Commenting for the algorithm, well said and so true, i see this in the building industry now. Some of the rules are there as a gate keeper, not to keep people safe. But to keep there investment safe. This has the dangerous consequences and i have drawn a line in the sand and fighting back.
I went from/to Cool a video about aluminum chemistry -> oh wow this is really great I need to start doing some aluminum casting for daily life things -> *rethinks everything about life and what is righteous or not and what is one's role in society and within his own life
0:26 Wrong. Value comes from people preceiving something as desirable and worth owning. Whether that thing has the slightest bit of practical value or utiliy is a whole other question.
Well said. We have a lot of work before we are to dissolve the illusion of scarcity and debt based economics as a species. It may be the most pressing matter humanity faces at present? Almost an ecological limitation nature has designed to preserve a universal equilibrium like Thermodynamics? Before we can weild the power of interstellar travel, we must understand how energy and information flow on our terrestrial home first. This would prevent radical species becoming a sort of cancer in the cosmos. Unfortunately, this postulate falls more under the category philosophy and spirituality as it would be challenging to prove emperically. 😅 Appreciate you and having voice of reason to my perception of our shared reality. 🍻
Thanks for watching and the comment. I used to think post-scarcity was a technology problem, now I'm not so sure. But I agree, I don't know how to test that hypothesis.
I do ceramics, a lot of it. This video was great to watch, and it got me thinking about something that has become scarce in the ceramics industry that has a lot of people bummed: lithium. Specially in the forms lithium carbonate, spodumene, and petalite. I dont fully understand it but my understanding is that with the rise of lithium batteries and cars run on them the material has just become too expensive for us to even carry at the clay supply. I wonder if this is related to what you are talking about or another thing entirely. I think lithium is mined, so if there is a finite amount on earth it would make sense for there to become a monopoly on it as soon as it becomes particularly valuable.
Wonderfully said, science applied freely and openly can benefit everyone!
Thanks you!
Commenting for the algorithm, well said and so true, i see this in the building industry now. Some of the rules are there as a gate keeper, not to keep people safe. But to keep there investment safe. This has the dangerous consequences and i have drawn a line in the sand and fighting back.
Good sir, you have described (in detail) my personal infatuation with Aluminum.
(I wasn't even fully-aware, until this presentation)
Thanks!
Even as a small child I recognized this as we dont work to help each other and further ourselves.
Bravo, the ways of the world explained. The yins and yans are all that really have to be told to all.
Beautifully constructed video
Thank you for sharing.
A gem of a mini-rant… well said!
Thank you. Mini-rant is a good description
I went from/to
Cool a video about aluminum chemistry -> oh wow this is really great I need to start doing some aluminum casting for daily life things -> *rethinks everything about life and what is righteous or not and what is one's role in society and within his own life
Thanks! That feels like a huge compliment.
@@PeterAllenLab it sure is, or at least I meant it
Thank you for the vídeo! and somehow thank UA-cam for recommending it to me
From the other side of the pond. greatings from Denmark
Denmark, the land of my ancestors! Welcome! Thanks for watching
0:26 Wrong. Value comes from people preceiving something as desirable and worth owning. Whether that thing has the slightest bit of practical value or utiliy is a whole other question.
I love it when people start comments with "Wrong-hard period." It reminds me of Dwight.
Immediate value is perception but value will tend toward practical utility over time.
Ok I like you, sub. Thanks for talking about the feudal values
What is that magic alummejum metal you are talking about, do we need to adjust the periodic table?
It's there already, Element 13. We Americans call it aluminum, but everyone else calls it aluMINIum. I should have mentioned it.
@@PeterAllenLabWe Brits _used_ to call it aluminum.
@@fburton8 those wishy washy brits
Well said. We have a lot of work before we are to dissolve the illusion of scarcity and debt based economics as a species. It may be the most pressing matter humanity faces at present?
Almost an ecological limitation nature has designed to preserve a universal equilibrium like Thermodynamics? Before we can weild the power of interstellar travel, we must understand how energy and information flow on our terrestrial home first.
This would prevent radical species becoming a sort of cancer in the cosmos.
Unfortunately, this postulate falls more under the category philosophy and spirituality as it would be challenging to prove emperically. 😅
Appreciate you and having voice of reason to my perception of our shared reality.
🍻
Thanks for watching and the comment. I used to think post-scarcity was a technology problem, now I'm not so sure. But I agree, I don't know how to test that hypothesis.
I do ceramics, a lot of it. This video was great to watch, and it got me thinking about something that has become scarce in the ceramics industry that has a lot of people bummed: lithium. Specially in the forms lithium carbonate, spodumene, and petalite. I dont fully understand it but my understanding is that with the rise of lithium batteries and cars run on them the material has just become too expensive for us to even carry at the clay supply. I wonder if this is related to what you are talking about or another thing entirely. I think lithium is mined, so if there is a finite amount on earth it would make sense for there to become a monopoly on it as soon as it becomes particularly valuable.
subbed
You said Capitalism did its thing, then immediately after demonstrated that it was government intervention that provided the land and loans.