Hmm. not so sure. "What we lose in mystery, we gain in awe." Francis Crick. At least that's been my meager experience.
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I think it can go either way. I suspect you are primed for awe :)
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Anthropologist Tim Ingold’s 2006 ‘Rethinking the animate, re-animating thought’pic.twitter.com/Qxl4LWU6F8
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Ooo, that’s nice! By chance I was reviewing this earlier today: https://meaningness.com/metablog/meaningness-mountains …pic.twitter.com/WZgYFA14iE
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Thanks! I’d watched that twice before, and just watched it again, because I’m writing about awe. Or trying to!
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I would point out that engineering keeps a sense of elegance and beauty in a sense. It may be different than what is usually expected, but there is still a sense of what is good and beautiful there.
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examples
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This book by
@JonHaidt is the one that I've lent to the greatest number of people in my life (OK maybe Oz's Black Box - but of nonfiction for sure), and as a result I now have no idea where my copy is
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On my second reading, after diving deep into other sources, was that he did a great job of pulling out relevant detail, simplifying without implying stuff that was wrong. But I completely forget the above topic. Maybe time for another read.
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