and 97% of it is straight-up just a guy in his house explaining future economics to another guy help
#interview with the vampire#iwtv#amc tvl#sam reid#jacob anderson






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and 97% of it is straight-up just a guy in his house explaining future economics to another guy help
letting go of the story
"looking backwards might be the only way to move forward"
Everyone should read this very dumb book
It was written in 1887 about a dude who gets hypnotized into suspended animation (yes) and wakes up in a far future socialist utopian paradise of...Boston in the year 2000.
It is so stupid.
Like 80% of it is the author explicating exactly how the economics and social organization of a socialist utopia would work.
There's a love story between the 1887 guy and a woman who turns out to be the great-granddaughter of his long-dead 1887 fiancé.
The economics and sociology are uhhhhhh questionable, but it takes certain problems of "what life will look like in a socialist utopia" more seriously and gives more interesting answers to them than anything else I've ever read.
It is deeply steeped in benevolent sexism.
It quietly implies that the socialist utopia will not have racism, but without ever addressing racial inequality directly. Presumably so he didn't get canceled for being a woke lib or whatever in 1887.
He is completely uninterested in how values, morals, religion, or manners might change over the course of 113 years and a socialist revolution.
(except that women will be less annoying, apparently)
Anyway, it's great and everyone should read it.
On the Popular Phenomenon of Edward Bellamy and "Looking Backward"
I know — you were hoping this post would would be about THIS guy — — Martin Laurello, the man who could turn his head backwards, but there’s no need to be disappointed. You can still read all about him here, but then come on back please! Edward Bellamy (1850-1898) looked backwards too, but from the FUTURE. Which actually means he was looking FORWARD when he wrote his famous 1888 novel Looking…
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Melody's Echo Chamber shares "Looking Backward” from her forthcoming album Emotional Eternal out 29 April 2022.
Pre-order here.
This week we discuss how the Sci-Fi genre uses technology to set itself apart from others. From Light Sabers to First Ones Tech, we list a few of our favorites as well as some that have had actual impacts on innovation in the real world. We had a lot of laughs this week, so it was a fun one to edit.
Referenced Material: Star Wars (Movie) Star Trek (Movie) She-Ra and the Princesses of Power (Netflix) Steven Universe (TV) Dick Tracy Comic Strip by Chester Gould R.U.R. by Karel Čapek Dial F for Frankenstein by Arthur C. Clarke Looking Backward by Edward Bellamy Harry Potter by JK Rowling
fractions of future reveries
it does a way better job to sort out whatever is there to be sorted out; “it”, I mean without significant human interference
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I should be there, but I can’t wait. I can’t wait and this is what I am
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body and mind clearly have different ways of becoming, but some curious analogies seem inescapable