yasuhiro yoshida 吉田康浩 🇵🇸🇱🇧🇮🇷🇻🇪
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yoppu.bsky.social
yasuhiro yoshida 吉田康浩 🇵🇸🇱🇧🇮🇷🇻🇪
@yoppu.bsky.social
Self-taught iOS/Rails/JS samurai cop, traveler, active participant in loss. Busy turning tragedies into a comedy. Available for a gig in between. #MMT #Degrowth
https://linktr.ee/yasuhiroyoshida
Interestingly, I now see us as analogous to the universe — its genesis, evolution, and eventual fate, full of entropy in a distant future. We live in the universe, but each of us is a cosmos in our own right.

If I may put everything in one simple message, it would go like this:

we see what we are.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
In other words, we each live in a different domain — AI taking over is unlikely to become our agreed-upon hallucination.

This book was really tough to follow. Having finished it, I’m not as confident as I usually am about what I read. For the first time, I felt like I needed a book club.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
Before wrapping up, Seth discusses the possibility of AI taking over our lives. For now, he sees AI as nothing more than a “sophisticated pattern-recognition machine,” whose job is to be probabilistically accurate, not persistently useful.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
Our number one goal is to live another day. Constant evaluation and prediction weren’t optional — they were the very engine of our survival.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
Then how did we acquire this perpetual machine of prediction? “Survival,” Seth explains. At the end of the day, we’re all humans: our bodies are blobs of entropy, our lives are a tangled mesh of entropy.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
Seth reminds us that the “self,” in the usual sense, can be divided into two parts: the narrative self, which is how we see ourselves, and the social self, which is how others see us. And, once again, both are what the brain predicts — a controlled hallucination.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
Oscar Wilde once said, “Life imitates art.” If art is a form of expression, we can think of it as a reflection of the self. According to Seth, the self is the brain’s best guess at how life should unfold — we never write the script ourselves; the brain does, and we may simply be following along.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
He also links this idea to time: our sense of time’s persistence depends on our capacity for change.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
Seth expands his theory to explain changes are also something that is inferred by the brain—in other words, our past experiences must first allow for possible changes before they can be inferred and actually perceived. Changes are never external. It's all internal, and it begins with you.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
Seth even playfully refers to reality as a shared hallucination. What that leads us to is the realization that how we interpret something and how we respond are never fully predictable. No single experience is ever the same as any previous one within ourselves, let alone between different people.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
What we experience, then, is not reality itself but a kind of hallucination — or, as Seth puts it, a “controlled hallucination” — and this is the brain’s default state.

In that sense, we all have been operating like what we call today "AI" before the emergence of it in the recent years.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
According to Seth, there isn’t some premeditated, fixed “self” inside us that already has the answers. We’re constantly taking in stimuli, and the brain decides what they are — or more accurately, it predicts what they’re likely to be, based on past experiences.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
The book rests on a premise: nothing in the world comes with intrinsic meaning. Objects do not present themselves to us with fixed attributes, nor do they announce their own existence. Instead, it is the brain that determines what is there, what properties it has, and what it means to each of us.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
What most distinguishes humans from other living organisms is consciousness. Through it, we perceive, process, and respond to an immense flow of information. Yet no two individuals ever share exactly the same experience. This book sheds light on that mystery.
January 31, 2026 at 11:56 PM
Where were you? Where do you stand today? Are you proud of yourself? What are you afraid of losing?
December 28, 2025 at 12:03 AM
The book—or at least its title—is believed to have grown out of an El Akkad tweet two weeks after October 7th:

"One day, when it's safe, when there's no personal downside to calling a thing what it is, when it's too late to hold anyone accountable, everyone will have always been against this."
December 28, 2025 at 12:03 AM
El Akkad distills this reality succinctly: “We are all governed by chance. We are all subjects of distance.”

Something must give—if we want to improve the human condition.

He later on asks, “What are you willing to give up to alleviate someone else’s suffering?”
December 28, 2025 at 12:03 AM
We should also remember that selectively ignoring or downplaying those in destitution constitutes a form of artificial distance. Such acts are not always loud. Silence is dangerous and ominous. It allows those involved to revise the narrative at will and affords them plausible deniability.
December 28, 2025 at 12:03 AM
On top of that, we are all relational in a finite space: one person’s shape inevitably shapes another’s. Some people need you to remain in a particular form. Distance is not always an accident; it can be actively produced, maintained, and defended.
December 28, 2025 at 12:03 AM
Even if you yourself are liberated enough, others are not, and you are never free from the distances others impose upon you.
December 28, 2025 at 12:03 AM
You might be born into a world widely perceived as less free and manage to migrate to another widely perceived as freer, hoping to live happily ever after. You may come to believe that a polite, rule-based, orderly world truly exists—and that it will resolve your suffering. It will not.
December 28, 2025 at 12:03 AM
proximity to life events matters. Emotional proximity determines how close suffering feels; cultural proximity shapes whose lives we identify with; media proximity governs what we encounter directly versus abstractly; and political proximity defines who is framed as ‘us’ and who is cast as ‘them.’
December 28, 2025 at 12:03 AM
Our lives are often dictated by birth, geography, timing, health, and opportunity—forces that are largely circumstantial and accidental. If luck were the primary differentiator among us, our task would be simple: to accept our lives as they are. But these assumptions get twisted, because
December 28, 2025 at 12:03 AM
Promises may vary in form and scope, but they are typically understood to rest on civility, equality, and fairness, irrespective of race, religion, or country of origin. The lived reality often contradicts this assumption.
December 28, 2025 at 12:03 AM