Who Wins in a Muddle: Difference between revisions
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|image=Eric profile picture.jpg | |||
|nameurl=https://x.com/EricRWeinstein/status/1329152833728376832 | |||
|name=Eric Weinstein | |||
|usernameurl=https://x.com/EricRWeinstein | |||
|username=EricRWeinstein | |||
|content=Since the Internet took over the heavy lifting of [[Semi-reliable Communal Sense-making|sense-making]], [[Who Wins in a Muddle|almost everything ends in muddle]]. | |||
Each new day is a splitting event in the human multiverse. | |||
Every story a superposition of our activist narratives. | |||
If WWII had the web, 10% of us might claim Japan was victorious. | |||
|timestamp=8:01 PM · Nov 18, 2020 | |||
}} | |||
{{#widget:YouTube|id=C6zViXwQqkI}} | {{#widget:YouTube|id=C6zViXwQqkI}} | ||
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== Related Pages == | == Related Pages == | ||
Latest revision as of 22:57, 6 March 2026
Since the Internet took over the heavy lifting of sense-making, almost everything ends in muddle.
Each new day is a splitting event in the human multiverse.
Every story a superposition of our activist narratives.
If WWII had the web, 10% of us might claim Japan was victorious.
