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Frank Ramsey by Cheryl Misak. Kid only lived till 26 and changed the disciplines of Philosophy, Mathematics, and Economics. Ludwig Wittgenstein was reported to have said Ramsey was his only contemporary.

Here's an interesting BBC radio program [0] from 1978 on Ramsey. I came across this years ago and felt inspired to go into research. Of course, this program is a bit out of date and doesn't touch on his pragmatist turn much at all!

[0] https://sms.csx.cam.ac.uk/media/20145


Two weeks ago I found John Maynard Keynes's 1951 volume Essays in Biography at Calico Books in Ventura (bookhounds like myself enjoy provenance details like that). He knew Ramsay personally, and one of the essays in the book is dedicated to him. I especially enjoyed the following passage by Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson that Keynes quotes. Dickinson wrote this about Ramsay and also about C P Sanger, an older man who died about the same time:

It does not become a Cambridge man to claim too much for his university, nor am I much tempted to do so. But there is, I think, a certain type, rare, like all good things, which seems associated in some peculiar way with my alma mater. I am thinking of men like Leslie Stephen (the original of Meredith's Vernon Whitford), like Henry Sidgwick, like Maitland, like one who died but the other day with all his promise unfulfilled. It is a type unworldly without being saintly, unambitious without being inactive, warmhearted without being sentimental. Through good report and ill such men work on, following the light of truth as they see it; able to be sceptical without being paralyzed; content to know what is knowable and to reserve judgment on what is not. The world could never be driven by such men, for the springs of action lie deep in ignorance and madness. But it is they who are the beacon in the tempest, and they are more, not less, needed now than ever before. May their succession never fail!


100 percent use proton!


Moving forward: always have an email client on a local machine downloading a copy of all emails. Have a local copy of all gdrive contents. Backup your password mangers to a txt file and encrypt it on a drive. And above all, dont trust google with all your stuff. They dont care.

I lost a gmail years ago and only use it as a throwaway email client now. You get what you pay for.


That's completely impractical for the average, and even above average user.

Just because something can be a solution doesn't mean it should be.


We live in less than an ideal world though, we don't really get to dictate how practical the solutions to our problems are.

It is in a way what makes a problem truly a problem. Otherwise, "problems" would all just be different ways of being ignorant of the better way.


Agreed. What are the practical alternatives to GP’s suggestion?


At the very least the average person can simply download all of their google data every year or so to soften the blow considerably. something that's actually super easy to do. https://takeout.google.com/


And then what?

If you're the average person and have gigabits of email, what are you supposed to do then?


Google takeout. Do it every 3 months. Easy peasy..

Good for privacy too. It jas everything! Look through it an permanently delete what you don't want them to keeo.

Note that it is slightly lossy with respect to headers, times etc. Not ideal for anything legal related. For those print them off.


Can you easily consume the takeout data?


Yes. For example emails are an mbox file amd there are free mbox viewers. You then have something like an old school mail client to view emails.


Walter Issacson's Steve Jobs bio. I legit disliked Steve Jobs. I could not put this book down for the week it took to read. Then I became an Issacson junky. He just digs into the minutia and makes it digestible.

Currently reading Frank Ramsey by Cheryl Misak. Will appeal to philosophy nerds mostly. Fascinating how a kid of 26 changed the fields of philosophy, mathematics, and economics, but no one really knows of him.


For an interesting deep dive on everything wrong with Isaacson’s Jobs’ bio.

https://hypercritical.fireside.fm/42

https://hypercritical.fireside.fm/43


>I legit disliked Steve Jobs.

Do you mean before reading the bio, during, or after?


The fundamental mistake most people make with introducing kids to game making is making them code first. This, and other companies, have a good staring point of using hands on things to understand the fundamentals of game design and then go to code. https://www.buildgamebox.com/


Looks interesting. As a consultant I hate Project and Atlassian. But please get rid of that creepy AI created image at the top. Is she showing me a new product or getting ready to eat my soul through my eyes?


Removed. "eat my soul through my eyes" - good words for a country song :)


Thats awesome. as a desktop?


Thanks for this. I was able to disable auto join. It sucks that they pull this shit with out telling us.


First, dont ask for parenting advice. You'll got a ton of varied answers- all specific to those peoples point of view and experience. Not wrong, just varied. The basics- love your child, feed them, shelter them. The rest is up to you to decide. After the 3 basics, parenting is a matter of style. And for gawd sakes, dont buy any parenting books- especially ones on sleep. Good luck on your journey.


to no one's surprise it also does it in chromium-

Hello, this message is in your clipboard because you visited the website Web Platform News in a browser that allows websites to write to the clipboard without the user’s permission. Sorry for the inconvenience. For more information about this issue, see https://github.com/w3c/clipboard-apis/issues/182.


it's nothing but chromium all the way down ;)


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