The speakers express annoyance with people who use the phrase 'updating my priors' to mean changing their minds, discussing whether it originated from the rationalist community or Twitter culture. They also delve into topics like Nuvo Smart, money ballers and rationalists, Bayesianism vs frequentism, and the prevalence of rating everything today.
David and Tamler fall under the spell of Lee Chang-dong’s 2018 masterpiece Burning, a movie where nothing is what it seems, or maybe it is. An alienated young man meets what seems like his dream girl from his small town, but she’s about to leave for Africa. Will he take care of her cat? Is there a cat? When she comes back she’s attached (maybe) to a slick rich guy played by Steven Yeun and then she disappears. What happened? What’s real and what’s a pantomime? Adapted from a Murakami short story that’s adapted from a Faulkner short story, this movie warrants a true VBW deep dive, so we had to do it in two parts. This is part 1. Plus another segment of our pet peeves. “Updating my priors,” “Fixed it for you,” faculty governance, and more, these are the things that really grind our gears.
Links:
Burning (2018) [wikipedia.org]
The Elephant Vanishes by Haruki Murakami (containing the short story "Barn Burning) [amazon.com affiliate link]
Barn Burning by William Faulkner [wikipedia.org]
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