Archive

Page 20 of 95

Super Smart

#0476

Super Smart

The post celebrates how true genius emerges from continuous, self‑driven exploration rather than forced training: by following one’s curiosities across subjects and building on previous discoveries, individuals can create unique works that mirror the great minds of history. It argues that hobbies are stepping stones to deeper pursuits, and that being pushed into unrelated fields leads to misery; instead, a lifelong journey of curiosity—beginning in childhood and evolving with experience—creates the conditions for brilliance and world‑changing contributions.

Real Education vs. Fake Education

The post argues that modern schooling relies too heavily on memorization and standardization, treating learning as a commodity rather than a genuine pursuit of knowledge; it claims that this system benefits institutions more than students, leaving learners with shallow facts instead of real understanding, and emphasizes that true education must be authentic, self‑directed, and rooted in meaningful texts that provide deep, transformative wisdom capable of igniting personal greatness.

Real Education Helps The World Grow

Real Education propels individuals forward by keeping them one or more steps ahead of unseen troubles, fortifying their safety, strength, and intellect while empowering them—and humanity—to learn through books, narrated stories, and practical experience, ultimately enabling personal growth and world-changing impact.

Deer: The Happy Little Horses

The post is a playful poem about a bicycle trip in which the narrator sees a group of deer that he likens to little horses and decides to capture the moment on camera. He rides from his driveway out onto the highway, timing his arrival so he can stop just in time, take several quick shots without a selfie stick, then continues back home while enjoying a snack at a rest area. The poem ends with a self‑rating of ten out of ten and an invitation to repeat the adventure, punctuated by a series of attached photos that illustrate the deer sightings, his bike ride, and his happy selfies.

To A Culture Of Knowledge, Wisdom, And Greatness

The post argues that teaching is more than a job; it’s the vehicle for cultural transmission and generation‑building. The author laments how many teachers copy grades from unrelated subjects, treating a C in one class as if it applied to all others, thereby harming students’ self‑evaluation and learning. He claims that this grade‑centric, memorization‑oriented system turns schools into “jobs” that merely reproduce mistakes instead of cultivating knowledge. The piece stresses that good teaching requires deep grasp of fundamentals (e.g., math and programming) and that homeschooling can isolate kids from culture, making them vulnerable to misinformation. In short, the author sees teaching as a cultural mission whose failure leads to repeated errors and a broken generation.

Learning Is Great

The author reflects on their discontent with traditional math instruction, celebrates a successful personal LED project, and calls for a return to self‑directed learning outside the rigid school system.

Oh Snap! or How Not To Read The Documentation

The author recounts their first attempt at building an LED circuit, detailing how they initially omitted a resistor and consequently burned two LEDs before learning to calculate the correct resistance value. They describe experimenting with various resistor values—10 Ω, 100 Ω, 220 Ω, 330 Ω, and even 51 kΩ—to observe the effect on brightness and LED survival, noting that the proper resistor keeps the LED from burning out while allowing electrons to flow as heat. The post reflects their enthusiasm for electronics, the importance of learning via hands‑on experimentation, and encourages others to try simple circuits with a battery, multimeter, and careful calculation before risking shock or component failure.

All Human Beings

The post calls for a universal renewal of human rights and cultures that guarantee freedom from indoctrination, poverty, and violence. It urges children to learn truthfully and be guided toward knowledge, wisdom, and greatness; it demands open access to all human knowledge through authentic teachers. The text insists on cultures without torture, slavery or detention, free from prisons, with police only serving as rescuers and disarming agents, and a criminal mind treated medically. It also proposes politics divorced from money-making, and laws that are constantly reviewed for their impact on humanity’s hope and beauty. In short, the post invites us to study the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, make necessary repairs, and bring its spirit into our homes so that the future is worthy of all people.

Programming Is Not That Scary

The post explains how to start web development by picking manageable technologies, then details the many layers of hosting and security that come into play once your server is online. It proposes using server‑less functions to keep scaling simple, notes how mobile apps differ from web ones in terms of CPU usage and battery life, and recommends desktop frameworks such as Electron or NW.js

For The World To Flourish

The post argues that a civilization’s maturation hinges on collective learning—self‑education, knowledge, wisdom, and the pursuit of greatness—and that true growth begins when a people can reflect upon themselves and fill their minds with books. It insists that world peace is essential, so conflicts must end and cultures share a common vision of wisdom. The text stresses educating younger generations in stressless environments, encouraging them to build companies and plan rational futures, while reminding adults to correct mistakes that drag the world down. Ultimately it calls for a relaxed, cheerful upbringing, removal of errors, and a peaceful world where each individual sees their own growth as part of collective improvement.

The New Wonder Of The World

The post asserts that real learning comes from passionate teachers using flexible, computer‑assisted lecture models that encourage true understanding instead of rote memorization, urging a shift toward genuine education across all subjects.

Super Nintendent Meow

The post outlines a three‑step plan to build an integrated system: first, create a computer game that earns players fame; second, develop an editor and automator so they can become creators themselves; third, set up a marketplace that frees them from poverty by enabling them to sell their creations. The author describes this as a “school” that teaches abstract thinking and lets students learn without draining their accounts, using an abstract language that speaks worldwide and erases hate. They envision the system evolving through successive implementations—audio‑book creation, music composition with automatic song mutation, and 3D sculpture/jewelry design with automated permutation—each adding a new creative tool while keeping the platform free and open to all, ultimately aiming for world peace.

The Nearly Impossible Journey Towards World Unity And Peace

The post argues that true world peace will come from “real education” built on cultural convergence, where students create independent businesses at graduation instead of chasing grades. These institutions would be open to all, self‑financed by a small share of the businesses’ earnings, and would graduate every student with no expulsions or record‑keeping—just successful business ventures that guide their learning. The author claims current education is uneven, luck‑based, and dishonest; it fails to give people real knowledge, so they must take responsibility for self‑education. If such institutions were properly funded and carried through generations, the author believes humanity would become wiser and more dignified, ultimately achieving peace.

Convergence On Wisdom

The author reflects on reality as a solid wall that many people—especially judges, politicians, and ordinary citizens—struggle to move against, warning that those in power can have their minds poisoned by this struggle. He argues that self‑education is the key to gaining knowledge, wisdom, and greatness, which then empowers individuals to build new schools of “real education” and kindle students’ spirits. Once these truly educated people reach middle age, he predicts an era of convergence where cultures unite in peace and prosperity; without boundless international education the world will again split into divisions, hunger, poverty, and manipulation. In short, real schools are presented as the only way to accelerate this convergence and reduce suffering, war, and regret.

In The Company Of Philosophers

By believing that the world’s most vital changes come when every individual becomes wiser and stronger, this post calls for collective action: we must fix our schools so they lift students out of poverty, inspire them to think like great thinkers such as Greta Thunberg or Ken Robinson, and give them tools to build wise businesses; each person is destined to become a hero and a Great Being, reminding others to grow endlessly; together—through shared wisdom from countless leaders—humanity can overcome its divisions and face future challenges not alone but united.

Gentle Silliness Across The Ages

The post describes how to become a lifelong “Hero” who, in his later years, shares wisdom and humor through books and audio, inspiring future generations with real-life stories and observations from everyday places—like visiting Westminster Abbey or meeting ordinary people—while weaving gentle humor into the narrative; by documenting these encounters with thoughtful quips, he creates an enduring school of thought that lets readers feel his presence and learn timeless wisdom for years to come.

A Beautiful Mind

The post argues that conventional schooling often forces students into predetermined subjects and routines, leaving little room for true learning or personal interest; it stresses the importance of taking responsibility for one’s own education by actively selecting books and experiences that resonate personally—such as exploring music, science, or other passions—and making informed choices based on a broad reading base. By doing so, learners can develop a “beautiful mind” that fuels greatness, rather than merely following others’ expectations; the author believes this self‑directed learning is key to personal growth and to contributing meaningfully to society.

Art Of Art

#0459

Art Of Art

The post is an exhortation to create art that endures—starting with a simple yet powerful frame, carving a single large stone with a hammer, and shaping it patiently over a week. The author urges the artist to embed humor, sadness, wisdom, and profundity into their work, ensuring it lasts like a monument rather than a fleeting piece. By treating each creation as a story with beginning, middle, and end, the art becomes a lasting testament that both enriches the creator’s past and contributes meaningfully to the world.

All Genius Is Equally Precious

The post argues that “genius” is not an elusive gift for a few, but a state everyone can reach by resting, finding happiness, and staying true to oneself. It encourages using nature trails as quick escapes from busyness, noting that simple pleasures like bread and bug spray can help one reset. The writer stresses that constant overwork blocks our authentic selves; only when we let ourselves grow naturally—pursuing curiosity, moving forward cheerfully—do we tap into our personal genius. Though there’s no single definition, each person’s genius is unique and worth nurturing for lasting joy and accomplishment.

Breaking Out Of Indoctrination

The post argues that gaining true wisdom is a deliberate process built on reading many books—starting from simple, concrete examples like nuclear weapons and wage slavery to illustrate how easily we can miss obvious truths—and then expanding through a wide range of works: best‑sellers, award winners (e.g., Audie Awards), audiobooks, philosophy, memoirs, and biographies that let us see other cultures and break our own indoctrination. By reading thousands of titles, each adding its own perspective, we accumulate a “dollop” of wisdom that lights our perception like a torch, making us less prone to false beliefs; the author cites Plato’s Cave allegory as the ultimate illustration that only through many books can we truly see reality and help one another.

The Final Century Of Lies, Deceptions And Confusion: Rise Of The Culture Of Greatness

The post celebrates a new era in which “heroes” are alive again and thinkers—especially “out‑thinkers”—are ready to build the bridges that will lift society beyond its old ledges. It declares that this future is already here, even though it may feel late, and that children today will grow into great beings who will no longer be short‑sighted or bound by money’s choke on humanity. The author calls for building those needed bridges to repair the world, end poverty as a symptom of fake politics, and finally put an end to pretenders and lies.

Rising Above

#0455

Rising Above

The post claims schools fail to foster true individuality, urges readers to follow their own path and collaborate on repairing money and societal systems so each person can live a beautiful, self‑actualized life.

One By One, Book By Book

The post celebrates the power of united human wisdom and calls for abandoning national borders, rigid beliefs, and petty deceptions that keep us blind; it urges a collective effort—through shared learning, reading, adventure, and self‑education—to align our will and intelligence so that humanity can enter a new Renaissance of science, politics, and art, ultimately ending the tricks of liars and achieving prosperity, wisdom, and peace.

Informed Consciousness

The post reflects on how “to think” means to out‑think others—especially political liars and analysts who out‑think voters—and extends this idea to space‑opera writers and the scientist’s rule that if something can’t be proved, it doesn’t exist. It then links consciousness, choice, and freedom of will to a universal family of beings capable of wise decisions, citing Giordano Bruno as an example of sending messages into the future. Finally it urges readers to combine consciousness with wisdom, clarity, and truth in order to solve planetary problems such as climate change, nuclear weapons, and extinction, while encouraging love for animals and rise toward a greater informed consciousness.