Anonymous ID: dd124d Oct. 6, 2018, 9:09 a.m. No.3364484   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>3364319

 

Stop sharing that meme.

If you find that hillarious it says more about you than anything else.

 

"i did not make it" but u do share it.

 

Dont be a low level ape. Rise to the act. Person…. or induvidual?

 

Pick one and stay the course.

With that meme you pick the first.

Person.

Anonymous ID: dd124d Oct. 6, 2018, 9:31 a.m. No.3364774   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Anons;

 

"

 

“Psychohistory dealt not with man, but with man-masses. It was the science of mobs; mobs in their billions. It could forecast reactions to stimuli with something of the accuracy that a lesser science could bring to the forecast of a rebound of a billiard ball. The reaction of one man could be forecast by no known mathematics; the reaction of a billion is something else again.”

 

—Isaac Asimov, Foundation and Empire

 

Robots. That’s what most people think of first when they think of Isaac Asimov—and certainly, his stories about the Three Laws of Robotics are among the best he wrote. But he also came up with another unique and equally memorable science fiction concept: psychohistory.

 

Psychohistory (originally hyphenated as “psycho-history”) first appeared in the short stories Asimov would later collect in his episodic novel Foundation. Set in a distant future, the book details a vast, galactic empire which has controlled thousands of inhabited worlds for 12,000 years. The empire is on the verge of breakdown. However, very few people have realized this, primarily those working with the great mathematician Hari Seldon. Seldon’s mathematical models have shown conclusively that the Empire will collapse within a few hundred years, followed by a 30,000 year dark age before civilization is rebuilt.

 

Seldon’s great accomplishment was his reinvention of the discipline of psychohistory. What had been little more than a set of vague axioms became, under his leadership, a profound statistical science, capable of charting the rise and fall of civilizations—and even, Seldon argued, of guiding the course of civilization so that the 30,000 years of darkness could be reduced to a mere millennium.

 

The underlying logic of psychohistory resembles Boyle’s gas law: The molecules in a gas move in a purely random way, and yet, collectively, that random behavior become predictable. So if you get enough people together (and Asimov very carefully avoided any suggestion of just how many), you could reduce the apparently random actions of billions of human beings to a set of physical laws describing the behavior of civilizations. That number, the Seldon constant, was extremely high—high enough that it could only be found in the vastness of the Galactic Empire.

 

On the surface this sounds fairly plausible, even if the degree of accuracy Seldon claimed for his work doesn’t. Yet it is far from clear that Asimov believes in his own invention. As in his stories about the Three Laws of Robotics, Foundation works because of the tension between the turn of events in the plot and whether they will lead to the next scheduled “Seldon Crisis.” Will the plan succeed, or will it fail?

 

In fact, the plan does fail by the end of the second novel, although this happens only because of an event which no one could have predicted: the rise of a mutant leader with enormous mental powers."

Anonymous ID: dd124d Oct. 6, 2018, 9:36 a.m. No.3364858   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4877

>>3364815

 

They are not.

 

To suggest your own "overlord" status in the gender is a mere futile response and only further the ignorant view you have on the status quo.

 

Have at it.

 

"i am part of th master gender" only further seperate you from the unity we are creating.