This was the mid-90s, & environmental scientists in Brazil were battling with their government over rainforest deforestation. Loggers were clear-cutting immense columns of rainforest, but in locations so remote that the government was able to deny it was happening at all.
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There’s some really cool research backing this up. The most interesting one, for me, dealt with the concept of luck. As it turns out, people are about as lucky as they think they are. And increasing how lucky they think they are ACTUALLY makes them luckier.
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The reason for this? Only a small fraction of our motivation for doing things comes from our conscious minds. The rest comes from our subconscious mind - which you can sorta think of as all the things we know, but we aren’t consciously thinking about right now.
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Your ideas about ‘who you are’ & ‘what you are here for’ guide hundreds of thousands of microdecisions, even when you aren’t consciously thinking about anything so philosophical. Collectively, the outcome of those microdecisions changes - when your ideas about yourself change.
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What all this adds up to is that you need to set the right intentions in order to make the right decisions. And like a djinni who grants you a wish - the more specific you can be, the higher the chance that your microdecisions will add up to what you wanted.
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We wanted to “change the world.” And the djinni gave us what we asked for - vast improvements, right alongside privacy nightmares, surveillance states, and toxic work cultures. We should have been more specific. Stop “changing the world.” Start “making the world better.” [end]
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End of conversation
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The most successful poker players aren’t more lucky; they are more patient: they know what they are looking for and they know when what they are looking at isn’t it.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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Twitter at the speed of parenting
) to find two photos of the same location in the remote Brazilian rainforest, taken 10 years apart.