One had to cram all this stuff into one’s mind for the examinations, whether one liked it or not. This coercion had such a deterring effect on me that, after I had passed the final examination, I found the consideration of any scientific problems distasteful to me for an entire year.
- Albert Einstein
OK, so it hasn’t been an entire year… But after completing all those papers to finish my economics degree, writing seemed to lag behind on my list of leisure activities. Instead, I’ve been enjoying the majority of my time through reading.
Regardless, I’m going to try to get a new entry in at least every other day. I want to release segments of some of the longer posts I have been meaning to finish. I will also be creating a new blog for the music company I will be starting.
I’ll get in another post tonight.
I am reposting a entry I made on Ycombinator’s hacker news.
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The most influential thing I’ve learned is that people act by their individual set of incentives. Apply choice aspects of psychology and economics – then you got something big. Think game theory.Also, I’m waiting for the Human Genome Project to help elucidate more on the placebo effect.
I think it has a major correlation with the phenotypic vs. genotypic expression of faith – something all humans display toward an institution, ideology, themselves, and/or another person.
This will be immensely powerful information.
Currently, I feel college is an intellectual tax. I have work that I need to be doing – none of which is profound nor directly interesting. Consequently, the hanging burden continues to provide anxiety.
My free thought is being restricted and my creative capacity is mildly inhibited.
Secondly, this city is dirty and inefficient..