Welcome to the IdeaMatt blog!

My rebooted blog on tech, creative ideas, digital citizenship, and life as an experiment.

Tuesday
Oct192010

What's your favorite little philosophy book?

Book 5_07 Time Cover.jpg

In Towards a calculus of happiness I mentioned Wabi-Sabi: for Artists, Designers, Poets & Philosophers, which is increasingly informing how I'm thinking about my book. It now rests along with other favorites [1] in a class of philosophy books that gets at what I'm shooting for. I'd love your suggestions for others that are similar.

Here are a few attributes that come to mind:

  • Logically coherent view of the world (e.g., worldview, principles, and practices)
  • Tightly written in clear, spare language
  • Provides lasting value

Do any of your favorites jump out at you? I'm not in the habit of studying the masters, so this is a new sub-experiment as part of writing the book. Thanks!

 

[1] Here are some I've stumbled across in the last five years:

Monday
Oct182010

Why experimenters are luckier...

I really enjoyed the Harvard Business Review article Make Luck Work in Your Favor, which talked about three types of entrepreneur luck:

  1. Circumstantial Luck
  2. Constitutional Luck
  3. Ignorance, or Dumb Luck

Here's a passage I particularly liked, which is a fine description of the typical Think, Try, Learn experimenter:

They read new things, try new experiences and are open-minded to a variety of relationships because they are curious. All of these things increase the probability for circumstantial luck.

Lucky Horse Shoe ?

The topic reminds me of the ideas in How to Attract Good Luck, including the importance of being around new people. Carr claims "a high proportion of lucky chances comes to us through strangers or people we know only slightly."

What's your take on luck? Any tips to share?

Saturday
Oct162010

Look for me at the Quantified Self!

In the surprise and delight [1] category I am absoutely thrilled to announce that I've been asked to be regular contributor to The Quantified Self, the data-driven life blog that Wired luminaries Gary Wolf and Kevin Kelly run. Out-standing! My first post is Is there a data-driven personality? A big thanks to Alexandra Carmichael for the invitation.

You might want to check out their archives, which include things like whether eating butter can make you smarter, or A Visual Guide to Cognitive Bias.

 

[1] The 2x2 cell I'm trying to figure out is what Expected + Delightful would be. Ideas? The others are straightforward - "Pink Slip" and "Gum Surgery", for example?

Friday
Oct152010

Past experiments you didn't know about? You bet!

TAKING A PEEK -- A Pretty Geisha Watching a Young Man Visiting in the Next Room

I've been experimenting for a few years, but I didn't know it. Then again, I think I can forgive myself - it was before "Think, Try, Learn" popped out. Just for fun I thought I'd go back and find a few experiments (in hindsight) that I blogged about in the past.

What about you? What do you have going on now that might qualify as an experiment. Something new, something scary, or maybe something where you really don't have a good model with which to predict?

Wednesday
Oct132010

The Experiment-Driven Life Universe v0.1: What do you think?

Pocket Buddha in his garden

Following up on my last post (Towards a calculus of happiness) I want to share a condensed version that I think is converging on something tasty. Again, this is the TTL/Matt's view of the world. I'm not sure if what I'm doing is making sense to you, but here goes!

nature of world

  • the world is constantly changing
  • our knowledge is always incomplete
  • we are limited in what we can control

implications

  • the world is unpredictable (META!)
  • perfection is impossible (META?)
  • there is no true stability
  • there is no true safety
  • success is never guaranteed
  • mistakes are natural
  • things never work out like we expect
  • no choice/decision can be perfect

     

metaphysical truths

  • attachment -> suffering
  • being present/mindful/in the moment -> happiness
  • the only way to improve is to change something (thinking, acting)
  • reality != desire (what is vs what ought to be)
  • observation -> awareness -> change

     

human nature

  • we are born curious :-)
  • we are all different
  • we like feeling light (not too serious)
  • we feel good around supporting people
  • we feel good around beauty
  • we are happier when we feel safe/unafraid
  • change is scary
  • we are prone to feeling certain, have all answers, ...