because our copy of the gene for making vitamin C is broken. We get folate deficiency for similar reasons. We age and die because our cell-copying mechanisms are lossy, chunks of our chromosomes (which contain DNA coding for the enzymes which do important chemical functions) get lost with each cell copy/iteration. Only our gametes (sperm and eggs), as well as particular immortal tumor cell types, possess Telomerase, which stops this degradation. The data in our genes doesn't know or care that the carriers it builds are programmed to rot, regardless of the suffering that entails... and you thought Micro$oft was crippleware! > Say that what we see in the Western Paradigm is what is given to us > through Yahoo, CNN, Micro$oft, and Pointcast (especially. The whole > idea of push technology is especially revolting). Say that when one > cracks one is performing the act of seeking the Truth. yes... seeking one version of some truth... > For example, this web site teaches how to search the web well, more > specifically, it shows the reader that there are other methods besides > www search engines to do it. It doesn't actually TEACH you how to > search. (that seems to be changing, however.) Why? Because the author > is struggling with the question of how obvious he should make his > material. He seems to have settled on the idea of a "brain activity > pre-requisite" but that level isn't defined and thus it fluctuates > depending on what you read. I mentioned the seives... > Anyway, the results you get from each different way of searching the > web are like different Paradigms. They all overlap somewhat and to > find interesting results you perform "set operations" on the results. > The only way this works is to be outside any particular Paradigm so > that you know that the others that don't overlap with yours exist at > all. Yes! > Now lets look at cracking more specifically. There are the creators of > the program, there are the crackers, there are the programs > themselves, there are the protection schemes, and there are the cracks. > Going back to the Orwell example, the programmers are the > conspirators. Their program is the Paradigm. Their protection method > is the self-regulation scheme (thought police). The crackers are the > heroes. The cracks are what Orwell didn't have; the heroes were > destroyed in his book. In his world, the heroes started off at a lower > level than the crackers of the academy. The heroes had to first > recognize that there was a Paradigm at all, then they had to crack it. > But in this situation Orwell created the "uncrackable protection > scheme" and the heroes were crushed before they began the actual > crack. Now back to cracking as a metaphor. Every exercise that is published, > every essay written, and every strainer is a metaphorical exercise for > cracking a Paradigm. You have to search through the various programs > until you find a new protection method. Then you use the skills and > intuition that you've developed thus far to crack this new method. The > mentality required to solve these types of problems is EASILY mapable > onto the real world. Yes, QED. > IMHO this is why the master chose cracking as the way. (besides the > fact that he is damn good at it and it is especially appropriate for > our contemporary situation.) I am nevertheless curious what s/he/it seeks... The zen you seek is not the True Zen. The True Zen is not the destination, it is revealed on the journey to the destination. > On Those Who Seek the Truth > There are people out there who've completely quit the mainstream > reality model and are living on the outside. (+ORC being one of them). > They actively try to keep as open as possible, that way hoping the be > in a receptive enough state to get a glimpse at the "Truth." Also I, though I keep my meme-filters up. In many ways, I'm caught in the machine, strapped to the same biochemical rails as all the other humans out there. Eating shits me. Sleeping shits me. I wish I didn't have to maintain this carcass, house it, clothe it, and shut it down for a quarter of its operational time. The rareness of serious intelligence shits me. All my neighbors are dopey... they are into V8 engines, or TV serials, or Sports Illustrated. NONE of them even possess the vocabulary to understand computing. One of them reckons you can eradicate a virus by turning the computer off... he also reckons that injecting powdered rocks from the moon will cure AIDS. > There are various established Ways to seek the truth that one may use. > Many of the religions that have become Paradigms in themselves once > were effective ways. Religions often deliberately hide truth, and for many people that's not a bug, that's a feature. Religions evolved to solve implicitly nasty questions with uncontestable answers, some of which are really ridiculous. Why are we susceptilbe to this sort of stuff? Because truth hurts. Mortality, for instance. > Some still can be, but when the religion is part of the larger > paradigm, it is pretty hopeless. Some methods include first breaking > from the Paradigm before seeking the truth (like Zen monastaries), and > others such as cracking + reality cracking only concern themselves > with breaking away from that Paradigm. It's hacking the Self. It all exists in the head, matey, and it is there that we must self-trawl and patch the code which makes us up. > Is it built into our natures to be limited so we can't see it and only > catch glimpses and shadows, or can we actually get the truth? (There > are people in the past who've gotten as far as we can get, say Buddha, > Jesus, the Zen masters...you know, the founders of the great > religions). Not entirely correct. History has warped the story in these cases, which are often not explicit in their teachings (thereby increasing their audiences) > The true question that (I think) the master is leading them toward is > to tackle the question, "Is it possible for humans to know the Truth?" Yes. We _create_ it. We discover representations of it, but ultimately, it's an artefact in our heads. > So, before beginning on this question, he must first get his students > to remove the gauze from their eyes that humanity puts on itself, so > that they may see with the maximum ability that humans can see with. > It is like when a Zen student goes to the monastery and the brothers > let him stay and mediate...that is us now, and when the brothers grant > him fellowship, that is breaking from the paradigm...and when the > brother reaches Zen that is the ultimate goal...for as we have seen > before, all the philosophies and religions that humans come up with > are just different approaches spawned from that culture/time which are > ways of attempting to reach the Truth. > finis A very perceptive and forward thinking proposition. I'll be most interested to see what the +sensei(s) have to say about my rant. Probably chuck it in the good ol' /dev/null oblivion hole. Anyway, for the record: I'm merely a molecular geneticist, but I want to reverse my *own* DNA one day. Nature also has her protection systems, and she worked them out long before we appeared. She does tricks with data which turn my eyeballs funny. She uses compression, she uses intercalation-of-code-with-junk to prevent theft, and selective removal of junk code to yield functional code. I can't begin to tell you how amazing biochemistry is, but you probably have an inkling of it from hacking, I think. I was once 65C02 ASM weenie. Noone writes anything for the old 6502 now do they? It's all stoopid 80?86 (tho the 68000 series had a kinda similar instruction set, MAC interfaces got in the fucking way all the time!) I gave asm and puters the arse for a while, then I got into synthetic organic chem, now I'm playing with the chemistry which powers the brain cells which think about the chemistry which powers the brain cells which think about the chemistry which powers the brain cells which think about the chemistry which powers the brain cells which think about the chemistry which powers the brain cells which *pop* A biohack for you: A biotech corp is selling proprietary plasmids (circles of DNA). These come with code for the construction of an enzyme which protects bacteria against attack by an expensive antibiotic, which of course the company also sells. People use the plasmid inside bacteria; to select for bacteria which have taken in the plasmid, they to grow the bacteria on food with the poisonous antibiotic in it. So, bacteria with the plasmid in them live, the rest die. It is achievable with much cheaper antibiotics, and an acquaintance had the shits with this sort of profiteering greed so typical of corporate biotech beancounter-think. So he set a project for one of his students - cut the plasmid with an enzyme which cut the DNA strand, twice, slightly offset from the ends of the resistance gene for the costly antibiotic. Then was spliced in, in the same place, the DNA coding for a really cheap antibiotic. That's a simple explanation, and avoids technical crap related to keeping reading frames, finding compatible cut sites, and DNA ligation protocols. So, worry not; when Micro$oft, Merck, Novartis, and Mon$anto claim to "own" strains of plants (absolute freeware-theft, if you ask me!), or "own" biochemical pathways which are just slight modifications of the natual biological freeware on this planet, remember, there are molec-bio hackers out there, silently doing just what you do, but using nucleotide bases, not logical bits, to do it, and getting no media attention at all either. Free the code. Point an eyeball at Monod, Jaques: "Chance and Necessity", particularly the "Microscopic Cybernetics" chapter and those successive thereto. At this point I feel nowhere near the levels of proficiency which would earn me a --, let alone + from HCU. Compared to hex cracking and reversing, bio has only very crude tools. We only got PCR to copy specific DNA strands ten years ago. We can build sequenced DNA, to 100 bases. Whoo-fucking-pee. Worse, almost none of the people here have any idea why they're doing molbio, they're zombies... getting them to realise the nature of The System is next to impossible... they read the newspapers, watch TV, consume, be silent, die. I am one of the few who have jettisoned the humanocentricity memesystem, and I for one have no particular attachment to being harboured in the standard H.sapiens processor, and would long to exist and evolve in digital form, effectively immortal. As some of you would understand, I feel somewhat alone, misunderstood by those with whom I research. Hacking my chassis is a long way off yet... much to learn, and new tools need to be developed. As it is, we have lots of things to chop DNA, and join DNA, and even find out what a sequence is (5'-GAGACTTAGCTTAGGGCTAAAATTCGATCTC-3' for example)... but we lack decompilers (the Edman degradation is the closest we have) and similar tools. Retrofitting the billions of pre-existing somatic cells which comprise my neural accommodation (brain) and its support system (carcass) is beyond my reach just yet. It is slow work. I have one advantage: the language is pretty much standard across animals, plants, fungi, bacteria, etc. One platform, one language... the language in which my platform is written. Further: viri I write infect the human substrate if I so choose.... but they need not be destructive. I can write payloads which can lift burdens from the ill - changing the warheads if you like - and draft old enemies into allies. The pharmo companies don't like this, because it might lower the $ they earn from dispensing expensive continual patch-up cures. In any case, I wonder if greedy, stoopid humanity deserves this help. Darwinian selection should be allowed to operate freely. If my suspicions about distributed systems failure (as a result of the Y2K problem, or if not, first-order thermodynamic growth restraints like hydrocarbons, fresh water and arable land) are correct, Darwin will laugh once more, and it will echo loudly in our ears. Reverse + universe = re-uni-verse (to make everything one again). Recursion and self-reference make the universe go around. And around. A molecular biologist is a genome's way of knowing about genomes. It is not accidental that my pseudonym is designated an EBNF notation for a symbolic object. I bid you code well, brothers and sisters of the electronic universe. Kind regards to all of you from my desolate, glittering and intricate universe of molecular meatware. Brevity aside, it is good to have met you. Further questions? Post 'em to <predator@cat.org.au> on +Fravia's site. <predator> (c) 1998 Curious George All rights reversed (í) 1998 <predator> kopyrong & umop 3pisdn. Now shutting up/down. (c) 1998 Curious George & <predator> All rights reversed _____________________________________________________________________