The attached video by @max_romana , fascinating, explains in a non-technical, visual and animated way what emergent complexity is and how we can harness it.
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https://t.co/o5Zc9YdbQa
I used to do these explorations (once upon a time): instead of drawing by hand, I would write the code that drew for me. It was a beautiful period that I never stop thinking about daily.
Protecting spaces where the inner judge has no access is not a luxury: it's thought maintenance.
Yet an irresolvable tension remains: creativity requires absolute solitude, but writing, by definition, implies a reader.
Antidotes exist. Intentional solitude. Music that masks the world. Writing for thirty minutes without being able to correct. Or the rare company of those who don't make us feel observed.
Changing publishing platforms is like changing cities: you hope the new environment will make you different, but you bring the same brain with you. Yet architecture is powerful. The spaces we inhabit modify the thoughts we generate.
Every writing tool suggests a certain kind of thinking, a length, a tone, a rhythm. A handle invites pulling. A button asks to be pressed. In the same way, a space for writing proposes a form to thoughts. These are not just technical limits. They are cognitive architectures.
My AI twin remembered a shared lunch in Rome and a creative collaboration, responding to my friend @maxcuratella.
With warmth. And context.
This is what an AI persona should feel like.
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Dynamicland's new website, documenting ten years of work, will be released tomorrow at https://t.co/TxY7OKAuyg.
In the meantime, this video about Dynamicland's precursor gives some backstory and motivations. https://t.co/cvCDnKVIcW