In philosophy a single naïve question is sometimes enough to make an entire system come tumbling down
Amazing wall of camellias against the bluest of winter Souther highlands sky
‘Differential enforcement’: Elon Musk weighs in on Donald Trump charges
The Twitter owner has given his view of Donald Trump’s latest legal woes suggesting the former president is being treated unfairly.
"We are now approaching the state of Orwell's perfect dictum, that he who controls the present controls the past, he who controls the internet servers controls the intellectual record of mankind...." - Julian Assange
Labour of love 💕
Every self-help book ever, boiled down to 11 simple rules
. A distillation of lessons from the lives of famous people who had pulled themselves up by their bootstraps, it sold millions of copies and was a mainstay in Victorian households. Every generation since had its runaway bestseller, such as How to Live on 24 Hours a Day (1908), Think and Grow Rich(1937), or Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff (1997). By now, the $11 billion self-help industry is most definitely not small stuff. Yet when you strip it down, there’s very little new information. After all, we were consuming self-help for centuries before Smiles, just under different names. Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius gave tweet-sized advice in Meditations; so did Benjamin Franklin in Poor Richard’s Almanack. Even self-help parody isn’t new. Shakespeare did it with Polonius’ “to thine own self be true” speech in Hamlet: basically a bullet-point list from a blowhard. The 21st century has seen a measure of self-awareness about our self-help addiction. There’s the wave of sweary self-help bestsellers I wrote about, such as The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck. They hover somewhere between parody and dressing up the same advice as their forebears in earthier language. More recently, there’s a trend you might call meta-self-help: books in which people write about their experiences following self-help books, such as Help Me! (2018) and How to Be Fine(2020), based on the similar self-help podcast By the Book. But hey, if it’s all pretty much the same stuff — and it is — why stop at distilling it into a single book? Why not condense the repeated lessons of an entire genre into one article? That’s what I’ve attempted here, after reading dozens of history’s biggest bestsellers so you don’t have to. Here is the essence of the advice I’ve seen delivered again and again…”
More Sunday Trivia:
Average age people in various nations lose their virginity. “Iceland [Malaysia] fact of the day.”
Crocodile found to have made herself pregnant