28 May 2026
The Cookie & AI Banner is coming to the EU
23 May 2026
Religion is anachronistic. Shared myths are essential to darwinistic success
Religion is anachronistic.
It is astonishing that they still exist in our age of information, logic, and science.
Well, superstitions are not necessarily (reverse) correlated to advance in science - physics, mathematics, chemistry, or biology. But they should have been correlated to advances in thinking and logic.
I expected modern men to reject religion by using simple logic. Scientific skepticism, the Socratic method, 3,000 years old tools. What is new is not the methods themselves, but the quantity (to speak in Hegelian terms).
I.e., 2500 years ago, only 1 in 100,000 people learned proof, evidence, syllogism, inference.
The change over the last 200 years, however, has been dramatic - not only qualitatively, but quantitatively. Literacy and access to knowledge reached phenomenal levels: 95% of the population can read and watch videos about these topics, about Plato, evolution, the scientific method. And yet, despite exposure to evidence and logic, people still believe that the Earth was created by an imaginary being in six days. And then He rested, got sleepy, and forgot about the dinosaurs.
That is why I am shocked. A thousand years ago, fine - nobody had heard of Plato, nobody knew how to read, nobody went to school. So people muttered (sic) religious sermons, because that was all they heard from the local priest — semi-illiterate himself.
But I would have expected that today, with so much information available, 90% of the population would have some kind of intellectual revelation. To say: “Wait, this is nonsense: gods, creationism, miracles, hell, purgatory, sin, saints.”
But that didn’t happen. It is a fascinating social phenomenon. The overwhelming majority still believes in imaginary friends, gods, saints, miracles, relics, creationism.
The phenomenon is phenomenal (sic). It shows that social bonds, and the importance of myths in social construction, overwhelmingly outweigh logic or science in terms of their importance for evolutionary, Darwinian success.
Communities that believe in shared superstitions and myths achieve greater evolutionary success. From a sociological perspective, that is an extraordinary conclusion.
26 April 2026
(AI) Technology doesn't democratize efficiency. It benefits early adopters
Technology doesn't democratize things. Initially, it benefits early adopters. Those with the resources and education to adopt and adapt fast.
The new tech buzzword is: AI agents make everybody more efficient.
Yes, it does. But not equally.
It's a good punchline and buzzword, saying that technology democratizes things - information, knowledge, education, transportation, resources, communication, or, with contemporary AI agents: work efficiency.
But this is rarely true.
I don't remember any technological innovation who really democratized things - at least at first.
Technology tends to benefit first the rich and the educated - those who already have the capacity to invest, absorb and adapt faster.
Yes, technology trickles down, eventually. But not immediately.
It was the same with automobiles - first adopters were rich people; later beneficiaries were industrialists who sold (Ford Model T) affordable cars to the working class.
Same with writing, printing, books, and newspapers: for hundreds of years, the beneficiaries were still the upper and middle classes, who were already literate, or had the resources to educate their children. For hundreds of years after Gutenberg, the majority of the population remained illiterate and didn't really benefit. Intergenerational mobility was significantly lower at the time, when education was a luxury, and most children had to start working VERY early in factories or agriculture.
Same with the internet and email: first few years, it was reserved for universities, researchers, top tech entrepreneurs, academia, financial magnates - not everybody.
So no, AI is not for everybody, it doesn't democratize first, and it doesn't benefit everybody equally. We have to move and adapt fast.
New relevant study (from Marius Comper):
See also discussion
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18YjsXCRPB/
06 April 2026
Elitocracy is more unstable then democracy. Don't restrict voting based on literacy
- more equitable distribution of wealth, privileges and justice;
- more stable on the long term (less prone to atrocities or war).
03 April 2026
Belief in God is nothing like belief in science
Many believers think that believing in a god or a divine force is the same as believing in a scientific theory.
Obviously, this is a fallacy - a clever but misleading play on words. Belief in a scientific theory has absolutely nothing to do with belief in a deity. In fact, even using the word “belief” in a scientific context is inaccurate.
I suspect this is a way for some believers to logically justify their faith - by playing with language and framing things in a way that equates science with belief.
On the opposite extreme, equally unfounded, are those who claim they can prove the existence of a god or the supernatural.
Personally, I find these attempts - both to equate faith with science and to “prove” faith - unnecessary. Believers should embrace the reality that their faith has nothing to do with science, that it isn’t proven, and that it doesn’t need to be.
After all, it’s easy to “believe” when you have proof. At that point, it’s no longer belief - you simply know. The real challenge is to have faith without guarantees or evidence.
And perhaps that’s exactly what believers should take pride in.
Notes
1. In science, the word "belief" is rarely suitable. We prefer hypothesis, model, "we propose".
2. We all know that science is not absolute. Scepticism is built-in. There is no absolute scientific truth. All scientific theories are evolving. Some theories are proven simply wrong. Some evolve into better theories.
The concept of falsifiability is worth mentioning. Religious or supernatural belief is not falsifiable.
3. Science produces provisional, evidence-based truths.
Some theories are extremely stable. Some not.
4. So here's the interesting question, it's the meta: what is truth in science?
The theory that I particularly love is utilitarian/pragmatic. It is very suitable in engineering, and in social sciences (management, sociology), but also applicable in all sciences.
"A theory is true if it works."
5. Mathematics is probably the weirdest science, btw. It is at the same time very practical, and also very abstract, both in language and concepts. It is full of paradoxes - it even negates itself (it proves that it cannot be complete, it is limited by design - Gödel's incompleteness theorems).
And mathematics also works: we use it exceptionally well to cook food, to build houses, generate fake photos, discuss on Facebook, and to put people on the moon.
7. So no, we don't "believe" in science, or scientific theories. We build it, we discover it, we invent it, we demonstrate and prove it, we challenge and evolve it, we apply it in practice.
8. No matter what theory of science we use, the idea that we "believe" in a scientific theory is, in principle, inappropriate.
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