Second, I found some people who do share several of my "modules." They do electronics like me, they do... @Meaningness @coyotespike
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Replying to @mattskala
...computer programming like me, they like looking at the same pretty girls that I do, and so on. And we can...
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Replying to @mattskala
...barely communicate because they only speak Japanese, here on Twitter. And yet we *do* recognize each other.
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Replying to @mattskala @coyotespike
Have you read
@gwern ’s wonderful essay about this? On subcultures, community, and Japanese culture specifically1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
I don't think I have
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okay...lots of interesting stuff in there. I agree with much of what's said about the anonymity obsession.
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Replying to @mattskala @Meaningness and
however, one of my observations which seems to conflict w/ first few sections is a *lack* of specialization
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Replying to @mattskala @Meaningness and
I follow an account because I liked an anime picture and then discover that person is also into electronics
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Replying to @mattskala @Meaningness and
we share not a subculture but a culture, of seeming unrelated modules
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This seems attributable to personality similarities?
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maybe! but that would suggest cultural module selection is nature not only nurture, which is a big claim.
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