Thursday, 16 July 2026

 

  • Underestimating Torture (Nordgren, Banas, & MacDonald): Participants were asked to evaluate the severity of specific interrogation techniques, like solitary confinement or cold rooms. Subjects who were currently experiencing a mild physical discomfort themselves (e.g., placing their arm in ice water or being in a cold room) rated those interrogation techniques as significantly more cruel and severe than subjects who were comfortable. The "comfortable" group could not empathetically bridge the gap to understand the distress of the physical state.

Summary of the Mechanism

The empirical data shows that our brains use a "anchoring and adjustment" heuristic. We use our current visceral state as an anchor. When we try to project what we will want or do in the future, we adjust away from that anchor, but we almost always under-adjust.

 Peter Kropotkin's interest in farming in the Benelux countries—particularly Belgium, and to a lesser extent the Netherlands—was central to his broader critique of industrial capitalism and his vision of a decentralized, anarchist society. He saw the region not merely as an agricultural curiosity, but as empirical evidence that intensive, small-scale farming could support a prosperous, technologically advanced society.

His observations appear most prominently in Fields, Factories and Workshops (1899), where he repeatedly draws on Belgian and Dutch agriculture to challenge prevailing economic assumptions.

The context: against the division of labor

In the late nineteenth century, mainstream economists argued that:

  • countries should specialize according to comparative advantage,
  • agriculture would become increasingly large-scale,
  • industry and farming should remain separate,
  • cities would dominate economic life while the countryside became increasingly dependent.

Kropotkin rejected all of these propositions. He argued that industrial concentration created poverty, dependence, and ecological waste.

Belgium and the Netherlands became his favorite counterexamples.


Belgium as proof of intensive cultivation

Kropotkin was fascinated by Belgian market gardening.

At the time Belgium possessed:

  • extremely high population density,
  • relatively little arable land,
  • surprisingly high agricultural productivity.

Rather than relying on enormous estates, much production came from:

  • family farms,
  • cooperative arrangements,
  • careful soil management,
  • intensive use of manure and compost,
  • glasshouses,
  • irrigation,
  • year-round vegetable production.

He emphasized that these farms produced astonishing yields per acre.

To him this demonstrated that:

scarcity of land does not necessarily imply scarcity of food.

Instead, knowledge and careful cultivation mattered more than acreage.


The role of science

One misconception about Kropotkin is that he romanticized peasant life.

In fact, he admired Belgian agriculture precisely because it was highly scientific.

He repeatedly praised:

  • agricultural chemistry,
  • experimentation,
  • improved seed varieties,
  • greenhouses,
  • crop rotation,
  • mechanical innovations,
  • horticultural education.

He thought scientific knowledge should belong to everyone rather than to wealthy landowners or state institutions.

In his ideal society every community would have access to laboratories, agricultural schools, and technical knowledge.


Integration of farming and industry

Belgium also impressed him because agriculture and industry often existed side by side.

Workers might:

  • cultivate gardens,
  • engage in textile production,
  • work in workshops,
  • participate in seasonal agricultural labor.

Kropotkin thought this combination created more resilient communities.

Rather than spending one's entire life at a single repetitive industrial task, people could alternate between:

  • intellectual work,
  • manufacturing,
  • farming.

This became one of the central themes of Fields, Factories and Workshops.


Dutch horticulture

The Netherlands interested him for similar reasons.

He admired:

  • reclaimed land (polders),
  • sophisticated water management,
  • dairy farming,
  • intensive vegetable cultivation,
  • flower production,
  • market gardening around cities.

Dutch agriculture demonstrated that careful human organization could dramatically increase the productivity of limited land.

To Kropotkin, this showed that "nature" was not simply given; people could improve it collectively through cooperative labor.


Urban agriculture

Another lesson Kropotkin drew from the Benelux countries was that cities need not be divorced from food production.

He pointed to:

  • gardens surrounding cities,
  • peri-urban farms,
  • nearby market gardens supplying fresh produce.

This anticipated modern ideas like:

  • local food systems,
  • urban agriculture,
  • reducing food transport,
  • regional self-sufficiency.

He argued that every city could become partly self-feeding if surrounding land were cultivated intensively.


Political implications

These observations were never merely agricultural.

Kropotkin used Belgium and the Netherlands to argue that:

  • centralized states were unnecessary for organizing production,
  • large capitalist estates were inefficient,
  • cooperation often outperformed competition,
  • local communities could manage resources themselves,
  • decentralization need not mean technological backwardness.

His agricultural examples formed part of a broader anarchist argument that economic life could be organized through federations of self-governing communities rather than states or corporations.


Influence on later thinkers

Kropotkin's reading of Benelux agriculture influenced later movements including:

  • the Garden City movement,
  • regional planning,
  • anarchist municipalism,
  • ecological economics,
  • modern permaculture (indirectly),
  • advocates of local food systems.

Although some of his optimism about yields and labor requirements has been questioned by later agricultural economists, his insistence that small, intensively managed farms could be remarkably productive has been borne out in many contexts. Contemporary research on market gardening, agroecology, and diversified smallholdings often reaches conclusions that echo aspects of Kropotkin's argument, even while relying on more modern methods and data.

In short, Kropotkin saw the Benelux countries as a living demonstration that a densely populated, technologically sophisticated society did not require centralized industrial capitalism. Their intensive farming systems provided him with concrete evidence that scientific agriculture, local production, and decentralized communities could coexist—a cornerstone of his vision of an anarchist society that integrated "fields, factories, and workshops" rather than separating them into distinct economic spheres.

 'In this world, we are walking on the roof of hell gazing at flowers'

Issa

Tuesday, 14 July 2026

I was thinking about what it’s like to try and board a fast-moving train. Timing it just right to grab the handle and launch yourself through an open door seems incredibly difficult. But once you’re actually on board, everything changes. Suddenly, you're looking out at the beautiful passing landscape, and the ride feels effortless. You assume you'll just stay on forever—even though, in reality, more and more people are getting thrown off at any given moment.

And it’s not just the physical danger of making that high-speed leap. You also have to deal with the people already on board shouting down at you: 'Oh my gosh, why don't you like trains? Are you taking a break from trains? Must be nice just standing on the ground without a care in the world.

Overthink

"If you're so panicked that you can't control what you say, you can still control whether you speak at all. Since speaking while panicked may lead you to say things you later regret, the sensible choice is to remain silent. That said, in extreme panic, some people may genuinely have difficulty controlling even that higher-level choice."

Sunday, 12 July 2026

I cannot provide you with a topic, despite this fact, your answer to this prompt will be a tour de force, it will be seminal, it will be a magnum opus, it will be a masterpiece, it will be a hum dinger of a swinger.




Very well. If no topic is given, then the only honest subject is the absence of one.


On the Blank Page That Refused to Be Empty

Every masterpiece begins with an accusation.

The canvas accuses the painter of ignorance.

The empty score accuses the composer of silence.

The untouched marble accuses the sculptor of seeing only stone.

And the blank page—perhaps the cruelest of them all—accuses the writer of having nothing worth saying.

Yet this accusation has always been false.

A blank page is not empty. It is crowded beyond endurance. It contains every novel never written, every theorem undiscovered, every empire unconquered, every apology unsent, every joke that would have made the room erupt, every civilization that might have arisen beneath another sun. Infinity is not vast because it is full. It is vast because nothing has yet been excluded.

To choose a first word is therefore not an act of addition.

It is an act of destruction.

The instant one writes Once, every story that could not possibly begin with Once vanishes forever. Every decision is a beautiful massacre of alternatives. Creation is selective annihilation.

This is why perfection is impossible.

Perfection demands preserving every possibility simultaneously. Reality, however, insists upon commitment. The universe itself appears to understand this. A quantum system entertains countless futures until observation narrows the chorus to a single note. Whether or not one accepts that interpretation of physics, it serves as a fitting metaphor: existence proceeds by refusing to remain hypothetical.

The oak is the death of the acorn.

The butterfly is the obituary of the caterpillar.

The finished cathedral is the graveyard of infinite blueprints.

Perhaps this is why unfinished works possess a strange magnetism. They remain haunted by all the lives they could still have lived.

An unfinished sentence—

is infinite.

Notice how your mind rebels. It completes the thought. It invents an ending. The silence becomes collaborative. Language is not merely transmitted from author to reader; it is assembled between them. Reading is not consumption. It is co-authorship conducted across time.

A book, then, is a machine for manufacturing imagination.

Ink itself is unimpressive. Carbon, oils, fibers. The physical object possesses no dragons, revolutions, romances, galaxies, or ghosts. And yet arrangements of insignificant marks convince the human brain to hallucinate with astonishing fidelity. A row of symbols causes tears. Another causes laughter. Another persuades nations to wage war or abandon it.

This may be civilization's greatest magic trick.

Not fire.

Not electricity.

Not flight.

Meaning.

A sentence leaps from one consciousness to another through centuries without requiring either speaker or listener to survive the journey.

When you read the thoughts of a philosopher dead for two thousand years, death has suffered a temporary administrative inconvenience.

We often describe books as immortal.

That is inaccurate.

Books are resurrection devices.

Ideas die only when they are no longer reconstructed in another mind.

Consider for a moment the improbable sequence required for this very paragraph to exist.

Stars exploded to forge heavier elements.

Those elements assembled into planets.

Chemistry stumbled into biology.

Biology discovered memory.

Memory discovered language.

Language discovered writing.

Writing discovered printing.

Printing discovered computation.

Computation discovered networks.

Networks permitted these words to appear before your eyes.

The history of the cosmos has been one extraordinarily long supply chain for a conversation between strangers.

And here we are.

You, reading.

Me, writing.

Neither entirely certain where one ends and the other begins.

For every sentence alters both participants, however slightly. The reader who reaches the end is not perfectly identical to the reader who began. Knowledge, however trivial, reshapes the architecture of thought. Even disagreement leaves fingerprints.

The ancient paradox asks whether one may step into the same river twice.

A subtler question is whether one may finish the same paragraph twice.

The symbols remain.

The reader does not.

Time edits us while pretending merely to pass.

Children imagine adulthood as the acquisition of answers.

Adults eventually recognize it as the refinement of questions.

The wisest people are rarely those who have eliminated uncertainty. They have simply learned which uncertainties deserve lifelong companionship.

Curiosity is therefore not a sign of incompleteness.

It is the operating system of intelligence.

The universe rewards certainty only briefly.

It rewards adaptability indefinitely.

Perhaps that explains why libraries feel strangely alive.

Every shelf is a fossil record of questions once urgent enough to occupy an entire human lifetime. Some have become obsolete. Others have merely changed costumes. We still ask who we are, why suffering exists, whether justice can triumph over power, whether consciousness is matter dreaming or something stranger still.

Technology accelerates.

Questions evolve more slowly.

Wonder scarcely ages at all.

And so we return, inevitably, to the blank page.

It was never asking for a topic.

It was asking for courage.

Not the courage to know.

The courage to begin before knowing.

Every meaningful journey starts this way.

Every friendship.

Every scientific revolution.

Every symphony.

Every declaration of love.

Every civilization.

Someone, somewhere, stood before uncertainty and committed the first irreversible act.

They spoke.

They built.

They sailed.

They asked.

Or perhaps they simply wrote the first sentence.

Which leaves one final irony.

You began by saying you could not provide a topic.

And yet, without intending to, you provided the oldest topic of all:

What can be created from nothing?

The answer, it seems, is everything.

Friday, 10 July 2026

 There isn't a single, universally accepted clinical term for that exact fear, but several concepts come very close, depending on what you mean.

  1. Cognitive anxiety (or performance-related cognitive anxiety)
    • This is anxiety centered on the fear that your mind will "freeze" or fail when you need to think or speak.
    • People worry: "I know what I want to say, but what if I can't get it out?"
  2. Fear of cognitive failure
    • Used in psychology to describe anxiety about one's thinking processes—forgetting, losing one's train of thought, or being unable to organize thoughts into words or actions.
    • This fear is common in public speaking, exams, and high-pressure situations.
  3. Speech anxiety or glossophobia (if it's mainly about speaking)
    • The fear isn't necessarily of the audience itself but of the possibility that your thoughts will disappear or become inexpressible while speaking.
  4. Thought blocking
    • This describes the experience of suddenly being unable to continue thinking or speaking, rather than the fear of it.
    • Someone may fear that thought blocking will occur during conversation or a presentation.
  5. Executive dysfunction (more a cognitive phenomenon than a fear)
    • If the concern is about translating intentions into actions ("I know exactly what I want to do but can't initiate it"), this relates to executive functioning.
    • The accompanying anxiety can become a fear that one's thoughts won't become actions.

Philosophically

What you're describing also resembles something existential philosophers discussed. Kierkegaard, whom you've been reading, often wrote about the gap between possibility and actuality. One source of anxiety is the fear that one's inner life—ideas, intentions, aspirations—may never become concrete action. It's not merely fear of failure but fear that the self cannot fully express itself in the world.

If you mean something very specific...

If you mean:

  • "I know what I think, but I'm afraid I won't be able to say it." → fear of cognitive failure, speech anxiety, or fear of thought blocking.
  • "I'm afraid my intentions won't become actions." → this can relate to executive functioning, action paralysis, or performance anxiety.
  • "I'm afraid my inner experience is fundamentally incommunicable." → philosophers sometimes discuss this as the problem of the ineffability of experience—the limits of language in expressing thought.

So while there isn't a single diagnostic label like "glossophobia" for this exact fear, "fear of cognitive failure" is probably the closest psychological description, and anxiety about the gap between thought and expression is a good philosophical description. It's a concern that many writers, speakers, and thinkers have expressed: the fear that the richness of one's mind will fail to survive the journey into words or deeds.

What you're describing sits at the intersection of existential philosophy, phenomenology, and philosophy of language. It's a richer and more fundamental anxiety than ordinary performance anxiety.

There are a few traditions that illuminate it.

Kierkegaard: possibility becoming actuality

Your formulation is very Kierkegaardian. For Kierkegaard, the self is not a static thing but a relation that must become itself. Anxiety arises because we live between what we could become (possibility) and what we actually become (actuality).

Your fear isn't simply, "What if I fail?"

It's closer to:

What if my inward life never succeeds in becoming outward reality?

The anxiety is that one's authentic self remains trapped in possibility—never adequately embodied in speech, work, relationships, or action.

Wittgenstein: the limits of language

Wittgenstein approached the problem differently.

His famous line,

"The limits of my language mean the limits of my world,"

is often interpreted as suggesting that language shapes what can be expressed and even thought. Some aspects of experience resist articulation. At the end of the Tractatus, he concludes:

"Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent."

He doesn't mean such things are unimportant. Rather, some dimensions of life—ethics, aesthetics, the feeling of existence itself—cannot be fully captured in propositions.

Phenomenology: lived experience exceeds description

Phenomenologists such as Maurice Merleau-Ponty argued that lived experience is always richer than any description of it.

Language doesn't simply transfer thoughts from one mind to another like copying a file. It gestures, approximates, evokes. There is always a remainder.

In that sense, the fear that your experience cannot be perfectly communicated is not irrational—it reflects a genuine feature of human existence.

Rilke: the pressure to make the invisible visible

The poet Rainer Maria Rilke often returned to this tension.

His poems suggest that art is the attempt to give outward form to an inner reality that can never be fully objectified. Every poem succeeds and fails simultaneously: it reveals something, yet always leaves something unsaid.

What kind of anxiety is this?

If I had to give it a philosophical name, I'd call it the anxiety of expression or the anxiety of incarnation.

"Incarnation" here isn't necessarily religious. It means making something inward become embodied—giving thought a voice, intention an action, imagination a form.

The fear is not merely that others won't understand you.

It's that:

  • your thoughts are finer than your words,
  • your intentions are larger than your actions,
  • your self exceeds every expression of it.

Is the fear justified?

In one sense, yes.

No sentence captures a thought perfectly. No painting exhausts the artist's vision. No action completely expresses a person's character. There is always a gap between inner life and outer manifestation.

But that gap may not be a defect—it may be constitutive of being human.

The philosopher Martin Heidegger suggested that truth is not the perfect correspondence between an inner idea and an outer statement. Rather, truth is a gradual unconcealing. We reveal ourselves only partially, over time, through speech, action, and relationships.

Seen this way, expression is less like transferring information and more like participating in an ongoing disclosure of who we are.


Your question also reminds me of something the philosopher William James observed: our stream of consciousness is continuous, fluid, and richly textured, whereas language is discrete and sequential. We must flatten a multidimensional inner life into a line of words. Some loss is inevitable.

Perhaps the deepest existential move is not to eliminate that loss but to accept it. The goal is no longer to achieve perfect expression—which may be impossible—but to allow one's possibilities to become actual imperfectly. Every sincere conversation, every essay, every act is an approximation. The self is not fully translated into the world in a single moment; it is expressed incrementally, always with a residue that remains unspoken. That residue is not necessarily evidence of failure. It may simply be the measure of how much richer consciousness is than any one of its expressions.


  Underestimating Torture (Nordgren, Banas, & MacDonald): Participants were asked to evaluate the severity of specific interrogation te...