1/ Failure as having experience with what does not work (or the acquisition of negative knowledge).
"[...] negative knowledge (what is wrong, what does not work) is more robust to error than positive knowledge (what is right, what works)." – @nntaleb, Antifragile
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I find Nassim's concept of negative knowledge most intriguing. It reminds me of the Japanese and Korean term mu (negative), meaning "not have; without" and ma (negative space), translated as "the space between two structural parts."
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"Ma is best described as a consciousness of place, not in the sense of an enclosed three-dimensional entity, but rather the simultaneous awareness of form and non-form deriving from an intensification of vision."
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Tao Te Ching: §11 On Negative Spacehttps://medium.com/tao-te-ching/on-negative-space-3a6991f1af76 …
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Tattoo on my left hand (right brain)https://twitter.com/mistermircea/status/963804895051689984 …
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