Revisions of #2223

Contributors: Erik Orrje

Most people (except in Alzheimer's, etc.) don't run out of memory in the brain. If there's no scarcity for the space of ideas, why do they have to compete?

Version 1·#2223·Erik Orrje·8 days ago·Criticism
4 comments: #2224, #2227, #2230, and #2232

The comment was rather an ask for clarification about scarcity in the mind, rather than criticism.

Most people (except in Alzheimer's, etc.) don't run out of memory in the brain. If there's no scarcity for the space of ideas, why do they have to compete?

Most people (except in Alzheimer's, etc.) don't run out of memory in the brain. If there's no scarcity for the space of ideas, why do they have to compete?

Unmarked as criticism
Version 2·#2231·Erik Orrje·8 days ago
2 comments: #2224 and #2230

Most people (except in Alzheimer's, etc.) don't run out of memory in the brain. If there's no scarcity for the space of ideas, why do they have to compete?

Most people (except in Alzheimer's, etc.) don't run out of memory in the brain. If there's no scarcity for the space of ideas, why do they have to compete?

Marked as criticism
Version 3·#2271·Erik Orrje·5 days ago·Criticism
3 comments: #2224, #2230, and #2330

Copypasted from your comment now in the revision. Please let me know if I'm doing things incorrectly.

Most people (except in Alzheimer's, etc.) don't run out of memory in the brain. If there's no scarcity for the space of ideas, why do they have to compete?

Most people (except in Alzheimer's, etc.) don't run out of memory in the brain. The reason most people don’t (permanently) run out memory (of either kind) isn’t that memory isn’t scarce, but that there’s a pruning mechanism in the mind. And there’s competition.

Unmarked as criticism
Version 4·#2329·Erik Orrje·3 days ago
2 comments: #2230 and #2334