Michael Graziano on The Evolution of Consciousness and …

Biography: Michael Graziano (Wikipedia) is a scientist, novelist, and composer, and is currently aprofessor of Psychology and Neuroscience at Princeton University.His previous work focused on how the cortex monitors the space around the body and controls movement within that space, including groundbreaking research into the brains homunculus. His current research focuses on the biological basis of attention and consciousness. He has proposed the Attention Schema theory, an explanation of how, and for what adaptive advantage, brains attribute the property of awareness to themselves. His 2013 book, Consciousness and the Social Brain, explores this theory in-depth and extends it in novel and surprising ways.

Andy McKenzie:Your recent book,Consciousness and the Social Brain, describes and expands upon your fascinating and well-received model of consciousness. Interestingly, consciousness itself is perhaps too narrow as a description of the content in your book, since you also describe attention, and specifically how consciousness arises as useful adaptation for modeling ones attention processes and the attention processes of others. One thing Im particularly curious about this is: if we were to wind back the evolutionary clock, is there any other way that consciousness could have evolved? For example, if it were to have evolved in a highly cooperative species as opposed to one in which social games play such a prominent role, would the consciousness that developed be recognizable as such?

Michael Graziano: The evolutionary question is a good one. We suspect that awareness, in some form, is very evolutionarily old, and has its roots as far back as half a billion years ago. Different species may have different bells and whistles, different quirks or flavors, but almost every animal has either something like awareness or some very simple precursor algorithm from which our awareness emerged.

As you hinted in your question, the story starts with attention, this mechanistic ability to focus resources on a limited set of signals and process them in depth. Attention may have evolved very early, probably about half a billion years ago, as soon as animals had sophisticated nervous systems. That means insects, fish, mammals, birds, even octopuses, have some version of attention. And we think that as soon as attention appeared, evolution would have begun to construct an attention schema. The brain not only performs attention, but also builds an internal description of what its doing. This follows from everything we know about control engineering. If you want to control something, you need an internal description of it. This internal description of attention would have come in very early in evolution and then gradually become more elaborate. Its this internal description of attention, this attention schema, distorted and blurry, that tells us we have a non-physical essence inside us that allows us to mentally possess items and that empowers us to act on those items. Awareness is the internal model of attention.

So its not that some animals are conscious and others are not. Its much more of a graded thing. As humans, of course, we have our own peculiar human form of consciousness. We use it not only to understand ourselves, but also to understand others. One of the main human uses of consciousness is to attribute it to others; its foundational to our social intelligence.

I do think that if we had a different set of species properties, we would have a different flavor of consciousness. Just like different animals have different kinds of legs, adapted to their own needs, but we can recognize them all as legs.

In fact, given the complexity of wiring up a brain during infancy and childhood, I suspect that different people have slightly different consciousness constructs. What it means to be conscious is probably slightly different for different people. Thats a wild thought.

Andy McKenzie: In your Aeon article from a year and a half ago, you wrote:

> I find myself asking, given what we know about the brain, whether we really could upload someones mind to a computer. And my best guess is: yes, almost certainly.

You then go on to discuss some of the interesting and at time troubling social ramifications that this would entail. Do you still consider the prospect of mind uploading to be technically feasible more likely than not? And either way, what do you think is the strongest argument against the relatively near term (say, within 100-200 years) feasibility of mind uploading?

Michael Graziano: Yes, I think mind uploading is possible and even inevitable. The technology is moving that way, and there is way too much social motivation to stop that momentum. Just like Kofu wanted to imprint his memory on the world by building the largest of the great pyramids, and now some people put every detail of their lives online and that online presence lingers on like a ghost after the person is dead there will be a huge market for preserving so much of yourself that the trace left over actually thinks and feels and talks like you do, and has your memories, and believes it IS you. As strange and discombobulating as that seems, it is ultimately technically possible. I think it will be a gradual development. These preserved minds will be crude at first, not really fully naturalistic. More like caricatures of people. Within fifty years, Id say it will be technically possible to do a first crude pass at it, and someone will try it on a mouse or a frog or something. Its a matter of gradual refinement after that, until the caricature becomes a duplicate. It all depends on the progress in scanning technology. If we develop a non-invasive scan, like an MRI, that can get down to the microscopic details of individual neurons and their synaptic connections, then were set.

One of the strangest quirks of the mind-uploading mythos is the notion that if you upload yourself into a computer, your real self in the real world disappears. And you have to get yourself back out of the computer to return to the real world. This wonderful bit of fantasy is total nonsense and was invented to solve a narrative problem in story telling. If you copied your mind and uploaded it onto a computer, thered be two of you, one in the real world and one in the computer world, living through separate experiences. And the one in the computer world could in principle be copied any number of times, until there are millions of you. And some of those versions of you could be directly linked to other uploaded minds, with direct access to each others thoughts. This is very hard for people to wrap their minds around. It challenges our understanding of individuality. This is the main philosophical challenge of our future, it seems to me; the breakdown of the concept of individuality.

Andy McKenzie:You mentioned a non-invasive scan of microscopic details of individual neurons and their synaptic connections as a step towards mind uploading. Obviously this is somewhat speculative at this point, but Im curious: what do you think will be the level of scanning resolution detail required to produce an uploaded mind that would identify as being the same as the original mind?

Michael Graziano: To produce the first crude approximation to an uploaded mind, wed need a scan at a resolution that gives us the very thin processes or wires sprouting from neurons, and the synapses between neurons. That would be at the sub micron level. Maybe 100 nanometers. Thats very small. Current MRI technology, at the highest resolution typically used on the brain, can resolve physical details at about half a millimeter at the best. There are scanning techniques that can do much better, but right now are limited in various ways, for example to scanning a small piece of tissue. So a lot of development is needed. On the other hand, that development is going on rather aggressively, and there is no reason to think there is any fundamental technical limit in sight.

Nobody knows how refined a scan would be need to be, to duplicate all the nuances. It could be that a much more refined method, down to the molecular level, is needed. Nobody will know until people start to try these things out.

Andy McKenzie:What are you working on now?

Michael Graziano:My lab continues to study how consciousness is implemented in the brain. We do experiments on people, for example in the MRI scanner, to test and refine the Attention Schema theory of the biological basis of awareness.

Andy McKenzie: Thanks, Professor Graziano!

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Michael Graziano on The Evolution of Consciousness and ...

Hedonism II – Photo Album | Castaways Travel

Hedonism II Photo Album Negril, Jamaica

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How does Ethereum work, anyway? – Medium

Introduction

Odds are youve heard about the Ethereum blockchain, whether or not you know what it is. Its been in the news a lot lately, including the cover of some major magazines, but reading those articles can be like gibberish if you dont have a foundation for what exactly Ethereum is. So what is it? In essence, a public database that keeps a permanent record of digital transactions. Importantly, this database doesnt require any central authority to maintain and secure it. Instead it operates as a trustless transactional systema framework in which individuals can make peer-to-peer transactions without needing to trust a third party OR one another.

Still confused? Thats where this post comes in. My aim is to explain how Ethereum functions at a technical level, without complex math or scary-looking formulas. Even if youre not a programmer, I hope youll walk away with at least better grasp of the tech. If some parts are too technical and difficult to grok, thats totally fine! Theres really no need to understand every little detail. I recommend just focusing on understanding things at a broad level.Many of the topics covered in this post are a breakdown of the concepts discussed in the yellow paper. Ive added my own explanations and diagrams to make understanding Ethereum easier. Those brave enough to take on the technical challenge can also read the Ethereum yellow paper.

Lets get started!

A blockchain is a cryptographically secure transactional singleton machine with shared-state. [1] Thats a mouthful, isnt it? Lets break it down.

Ethereum implements this blockchain paradigm.

The Ethereum blockchain is essentially a transaction-based state machine. In computer science, a state machine refers to something that will read a series of inputs and, based on those inputs, will transition to a new state.

With Ethereums state machine, we begin with a genesis state. This is analogous to a blank slate, before any transactions have happened on the network. When transactions are executed, this genesis state transitions into some final state. At any point in time, this final state represents the current state of Ethereum.

The state of Ethereum has millions of transactions. These transactions are grouped into blocks. A block contains a series of transactions, and each block is chained together with its previous block.

To cause a transition from one state to the next, a transaction must be valid. For a transaction to be considered valid, it must go through a validation process known as mining. Mining is when a group of nodes (i.e. computers) expend their compute resources to create a block of valid transactions.

Any node on the network that declares itself as a miner can attempt to create and validate a block. Lots of miners from around the world try to create and validate blocks at the same time. Each miner provides a mathematical proof when submitting a block to the blockchain, and this proof acts as a guarantee: if the proof exists, the block must be valid.

For a block to be added to the main blockchain, the miner must prove it faster than any other competitor miner. The process of validating each block by having a miner provide a mathematical proof is known as a proof of work.

A miner who validates a new block is rewarded with a certain amount of value for doing this work. What is that value? The Ethereum blockchain uses an intrinsic digital token called Ether. Every time a miner proves a block, new Ether tokens are generated and awarded.

You might wonder: what guarantees that everyone sticks to one chain of blocks? How can we be sure that there doesnt exist a subset of miners who will decide to create their own chain of blocks?

Earlier, we defined a blockchain as a transactional singleton machine with shared-state. Using this definition, we can understand the correct current state is a single global truth, which everyone must accept. Having multiple states (or chains) would ruin the whole system, because it would be impossible to agree on which state was the correct one. If the chains were to diverge, you might own 10 coins on one chain, 20 on another, and 40 on another. In this scenario, there would be no way to determine which chain was the most valid.

Whenever multiple paths are generated, a fork occurs. We typically want to avoid forks, because they disrupt the system and force people to choose which chain they believe in.

To determine which path is most valid and prevent multiple chains, Ethereum uses a mechanism called the GHOST protocol.

GHOST = Greedy Heaviest Observed Subtree

In simple terms, the GHOST protocol says we must pick the path that has had the most computation done upon it. One way to determine that path is to use the block number of the most recent block (the leaf block), which represents the total number of blocks in the current path (not counting the genesis block). The higher the block number, the longer the path and the greater the mining effort that must have gone into arriving at the leaf. Using this reasoning allows us to agree on the canonical version of the current state.

Now that youve gotten the 10,000-foot overview of what a blockchain is, lets dive deeper into the main components that the Ethereum system is comprised of:

One note before getting started: whenever I say hash of X, I am referring to the KECCAK-256 hash, which Ethereum uses.

The global shared-state of Ethereum is comprised of many small objects (accounts) that are able to interact with one another through a message-passing framework. Each account has a state associated with it and a 20-byte address. An address in Ethereum is a 160-bit identifier that is used to identify any account.

There are two types of accounts:

Its important to understand a fundamental difference between externally owned accounts and contract accounts. An externally owned account can send messages to other externally owned accounts OR to other contract accounts by creating and signing a transaction using its private key. A message between two externally owned accounts is simply a value transfer. But a message from an externally owned account to a contract account activates the contract accounts code, allowing it to perform various actions (e.g. transfer tokens, write to internal storage, mint new tokens, perform some calculation, create new contracts, etc.).

Unlike externally owned accounts, contract accounts cant initiate new transactions on their own. Instead, contract accounts can only fire transactions in response to other transactions they have received (from an externally owned account or from another contract account). Well learn more about contract-to-contract calls in the Transactions and Messages section.

Therefore, any action that occurs on the Ethereum blockchain is always set in motion by transactions fired from externally controlled accounts.

The account state consists of four components, which are present regardless of the type of account:

Okay, so we know that Ethereums global state consists of a mapping between account addresses and the account states. This mapping is stored in a data structure known as a Merkle Patricia tree.

A Merkle tree (or also referred as Merkle trie) is a type of binary tree composed of a set of nodes with:

The data at the bottom of the tree is generated by splitting the data that we want to store into chunks, then splitting the chunks into buckets, and then taking the hash of each bucket and repeating the same process until the total number of hashes remaining becomes only one: the root hash.

This tree is required to have a key for every value stored inside it. Beginning from the root node of the tree, the key should tell you which child node to follow to get to the corresponding value, which is stored in the leaf nodes. In Ethereums case, the key/value mapping for the state tree is between addresses and their associated accounts, including the balance, nonce, codeHash, and storageRoot for each account (where the storageRoot is itself a tree).

This same trie structure is used also to store transactions and receipts. More specifically, every block has a header which stores the hash of the root node of three different Merkle trie structures, including:

The ability to store all this information efficiently in Merkle tries is incredibly useful in Ethereum for what we call light clients or light nodes. Remember that a blockchain is maintained by a bunch of nodes. Broadly speaking, there are two types of nodes: full nodes and light nodes.

A full archive node synchronizes the blockchain by downloading the full chain, from the genesis block to the current head block, executing all of the transactions contained within. Typically, miners store the full archive node, because they are required to do so for the mining process. It is also possible to download a full node without executing every transaction. Regardless, any full node contains the entire chain.

But unless a node needs to execute every transaction or easily query historical data, theres really no need to store the entire chain. This is where the concept of a light node comes in. Instead of downloading and storing the full chain and executing all of the transactions, light nodes download only the chain of headers, from the genesis block to the current head, without executing any transactions or retrieving any associated state. Because light nodes have access to block headers, which contain hashes of three tries, they can still easily generate and receive verifiable answers about transactions, events, balances, etc.

The reason this works is because hashes in the Merkle tree propagate upwardif a malicious user attempts to swap a fake transaction into the bottom of a Merkle tree, this change will cause a change in the hash of the node above, which will change the hash of the node above that, and so on, until it eventually changes the root of the tree.

Any node that wants to verify a piece of data can use something called a Merkle proof to do so. A Merkle proof consists of:

Anyone reading the proof can verify that the hashing for that branch is consistent all the way up the tree, and therefore that the given chunk is actually at that position in the tree.

In summary, the benefit of using a Merkle Patricia tree is that the root node of this structure is cryptographically dependent on the data stored in the tree, and so the hash of the root node can be used as a secure identity for this data. Since the block header includes the root hash of the state, transactions, and receipts trees, any node can validate a small part of state of Ethereum without needing to store the entire state, which can be potentially unbounded in size.

One very important concept in Ethereum is the concept of fees. Every computation that occurs as a result of a transaction on the Ethereum network incurs a feetheres no free lunch! This fee is paid in a denomination called gas.

Gas is the unit used to measure the fees required for a particular computation. Gas price is the amount of Ether you are willing to spend on every unit of gas, and is measured in gwei. Wei is the smallest unit of Ether, where 1 Wei represents 1 Ether. One gwei is 1,000,000,000 Wei.

With every transaction, a sender sets a gas limit and gas price. The product of gas price and gas limit represents the maximum amount of Wei that the sender is willing to pay for executing a transaction.

For example, lets say the sender sets the gas limit to 50,000 and a gas price to 20 gwei. This implies that the sender is willing to spend at most 50,000 x 20 gwei = 1,000,000,000,000,000 Wei = 0.001 Ether to execute that transaction.

Remember that the gas limit represents the maximum gas the sender is willing to spend money on. If they have enough Ether in their account balance to cover this maximum, theyre good to go. The sender is refunded for any unused gas at the end of the transaction, exchanged at the original rate.

In the case that the sender does not provide the necessary gas to execute the transaction, the transaction runs out of gas and is considered invalid. In this case, the transaction processing aborts and any state changes that occurred are reversed, such that we end up back at the state of Ethereum prior to the transaction. Additionally, a record of the transaction failing gets recorded, showing what transaction was attempted and where it failed. And since the machine already expended effort to run the calculations before running out of gas, logically, none of the gas is refunded to the sender.

Where exactly does this gas money go? All the money spent on gas by the sender is sent to the beneficiary address, which is typically the miners address. Since miners are expending the effort to run computations and validate transactions, miners receive the gas fee as a reward.

Typically, the higher the gas price the sender is willing to pay, the greater the value the miner derives from the transaction. Thus, the more likely miners will be to select it. In this way, miners are free to choose which transactions they want to validate or ignore. In order to guide senders on what gas price to set, miners have the option of advertising the minimum gas price for which they will execute transactions.

Not only is gas used to pay for computation steps, it is also used to pay for storage usage. The total fee for storage is proportional to the smallest multiple of 32 bytes used.

Fees for storage have some nuanced aspects. For example, since increased storage increases the size of the Ethereum state database on all nodes, theres an incentive to keep the amount of data stored small. For this reason, if a transaction has a step that clears an entry in the storage, the fee for executing that operation of is waived, AND a refund is given for freeing up storage space.

One important aspect of the way the Ethereum works is that every single operation executed by the network is simultaneously effected by every full node. However, computational steps on the Ethereum Virtual Machine are very expensive. Therefore, Ethereum smart contracts are best used for simple tasks, like running simple business logic or verifying signatures and other cryptographic objects, rather than more complex uses, like file storage, email, or machine learning, which can put a strain on the network. Imposing fees prevents users from overtaxing the network.

Ethereum is a Turing complete language. (In short, a Turing machine is a machine that can simulate any computer algorithm (for those not familiar with Turing machines, check out this and this). This allows for loops and makes Ethereum susceptible to the halting problem, a problem in which you cannot determine whether or not a program will run infinitely. If there were no fees, a malicious actor could easily try to disrupt the network by executing an infinite loop within a transaction, without any repercussions. Thus, fees protect the network from deliberate attacks.

You might be thinking, why do we also have to pay for storage? Well, just like computation, storage on the Ethereum network is a cost that the entire network has to take the burden of.

We noted earlier that Ethereum is a transaction-based state machine. In other words, transactions occurring between different accounts are what move the global state of Ethereum from one state to the next.

In the most basic sense, a transaction is a cryptographically signed piece of instruction that is generated by an externally owned account, serialized, and then submitted to the blockchain.

There are two types of transactions: message calls and contract creations (i.e. transactions that create new Ethereum contracts).All transactions contain the following components, regardless of their type:

We learned in the Accounts section that transactionsboth message calls and contract-creating transactionsare always initiated by externally owned accounts and submitted to the blockchain. Another way to think about it is that transactions are what bridge the external world to the internal state of Ethereum.

But this doesnt mean that contracts cant talk to other contracts. Contracts that exist within the global scope of Ethereums state can talk to other contracts within that same scope. The way they do this is via messages or internal transactions to other contracts. We can think of messages or internal transactions as being similar to transactions, with the major difference that they are NOT generated by externally owned accounts. Instead, they are generated by contracts. They are virtual objects that, unlike transactions, are not serialized and only exist in the Ethereum execution environment.

When one contract sends an internal transaction to another contract, the associated code that exists on the recipient contract account is executed.

One important thing to note is that internal transactions or messages dont contain a gasLimit. This is because the gas limit is determined by the external creator of the original transaction (i.e. some externally owned account). The gas limit that the externally owned account sets must be high enough to carry out the transaction, including any sub-executions that occur as a result of that transaction, such as contract-to-contract messages. If, in the chain of transactions and messages, a particular message execution runs out of gas, then that messages execution will revert, along with any subsequent messages triggered by the execution. However, the parent execution does not need to revert.

All transactions are grouped together into blocks. A blockchain contains a series of such blocks that are chained together.

In Ethereum, a block consists of:

What the heck is an ommer? An ommer is a block whose parent is equal to the current blocks parents parent. Lets take a quick dive into what ommers are used for and why a block contains the block headers for ommers.

Because of the way Ethereum is built, block times are much lower (~15 seconds) than those of other blockchains, like Bitcoin (~10 minutes). This enables faster transaction processing. However, one of the downsides of shorter block times is that more competing block solutions are found by miners. These competing blocks are also referred to as orphaned blocks (i.e. mined blocks do not make it into the main chain).

The purpose of ommers is to help reward miners for including these orphaned blocks. The ommers that miners include must be valid, meaning within the sixth generation or smaller of the present block. After six children, stale orphaned blocks can no longer be referenced (because including older transactions would complicate things a bit).

Ommer blocks receive a smaller reward than a full block. Nonetheless, theres still some incentive for miners to include these orphaned blocks and reap a reward.

Lets get back to blocks for a moment. We mentioned previously that every block has a block header, but what exactly is this?A block header is a portion of the block consisting of:

Notice how every block header contains three trie structures for:

These trie structures are nothing but the Merkle Patricia tries we discussed earlier.

Additionally, there are a few terms from the above description that are worth clarifying. Lets take a look.

Ethereum allows for logs to make it possible to track various transactions and messages. A contract can explicitly generate a log by defining events that it wants to log.

A log entry contains:

Logs are stored in a bloom filter, which stores the endless log data in an efficient manner.

Logs stored in the header come from the log information contained in the transaction receipt. Just as you receive a receipt when you buy something at a store, Ethereum generates a receipt for every transaction. Like youd expect, each receipt contains certain information about the transaction. This receipt includes items like:

The difficulty of a block is used to enforce consistency in the time it takes to validate blocks. The genesis block has a difficulty of 131,072, and a special formula is used to calculate the difficulty of every block thereafter. If a certain block is validated more quickly than the previous block, the Ethereum protocol increases that blocks difficulty.

The difficulty of the block affects the nonce, which is a hash that must be calculated when mining a block, using the proof-of-work algorithm.

The relationship between the blocks difficulty and nonce is mathematically formalized as:

where Hd is the difficulty.

The only way to find a nonce that meets a difficulty threshold is to use the proof-of-work algorithm to enumerate all of the possibilities. The expected time to find a solution is proportional to the difficultythe higher the difficulty, the harder it becomes to find the nonce, and so the harder it is to validate the block, which in turn increases the time it takes to validate a new block. So, by adjusting the difficulty of a block, the protocol can adjust how long it takes to validate a block.

If, on the other hand, validation time is getting slower, the protocol decreases the difficulty. In this way, the validation time self-adjusts to maintain a constant rateon average, one block every 15 seconds.

Weve come to one of the most complex parts of the Ethereum protocol: the execution of a transaction. Say you send a transaction off into the Ethereum network to be processed. What happens to transition the state of Ethereum to include your transaction?

First, all transactions must meet an initial set of requirements in order to be executed. These include:

If the transaction meets all of the above requirements for validity, then we move onto the next step.

First, we deduct the upfront cost of execution from the senders balance, and increase the nonce of the senders account by 1 to account for the current transaction. At this point, we can calculate the gas remaining as the total gas limit for the transaction minus the intrinsic gas used.

Next, the transaction starts executing. Throughout the execution of a transaction, Ethereum keeps track of the substate. This substate is a way to record information accrued during the transaction that will be needed immediately after the transaction completes. Specifically, it contains:

Next, the various computations required by the transaction are processed.

Once all the steps required by the transaction have been processed, and assuming there is no invalid state, the state is finalized by determining the amount of unused gas to be refunded to the sender. In addition to the unused gas, the sender is also refunded some allowance from the refund balance that we described above.

Once the sender is refunded:

Finally, were left with the new state and a set of the logs created by the transaction.

Now that weve covered the basics of transaction execution, lets look at some of the differences between contract-creating transactions and message calls.

Recall that in Ethereum, there are two types of accounts: contract accounts and externally owned accounts. When we say a transaction is contract-creating, we mean that the purpose of the transaction is to create a new contract account.

In order to create a new contract account, we first declare the address of the new account using a special formula. Then we initialize the new account by:

Once we initialize the account, we can actually create the account, using the init code sent with the transaction (see the Transaction and messages section for a refresher on the init code). What happens during the execution of this init code is varied. Depending on the constructor of the contract, it might update the accounts storage, create other contract accounts, make other message calls, etc.

As the code to initialize a contract is executed, it uses gas. The transaction is not allowed to use up more gas than the remaining gas. If it does, the execution will hit an out-of-gas (OOG) exception and exit. If the transaction exits due to an out-of-gas exception, then the state is reverted to the point immediately prior to transaction. The sender is not refunded the gas that was spent before running out.

Boo hoo.

However, if the sender sent any Ether value with the transaction, the Ether value will be refunded even if the contract creation fails. Phew!

If the initialization code executes successfully, a final contract-creation cost is paid. This is a storage cost, and is proportional to the size of the created contracts code (again, no free lunch!) If theres not enough gas remaining to pay this final cost, then the transaction again declares an out-of-gas exception and aborts.

If all goes well and we make it this far without exceptions, then any remaining unused gas is refunded to the original sender of the transaction, and the altered state is now allowed to persist!

Hooray!

The execution of a message call is similar to that of a contract creation, with a few differences.

A message call execution does not include any init code, since no new accounts are being created. However, it can contain input data, if this data was provided by the transaction sender. Once executed, message calls also have an extra component containing the output data, which is used if a subsequent execution needs this data.

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How does Ethereum work, anyway? - Medium

Essay: John Rawls and Robert Nozick: liberalism vs …

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These days , in the occasional university philosophy classroom, the differences between Robert Nozicks Anarchy, State, and Utopia (libertarianism) and John Rawls A Theory of Justice (social liberalism) are still discussed vigorously. In order to demonstrate a broad spectrum of possible political philosophies it is necessary to define the outer boundaries, these two treatises stand like sentries at opposite gatesof the polis

John Rawls, A Theory of Justice. Rawls presents an account of justice in the form of two principles: (1) liberty principle= peoples equal basic liberties such as freedom of speech, freedom of conscience (religion), and the right to vote should be maximized, and (2) difference principle= inequalities in social and economic goods are acceptable only if they promote the welfare of the least advantaged members of society. Rawls writes in the social contract tradition. He seeks to define equilibrium points that, when accumulated, form a civil system characterized by what he calls justice as fairness. To get there he deploys an argument whereby people in an original position (state of nature), make decisions (legislate laws) behind a veil of ignorance (of their place in the society rich or poor) using a reasoning technique he calls reflective equilibrium. It goes something like: behind the veil of ignorance, with no knowledge of their own places in civil society, Rawls posits that reasonable people will default to social and economic positions that maximize the prospects for the worst off feed and house the poor in case you happen to become one. Its much like the prisoners dilemma in game theory. By his own words Rawls = left-liberalism.

Robert Nozick, Anarchy, State, and Utopia, libertarian response to Rawls which argues that only a minimal state devoted to the enforcement of contracts and protecting people against crimes like assault, robbery, fraud can be morally justified. Nozick suggests that the fundamental question of political philosophy is not how government should be organized but whether there should be any state at all, he is close to John Locke in that government is legitimate only to the degree that it promotes greater security for life, liberty, and property than would exist in a chaotic, pre-political state of nature. Nozick concludes, however, that the need for security justifies only a minimal, or night-watchman, state, since it cannot be demonstrated that citizens will attain any more security through extensive governmental intervention. (Nozick p.25-27)

the state may not use its coercive apparatus for the purpose of getting some citizens to aid others, or in order to prohibit activities to people for their own good or protection. (Nozick Preface p.ix)

Differences:

Similarities:

Some Practical Questions for Rawls:

Some Practical Questions for Nozick:

Read The Liberal Imagination of Frederick Douglass for an excellent discussion on the state of liberalism in America today.

Citations:

Anarchy, State, and Utopia. Robert Nozick. Basic Books. 1974

A Theory of Justice. John Rawls. Harvard University Press. 1971

Disclaimer: This is a forum for me to capture in digital type my understanding of various philosophies and philosophers. I cannot vouch for the accuracy of the interpretations.

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Communication in genetic medicine – TGMI

Ive noticed over the last few weeks that many TGMI blog posts address challenges that specifically related to communication in genetic medicine. I wanted to highlight some of these mentions here, to illustrate that not all issues in genetic medicine are scientific or medical challenges. Sometimes its all about the way we share information with each other.

Looking back at recent blog posts, these are some of the communication challenges the TGMI team members noticed:

These are just some things that came up on the TGMI blog in the past few months, and while they look like very distinct problems, they are all about communication.

When clinicians and researchers need to use the same information, the requirements they have for how that information is presented can be very different

Of course an important point of communication is when patients need to understand the result of their genetic test and the implications of that result to a degree that allows them to make decisions about their own health. But communication isnt always about communication to patients or to a broader audience of non-experts. Even amongst themselves, researchers encounter communication challenges, with gene names being used inconsistently or inconsistent use of terms that articulate important issues such as the mode of inheritance, the risk of associated disease occurring, inconsistent methods used for annotating variations in genes and even many different ways of describing diseases or disorders and their consequences.

When clinicians and researchers need to use the same information, such as the link between a gene and a disease, the requirements they have for how that information is presented can be very different: Do they need it to understand genetics in general, or do they need it to very specifically understand the role genetic changes can have in one particular disease?

When two people talk to each other about genetics, they make assumptions about the level of genetic literacy the other person has. As Jennifer mentioned in last weeks blog post, the general level of genetic literacy has increased over the years. More people than before now know enough about genetics to talk about it in the context of a discussion about their health and hereditary conditions.

Still, this doesnt mean that all problems surrounding communication about genetics with non-experts have now been solved. For example, various studies have looked at communities where there is less awareness about genetic testing, or where a culture or language barrier affects communication. .

Were never going to get everyone at the same level of genetics knowledge, but that isnt necessary either. Genetically literate people dont need to know everything about genetics. They just need to have access to support and tools to help them find and understand relevant information and whats relevant is different for everyone. However it is important to improve the consistency in how different resources and tools use terms to describe genetic variation and the possible links those have to disease risk.

The same is true for communication between researchers and clinicians, or between researchers in different fields. They cant all be expected to know all the details of each others expertise, but they need to have a way to look up and extract the intended meaning from the information shared through publications, databases and other resources.

Last year, the American Heart Association published a statement to highlight this issue. They pointed out that researchers are rapidly finding new information about the link between genetics and cardiovascular disease, but that the clinician specialists who work with cardiovascular and stroke patients cant keep up with all this new genetics knowledge. The Association provided recommendations on how clinicians can acquire and maintain genetics competencies, and emphasised that clinicians not only need to have access to continued education about genetics, but also to tools and resources: The eventual goal is to empower and enable the cardiovascular clinician to understand, interpret, and apply genetic information to patient care in an effective, responsible, and cost-efficient manner.

These challenges arent unique to genetic medicine. Theyre all broad problems related to many areas of communication. Because these challenges are so ubiquitous, they are themselves the subject of academic study. Even just within science, there are fields such as Science of Team Science, which looks atcollaborations and effective communication between researchers, and Science of Science Communication, which studies how scientific information is disseminated to others.

Some studies look specifically at communication related to genetics and genomics. For example, how genetic literacy is measured, or how population sciences influence translational genomics.

The list at the top of this blog post only includes a few examples of communication challenges in genetic medicine, just enough to give you an idea of some of the different areas where communication is key. Id be curious to hear whether you have come across any other instances yourself either from your own experience or something youve heard or read about.

So, to turn this into two-way communication, please leave your thoughts in the comments below, or talk to us on Twitter. (Or you can always email us.)

Photo by Nik MacMillan on Unsplash

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Communication in genetic medicine - TGMI

The Health Care Blog

By TIM WILLIAMS & DAVID INTROCASO

This past October CMS Administrator Seema Verma announced the agencys Meaningful Measures initiative.[1] Ms. Verma launched the initiative because, she admitted, the agencys current quality measurement programming, widely criticized for years by MedPAC and others, ran the risk of outweighing the benefits. Under Meaningful Measures, CMS will, Ms. Verma stated, put patients first by aligning a smaller number of outcome-based quality measures meaningful to patients across Medicares programs. Since the primary focus of a patient visit, Ms. Verma said, must be the patient, the primary focus of the initiative will be to focus health care quality efforts on what is really important to patients.[2] As an indication of this commitment, immediately after Meaningful Measures was announced the National Quality Forums (NQFs) Measures Application Partnership (MAP) began work reviewing a record number of CMS-recommended Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs).[3]

There appears to be an ever increasing interest in PROMS in the US. For example, last year The New England Journal of Medicine published three PROMs-related Perspective essays that moreover described initial success by a few early US PROMs adopters. One of these essays also noted that England and Scotland had extensive experience in the use of these measures.[4] Though possibly overstated, we believe providers in the US can benefit from, for example, our experience in the United Kingdom (UK) developing and implementing My Clinical Outcomes (MCO) (at: http://www.myclinicaloutcomes.com), a digital patient reported outcomes measurement and analytics platform that is now used in the treatment of several chronic conditions in a variety of clinical settings across the UK.

MCO was initially developed in collaboration with orthopedic surgeons working in the National Health Service (NHS). These surgeons were seeking a way to systematically follow-up with their patients after joint replacement surgery largely in order to better economize on their use of clinical resources or more appropriately or efficiently identify those patients in need of follow up face-to-face consultations. The web-based platform was developed to work flexibly around existing clinical work flows.

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The Health Care Blog

Health Care – United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

Letter to Congress on Reauthorzation of Children's Health Insurance ProgramBishop Frank J. Dewane October 4, 2017

Letter to Senate on Replacement for Affordable Care ActCardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop William E. Lori, Bishop Frank J. Dewane, and Bishop Joe S. Vsquez, September 21, 2017

Letter to Senate Regarding Protection of Poor and Vulnerable People and the Effort to Repeal the Affordable Care ActBishop Frank J. Dewane, July 20, 2017

Letter to Senate Regarding the Better Care Reconciliation ActBishop Frank J. Dewane, June 27, 2017

News Release: U.S. Bishops Chairman Responds to CBO Report on Senate Health Care BillBishop Frank J. Dewane, June 26, 2017

Action Alert: Tell Your Senators to Insist on Changes to the Better Care Reconciliation Act of 2017

News Release: U.S. Bishops Chairman Reacts to Draft Senate Health Care BillBishop Frank J. Dewane, June 22, 2017

Letter to Senate Regarding Health CareCardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop William E. Lori, Bishop Frank J. Dewane, and Bishop Joe S. Vsquez, June 1, 2017

News Release: U.S. Bishops Chairman Calls on Senate to Strip Harmful Proposals from House-Passed Health Care BillBishop Frank J. Dewane, May 4, 2017

Letter to Congress Urging Continued Efforts to Improve Health CareCardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop William E. Lori, and Bishop Frank J. Dewane, March 30, 2017

Letter to the House of Representatives Regarding the American Health Care ActBishop Frank J. Dewane, March 17, 2017

Letter to Congress Presenting Moral Criteria for Debate on Health Care PolicyCardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop William E. Lori, Bishop Frank J. Dewane, and Bishop Joe S. Vsquez, March 7, 2017

Letter to Congress Urging Bipartisan Efforts to Preserve Gains in Health Care Coverage and AccessBishop Frank J. Dewane, January 18, 2017

Call to Support Legislation ReformingMental Health CareArchbishop Thomas G. Wenski, July 6, 2016

Backgrounder on Religious Liberty and the Freedom to Minister to AllFebruary 2015

Background on Access to Health Care (Medicaid Expansion)February 2013

Resources and Background on HHS Rule and Contraceptive CoverageJanuary 25, 2012

Letter to Energy and Commerce Committee on State Flexibility ActBishop Stephen E. Blaire, May 23, 2011

Cardinal DiNardo Urges Support for 'Respect for Rights of Conscience Act' (Original Letter)April 6, 2011

Permanent Ban on Abortion Funding Long Overdue, Says USCCB in House TestimonyFebruary 8, 2011

Background: Health Care ReformFebruary 2011

Cardinal DiNardo Letter in Support of HR-358January 21, 2011

The Bishops and the Right Exercise of Authority: A Response to Rick Gaillardetz's Commonweal ArticleRev. Thomas G. Weinandy, OFM, Cap., November 1, 2010

USCCB Health Care Reform Summary and Timeline of EventsAugust 26, 2010

Issues of Life and Conscience in Health Care Reform: An Analysis of the "Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act" of 2010May 24, 2010

Bishops Note Way Forward With Health Care, Clarify MisconceptionsMay 21, 2010

Cardinal DiNardo's Letter Urging Congress to Remedy Abortion & Conscience Flaws in Health Care Reform LawMay 20, 2010

Response to America Magazine by USCCB General CounselMay 17, 2010

Factsheet: Abortion Funding in the New Health Care Reform ActApril 12, 2010

Legal Analysis of Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and Corresponding Executive Order on Abortion Funding and Conscience IssuesMarch 25, 2010

Cardinal George's Statement on Passage of "Profoundly Flawed" Health Care Reform ActMarch 23, 2010

Bishops to House of Representatives: Fix Flaws or Vote No on Health Reform BillMarch 20, 2010

Community Health Centers: Setting the Record StraightMarch 17, 2010

Washington Post Op-Ed by Cardinal DiNardo, Bishop Murphy & Bishop WesterMarch 16, 2010

Statement of USCCB President, Cardinal George "The Cost is Too High"March 15, 2010

"What's Wrong with the Senate Health Care Bill on Abortion? A Response to Professor Jost"March 6, 2010

Abortion Funding in the Senate Health Care Reform BillMarch 4, 2010

Letter to Congress on Eve of Health Care SummitBishop William F. Murphy, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, and Bishop John WesterFebruary 24, 2010

The Need for Conscience ProtectionJanuary 26, 2010

Letter to Congress to Continue for Genuine Health Care ReformBishop William F. Murphy, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, and Bishop John WesterJanuary 26, 2010

UPDATED Pulpit Announcement and Prayer Petition | en Espaol

Joint Letter on Health Care to US SenateBishop William F. Murphy, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, and Bishop John WesterDecember 7, 2009

Joint Letter on Health Care to US Senate | en EspaolBishop William F. Murphy, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, and Bishop John WesterNovember 20, 2009

Fact Sheet: What does the Stupak Amendment really do?November 12, 2009

Letter to the U.S. Congress on HealthcareBishop William F. Murphy, Cardinal Justin Rigali, and Bishop John WesterOctober 8, 2009

Letter to the U.S. Senate on HealthcareBishop William F. Murphy, Cardinal Justin Rigali, and Bishop John WesterSeptember 30, 2009

Letter to House on Health Care Reform (HR 3200)Cardinal Justin Rigali, August 11, 2009

Issues Related to Coverage of Low Income in Health Care ReformAugust 2009

Legal Immigrants in Health Care ReformAugust 2009

Letter to Congress to Help Reform Health Care, Protect Human Life and DignityBishop William MurphyJuly 17, 2009

USCCB Health Care Statement to CongressBishop William F. Murphy, May 20, 2009

Letter to US Congress on 2009 BudgetBishop William F. Murphy and Bishop Howard J. HubbardMarch 26, 2009

Letter to Congress on SCHIPBishop William F. Murphy, January 14, 2009

Joint Letter Supporting Community Choice ActBishop Nicholas DiMarzio, et. al., June 5, 2007

Letter to Senate Budget Committee on SCHIP, Medicaid, MedicareBishop Nicholas DiMarzio, Rev. Larry Snyder; Sr. Carol Keehan, March 15, 2007

Letter in Support of the Medicaid Community-Based Attendant Services and Supports Act of 2005 (MiCASSA), S. 401/H.R. 910September 13, 2006

Comments on Recommendations of the Citizen's Health Care Working GroupBishop Nicholas DiMarzio, Ph.D., D.D., August 23, 2006

Joint USCCB/CCUSA/CHA Letters to Senators Grassley and Baucus on Medical Treatment for Victims of Hurricane KatrinaSeptember 27, 2005

Letter to Congressman Ralph Regula from Cardinal McCarrickApril 27, 2004

Letter to Senator Arlen Specter from Cardinal McCarrickApril 27, 2004

Letter to EPA on Testing of Pesticides on HumansSeptember 10, 2003

A Joint Letter from USCCB and CHA to Senator Collins on Mercury Reduction Act of 2003May 15, 2003

Children's Health and the Environment Initiative

Letter to Senator Jeffords Endorsing Youth Drug and Mental Health Services ActJune 10, 1999

Comprehensive Health CareJune 18, 1993

Health and Health CareNovember 19, 1981

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Health Care - United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

Physicians for a National Health Program

On May 5, 2016, an esteemed group of physicians unveiled a detailed plan for single-payer health care in the U.S. To read the proposal, please visit pnhp.org/nhi. To read and view media coverage of the proposal, click here. To browse supplemental materials related to the proposal, click here.

On March 3, 2018, medical and health professional students from across the U.S. gathered in New Orleans for the 7th annual Students for a National Health Program (SNaHP) Summit. To access Summit materials, including slideshows and archival video, visit pnhp.org/nola.

PNHP advocates fundamental, single-payer reform of our health care financing system. To join PNHP as a physician, health professional, medical student, or activist, visit pnhp.org/join.

PNHP welcomes the introduction of Sen. Sanders' single-payer legislation as a landmark moment in the fight for single payer. To learn more about the Medicare For All Act of 2017, including PNHP's analysis of how the bill could be strengthened, visit pnhp.org/MedicareForAll.

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Physicians for a National Health Program

Preorder Snap Flying Camera | Vantage Robotics

Snap packs a lot of muscle in its lean body. Until now, performance has meant flying a big dangerous quad. Snap changes this.

Field oriented control motor controllers: Snap uses a motor control technique that previously was only used in professional quads costing $10,000 or more. Field oriented control, or FOC, enables much faster response (you can literally play a song with the propellers), higher top end speed, and more efficient performance. This approach is part of what enables Snap to perform so well in the wind despite its size.

20 minute flight time: Snap stays in the air longer than any other quad of its size and capabilities, thanks to a combination of an ultra-light design, custom tuned propellers and motors, efficient FOC motor controllers, and a high capacity lithium polymer smart battery.

30 mph top speed: Snap can keep up with you. With 1 G acceleration, it goes off the line faster than a Ferrari.

20 mph wind performance: Yes, Snap flies in the wind - like a champ. Its super fast FOC motor controllers and 30 mph top speed keep it stable.

Modular: Snaps modular interfaces let you extend its capabilities over time. We have modules coming for absurdly long flight time, obstacle avoidance, unlimited range with a cellular modem, wildly fast flight speeds, and more.

Excerpt from:

Preorder Snap Flying Camera | Vantage Robotics

Digital Darwinism: How Disruptive Technology Is Changing …

Social media, mobile, wearables, Internet of Things, real-time these are just some of the technologies that are disrupting markets. Changes in how people communicate, connect, and discover are carrying incredible implications for businesses and just about anything where people are involved. Its not so much that technology is part of our everyday life or that technology is relentless in its barrage on humanity.

The real threat and opportunity in technologys disruption lies in the evolution of customer and employee behavior, values, and expectations. Companies are faced with a quandary as they invest resources and budgets in current technology and business strategies (business as usual) versus that of the unknown in how those investments align, or dont, with market and behavior shifts.

This is a time of digital Darwinism an era where technology and society are evolving faster than businesses can naturally adapt. This sets the stage for a new era of leadership, a new generation of business models, charging behind a mantra of adapt or die.

Rather than react to change or be disrupted by it, some forward-looking companies are investing in digital transformation to adapt and outperform peers.In November 2012, research-based consultancy Capgemini published a report studying the digital maturity of companies pursuing digital transformation. In its report, The Digital Advantage: How digital leaders outperform their peers in every industry, Capgemini found that those companies that are highly vested in both digital intensity and transformation management intensity, aka The Digirati, derive more revenue from their physical assets, theyre more profitable, and they also possess high market valuations.

Why is That?

It comes down to one word, relevance. If consumer behavior is evolving as a result of technology, businesses either compete to get ahead of it, they perpetually react to it, or they belittle it. One of the most problematic aspects around digital maturity is that technology is both part of the solution and also part of the problem.

Enter digital transformation.

Digital transformation may sound like its something youd hear in buzzword bingo, but it is one of the most important movements facing businesses today. It is forcing businesses to look beyond the world as they know it, observe how things are changing on the outside, to change transform philosophies, models, and systems on the inside. Ask 10 different experts in digital transformation for their definition of it though and you may just get 10 different answers. Before strategists can consider digital transformation, they at least have to know what it is, why its important, and what they need to do.

In 2013, I set out to better understand the catalyst and challenges around digital transformation and also the people driving it forward. It is indeed a deep and complex topic. I had to focus my research. Capgemini among others have already made tremendous headway in their work around technology and process models defining the evolution of digital maturity. One of the things I heard over and over was the need to know whos responsible for it and how do companies take steps in the right direction. Specifically, strategists wanted to know how to make the case in the absence of executive leadership pointing in new directions and leading teams to adapt or die! As a result, I explored digital transformation from a more human perspective. After a year of interviewing 20 leading digital strategists at some of the biggest brands around the world, I released my latest report, Digital Transformation: Why and How Companies are Investing in New Business Models to Lead Digital Customer Experiences.

What is Digital Transformation?

Again, it is a sweeping topic. Simply defined, digital transformation the intentional effots to adapt to this onslaught of disruptive technologies and how its affecting customer and employee behavior. As technology becomes a permanent fixture in everyday life, organizations are forced to update legacy technology strategies and supporting methodologies to better reflect how the real world is evolving. And, the need to do so is becoming increasingly obligatory.

In my research, I concentrated on how businesses are pursuing digital transformation in their quest to specifically understand how disruptive technology affects the customer experience. In turn, I learned how companies are reverse engineering investments, processes, and systems to better align with how markets are changing.

Because its focusing on customer behavior, digital transformation is actually in its own way making businesses more human. As such, digital transformation is not a specifically about technology, its empowered by it. Without an end in mind, digital transformation continually seeks out how to use technology in ways that improve customer experiences and relationships. It also represents an effort that introduces new models for business and, equally, creates a way of staying in business as customers become increasingly digital.

Some key findings from my research include:

While early in its evolution, digital transformation represents the next big thing in customer experience and, ultimately, how business is done. Those companies that get it and invest more in learning about their digital customers behaviors, preferences, and expectations will carry a significant competitive advantage over those that figure it out later (if at all). What separates typical new technology investments from those pursued by companies in my report is the ongoing search to find answers to problems and opportunities presented by the nuances of digital customers.

For example:

In the end, digital transformation is not a fad or a trendy moniker. It represents the future of business through the re-alignment of, or new investment in, technology and business models to more effectively engage digital consumers at every touchpoint in the customer experience lifecycle. Its bigger than any one area of technology disruption though and thats the point. Social media, mobile, cloud, et al. are converging into a greater force to push businesses out of comfort zones and into areas where true innovation can manifest.

The Result?

The roles and objectives of everyday marketing, social media, web, mobile and customer service and loyalty, can evolve to meet the needs and expectations of a more connected and discerning digital customer. Additionally, the outcome of even the smallest investments in change brings together typically disparate groups to work in harmony across the entire customer journey. This allows teams to cooperate, or merge into new groups, in uniting the digital journey to improve engagement; deliver a holistic experience; and eliminate friction, gaps, and overlap.

Perhaps the most important takeaway from my research is the pure ambition to make businesses relevant in a digital era.

The road to digital transformation is far from easy, but it carries great rewards for businesses and customers alike. It takes a village to bring about change, and it also takes the spark and perseverance of one person to spot important trends and create a sense of urgency around new possibilities.

But make no mistake. Digital transformation efforts grow market opportunities and profits as well as scaling efficiently in the process.

#AdaptorDie

Brian Solis is a principal analyst at Altimeter Group. He is also an award-winning author, prominent blogger, and keynote speaker. @briansolis

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Digital Darwinism: How Disruptive Technology Is Changing ...

What is Social Darwinism – Science – AllAboutScience.org

QUESTION: What is Social Darwinism?

ANSWER:

Herbert Spencer, a 19th century philosopher, promoted the idea of Social Darwinism. Social Darwinism is an application of the theory of natural selection to social, political, and economic issues. In its simplest form, Social Darwinism follows the mantra of "the strong survive," including human issues. This theory was used to promote the idea that the white European race was superior to others, and therefore, destined to rule over them.

At the time that Spencer began to promote Social Darwinism, the technology, economy, and government of the "White European" was advanced in comparison to that of other cultures. Looking at this apparent advantage, as well as the economic and military structures, some argued that natural selection was playing out, and that the race more suited to survival was winning. Some even extended this philosophy into a micro-economic issue, claiming that social welfare programs that helped the poor and disadvantaged were contrary to nature itself. Those who reject any and all forms of charity or governmental welfare often use arguments rooted in Social Darwinism.

At its worst, the implications of Social Darwinism were used as scientific justification for the Holocaust. The Nazis claimed that the murder of Jews in World War II was an example of cleaning out the inferior genetics. Many philosophers noted evolutionary echoes in Hitler's march to exterminate an entire race of people. Various other dictators and criminals have claimed the cause of Social Darwinism in carrying out their acts. Even without such actions, Social Darwinism has proven to be a false and dangerous philosophy.

Scientists and evolutionists maintain that this interpretation is only loosely based on Darwin's theory of natural selection. They will admit to an obvious parallel between Darwin's theory of Natural Selection and Spencer's beliefs. In nature, the strong survive and those best suited to survival will out-live the weak. According to Social Darwinism, those with strength (economic, physical, technological) flourish and those without are destined for extinction.

It is important to note that Darwin did not extend his theories to a social or economic level, nor are any credible evolutionists subscribing to the theories of Social Darwinism. Herbert Spencer's philosophy is only loosely based on the premises of Darwin's work.

However, according to evolutionary theory, nature is a "kill-or-be-killed" system. Those that cannot keep up are either left behind or cut off. If evolution, through chance, is solely responsible for life as we now know it, why should that process be countered? If "survival of the fittest" or "kill or be killed" cannot apply in what we define as "decent society," then, which is wrong, society or evolution? If neither, then how do we explain morality, charity, and compassion? Why drain resources from the strong to support the weak? Certainly, we should be charitable and help those in need.

Though Darwin did not promote Social Darwinism, basic evolutionary theory raises some nagging questions.

What is your response?

Yes, today I am deciding to follow Jesus

Yes, I am already a follower of Jesus

I still have questions

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What is Social Darwinism - Science - AllAboutScience.org

Nihilism Embodiment – FANDOM powered by Wikia

Nihilism EmbodimentPower/Ability to:

Become the embodiment of nihilism.

The ability to become the embodiment of nihilism. Variation of Philosophy Embodimentand Oblivion Embodiment. Opposite to Meaningfulness Embodiment.

Users become the living embodiment of nihilism and gain the ability to feed off of the unimportance of everything in existence. What the user sees is deemed nothing worth while, or of absolute insignificance: the opponent is deemed weak or worthless and can be destroyed by the user.

Xemnas (Kingdom Hearts) represents Nihilism, wielding the power of nothingness.

Yuchi Hirose (Alive: The Final Evolution) took in the Heart of Akuro to completely become the Void, and became completely emotionless as a result.

Kefka Palazzo (Final Fantasy) is a powerful being who enjoys nothing but chaos and destruction.

Utsuro (Gintama) considers his 500 years of immortality being an empty and meaningless existence; even the mind-reading Batou considers him to be "empty".

Kyurem (Pokmon) represents the absence of yin and yang.

Emo Dandy (Space Dandy) is a parallel version of Dandy whose life is so depressing and meaningless that nothing matters to him anymore, leaving him a personification of emptiness and nihilism.

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Nihilism Embodiment - FANDOM powered by Wikia

Use nihilism in a sentence | nihilism sentence examples

He followed it up with a number of other works on the condition of the Russian peasantry, on Nihilism, and on the conditions of life in Russia.

The principle of examination, the reasoned analysis of human conditions and the discussion of causes, far from culminating in disillusioned nihilism, everywhere aroused the democratic spirit, the life of sentiment and of human feeling: in the drama, with Marivaux, Diderot and La Chausse; in art, with Chardin and Greuze; and in the salons, in view of the suppression of privilege.

Still more unequivocal was the sceptical nihilism expressed by Gorgias: - (I) nothing exists; (2) if anything existed, it would be unknowable; (3) if anything existed and were knowable, the knowledge of it could not be communicated.

Thus arose a struggle between the youthful, hot-headed partisans of revolutionary physical science and the zealous official guardians of political order - a struggle which has made the strange term Nihilism a familiar word not only in Russia but also in western Europe.

The result is a selflimiting dialectic. This higher dialectic is a logic. It is no accident that the first of the philosophical sophists, Gorgias, on the one hand, is Eleatic in his affinities, and on the other raises in the characteristic formula of his intellectual nihilism' issues which are as much logical and epistemological as ontological.

The nihilism of Gorgias from the Eleatic point of view of bare identity, and the speechlessness of Cratylus from the Heraclitean ground of absolute difference, are alike disowned.

(For details of this revolutionary movement, see Nihilism.) In respect of foreign policy the reign of Alexander II.

Brahmanic pantheism and Buddhistic nihilism alike teach the unreality of the seeming world, and preach mystical absorption as the highest goal; in both, the sense of the worth of human personality is lost.

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Use nihilism in a sentence | nihilism sentence examples

Arizona Libertarian Party

Please click on the link below to see all candidates that NEED your help to be included on the Ballot for election. They are standing up for you, your beliefs and principles, and need your support. Tell your friends, family and everyone. It's easy, simply enter your State ID# and your name. You will then get a list of all candidates in your district and you can choose to support them or not with a click or two.

Who We Are

The Libertarian Party is the third largest political party in the United States. Millions of Americans have voted for Libertarian Party candidates in past elections throughout the country, despite the fact that many state governments place roadblocks in our path to keep our candidates off the ballot and deprive voters of a real choice.

Libertarians believe the answer to Americas political problems is the same commitment to freedom that earned America its greatness: a free-market economy and the abundance and prosperity it brings; a dedication to civil liberties and personal freedom; and a foreign policy of non-intervention, peace, and free trade as prescribed by Americas founders.

What began with a small group of activists in Colorado has become Americas third largest political party. We are the only political organization which respects you as a unique and competent individual.

Americas Heritage

Libertarians believe in the American heritage of liberty, enterprise, and personal responsibility. Libertarians recognize the responsibility we all share to preserve this precious heritage for our children and grandchildren.

Free and Independent

Libertarians believe that being free and independent is a great way to live. We want a system which encourages all people to choose what they want from life; that lets them live, love, work, play, and dream their own way.

Caring For People

The Libertarian way is a caring, people-centered approach to politics. We believe each individual is unique. We want a system which respects the individual and encourages us to discover the best within ourselves and develop our full potential.

Principled, Consistent

The Libertarian way is a logically consistent approach to politics based on the moral principle of self-ownership. Each individual has the right to control his or her own body, action, speech, and property. Governments only role is to help individuals defend themselves from force and fraud.

Tolerant

The Libertarian Party is for all who dont want to push other people around and dont want to be pushed around themselves. Live and let live is the Libertarian way.

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Arizona Libertarian Party

What is IBM Watson supercomputer? – Definition from WhatIs.com

Watson is an IBM supercomputer that combines artificial intelligence (AI) and sophisticated analytical software for optimal performance as a question answering machine. The supercomputer is named for IBMs founder, Thomas J. Watson.

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The Watson supercomputer processes at a rate of 80 teraflops (trillion floating-point operations per second). To replicate (or surpass) a high-functioning humans ability to answer questions, Watson accesses 90 servers with a combined data store of over 200 million pages of information, which it processes against six million logic rules. The device and its data are self-contained in a space that could accommodate 10 refrigerators.

Watson's key components include:

Applications for the Watson's underlying cognitive computingtechnologyare almost endless.Because the device can perform text mining and complex analytics on huge volumes of unstructured data, itcan support a search engine or an expert systemwith capabilities far superior to anypreviously existing. In May 2016, BakerHostetler, a century-old Ohio-based law firm, signed a contractfor a legal expert system based on Watson to work with its 50-human bankruptcy team.ROSS can mine data from about a billion text documents, analyze the information and provide precise responses to complicated questions in less than three seconds. Natural language processing allows the system to translate legalese to respond to the lawyers questions. ROSS' creators are adding more legal modules; similar expert systems are transforming medical research.

To showcase its abilities, Watson challenged two top-ranked players on Jeopardy! andbeat champions Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter in 2011. The Watson avatar sat between the two other contestants, as a human competitor would, while its considerable bulk sat on a different floor of the building. Like the other contestants, Watson had no Internet access.

In the practice round, Watson demonstrated a human-like ability for complex wordplay, correctly responding, for example, to Classic candy bar thats a female Supreme Court justice with What is Baby Ruth Ginsburg? Rutter noted that although the retrieval of information is trivial for Watson and difficult for a human, the human is still better at the complex task of comprehension. Nevertheless, machine learning allows Watson to examine its mistakes against the correct answers to see where it erred and so inform future responses.

In an interview during the Jeopardy! practice round, an IBM representative evaded the question of whether Watson might be made broadly available through a Web interface. The representative said that the company was currently more interested in vertical applications such as healthcare and decision support.

See also: Turing test, real-time analytics, health IT, Blue Gene, business analytics

See an introductory video onhow Watson works:

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What is IBM Watson supercomputer? - Definition from WhatIs.com

What is comparative planetology – Answers.com

1. The objective of comparative stylistics The objective of comparative stylistics is to study the stylistic characteristics of one language in comparison with those of another one. This systematic study offers students a better and deeper knowledge of the features that distinguish one language from another. Examples: - To become penniless /aflasa/ - The Arabs have pioneered in many branches of science /kna lilc arabi assabaqu fi: Satt furuc i al mac rifati/ These are two cases of "transposition." In the first example, the verb /aflasa/ is expressed by a phrase in English, while in the second example the verb "to pioneer" is replaced with a noun /assabaqu/ in Arabic. - He was blown away /dhahaba adrja arriyhi/ This is a case of "modulation," where each language describes the situation from a different viewpoint. While English indicates the means (blown), Arabic does the opposite: the result first /dhahaba/, then the means /adrja arriyhi/. Thus, we have a "chass-crois": Means: blown /adrja arriyhi/ Result: /dhahaba/ away - Give a pint of your blood /tabarrac biqali:lin min damika/ - Before you could say Jack Robinson /fi: tarfati c ayn/ These are two cases of "equivalence" where two languages describe the same situation by using quite different structural and stylistic means. In the first example, the expression "to give a pint," "pint" being a unit of measure for liquids equal to about half a liter, is rendered into Arabic by the equivalent /tabarrac biqali:lin min/ which literally means "donate some of." In the second example, the English idiom "before you could say Jack Robinson," which means "very quickly or suddenly," has an equivalent idiom in Arabic /Fi tarfati c ayn/ which means "in the twinkling of an eye." 2. The scope and limits of comparative stylistics According to Vinay and Darbelnet (1977), the three above-mentioned cases - transposition, modulation and equivalence - in addition to four others, which are borrowing, tracing ("calque"), literal translation and adaptation, constitute the seven techniques of translation. The authors of the book "Stylistique compare du franais et de l'anglais" even consider comparative stylistics as a method of translation (notice the expression, "mthode de traduction," they put under the title on the first page). It is undeniable that comparative stylistics is beneficial to students, since it enables them to identify the characteristics which distinguish their mother language from a foreign one, and hence to perceive the phenomena that endow each languagewith a peculiar genius. Yet, it is arguable that comparative stylistics can explain the process of translation or set forth "laws valid to the two languages concerned" (Vinay and Darbelnet 1977: 20). Since the comparison of two languages requires primarily the performance of translation, we can assert that comparative stylistics is subsequent to translation and not prior to it. Therefore, the seven techniques are no more than means of comparison. If we reconsider the example "he was blown away," it appears that, to translate it into Arabic, one would immediately look for its functional equivalent rather than think of the "technique" to be used, whether it is transposition, modulation or equivalence As a matter of fact, if the translator fails to find the appropriate equivalent in Arabic, /dhahaba adrja arriyhi/, it will be useless to know that this kind of transfer is called "modulation" from a comparative viewpoint. The same thing applies, of course, to the other techniques offered by comparative stylistics. Moreover, comparative stylistics usually suggests only one equivalent among several possible equivalents of a lexical unit or expression. In the previous example, we can say in Arabic: /dhahaba adrja arriyhi/ as well as /c asafat bihi arriyhu/ or /huwa fi: mahabbi arri:hi/, all of which are expressions with the same meaning. Finally, it appears that comparative stylistics, which is mainly interested in establishing correspondences and equivalences in two languages, does not go beyond the limit of language as a whole to reach the mobility of speech and usage. Hence, it can neither foretell the most appropriate equivalents for expressions in context nor embrace all potential cases of translation within the ever-renewable act of communication. The field of translation is indeed far from being limited or confined to linguistic facts, idiomatic expressions or correspondences that may constitute the subject of a comparative study

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What is comparative planetology - Answers.com

3 Ways Litecoin (LTC) Will Grow In 2018

Observers and experts have noticed growing unrest, uncertainty and frustration in the cryptomarket. Even though several coins have been witnessing a price drop/stagnation over the last three months, the industry is attempting to find its place as a technology that had promised innovation but had fallen short on delivering that.

This article highlights the three ways in which Litecoin can grow in 2018 amidst the growing dissatisfaction with blockchain and crypto-derived currencies. The landscape for cryptocurrency beyond this year is obviousthe focus has to switch from price speculation to usability and real-world application. It is important that functionality supersedes profit potential.

Recognition for Litecoin utility

Litecoin has struggled to differentiate itself from Bitcoin for years, partly because of a compliant marketing slant by founder Charlie Lee. But within the past two months, the narrative has started altering. More people are coming to acknowledge Litecoin as a cryptocurrency with real use. The fundamentals of this currencytransaction speeds, fees, and ability to scale through Segwit and lightning networkhave all proved to be superior to Bitcoin at this point. The attributes that make Litecoin a better option that Bitcoin can be subjective. But on grounds of what each currency is attempting to do in terms of technology (be it a digital, decentralized form of money for the transaction) Litecoin has outclassed all other coins. Scaling issues may come to cripple the Litecoins network someday the same way it has with Bitcoin, but the currency has become synonymous with sending and receiving crypto. Most people, when sending Bitcoin from one exchange to another, convert to Litecoin first in order to capitalize on the cost savings and transaction speeds that the latter offers.

Both coins, despite being mirror images in potential use, play a significant role in the expanding cryptocurrency landscape. The shortcomings of Bitcoin are distorting the growth of the cryptocurrency. Until the issues associated with scaling are solved, Litecoin offers a better alternative to the culture and development team of the cryptocurrency is committed to the superior quality utility of Litecoin as a transacting token. Litecoin has continued to be on the forefront of innovations in crypto technology and will continue to lead the way as a transacting currency. Litecoin has had Segwit longer and is very likely to be the first to implement Lightning Network or some other innovative solution.

Adoption of LitePay

Even though there has been a backlash towards LitePay from certain quarters, LitePay is a step in the right direction. While the debit card has been delayed for some time, it still serves as a two-way payment LTC processor that allows both sides of the transaction equation to participate in cryptocurrency. This equips Litecoin with ample marketing and growth potential. Merchants using LitePay instantly become sources of advertisement for LitePay. With the advent of a debit card, Litecoin spenders have an opportunity to elucidate to their friends and colleagues, the potential use for the cryptocurrency. Thus LitePay acts as an immediate and effective avenue for increasing revenue for Litecoin by tapping into a completely new consumer base. It also gives real crypto enthusiasts to use their currency.

Erosion of Bitcoin brand name

For those enthused by the technology and the possibility of cryptocurrency, whether for political, social or innovative reasons, Litecoin becomes a natural anchor. Litecoin is a fork of the original Bitcoin code, with alterations to expand the utility of the currency. The most remarkable features of Litecoin have been the drastically reduced fees and speedier confirmation times. Even the allure surrounding the mysterious Bitcoin founder Satoshi Nakamoto is not that dissimilar than the present state of Litecoin. That is because Charlie Lee has completely detached himself from a financial stake in his project by selling his entire holding of Litecoin. This gives Litecoin a strong developer, advocate, and leader without the uncertainty of motivation determining its performance. Charlie Lee is growing Litecoin, regardless of its price. Even though investors might find the financial incentive to be a bit lacking to grow Litecoin, but in terms of terms of strategic collaborations with major players like Amazon, the removal of a central authoritarian figure with the potential to become a billionaire is proving to be a positive thing for the Litecoin brand.

While most of the major cryptocurrencies have been at their lowest points since October 2017, Litecoin has managed to gain a step over Ethereum and is just below Ripple in terms of Google trend results. The usability of Litecoin over Bitcoin is evident. Litecoin offers more clarity regarding decentralization and is more representative of cryptocurrency to enthusiasts than XRP, which is deemed by many as a tool for the financial sector. All of these factors have contributed to the growing popularity of Litecoin and could lead to an increase in the further rush for it. The possibility of Litecoin to nab the top spot of popularity away from Bitcoin has bolstered.

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Disclaimer: This article should not be taken as, and is not intended to provide, investment advice. Global Coin Report and/or its affiliates, employees, writers, and subcontractors are cryptocurrency investors and from time to time may or may not have holdings in some of the coins or tokens they cover. Please conduct your own thorough research before investing in any cryptocurrency.Please conduct your own thorough research before investing in any cryptocurrency and read our full disclaimer.

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3 Ways Litecoin (LTC) Will Grow In 2018

Litecoin Review – Charlie Lee’s Open Source P2P LTC …

Litecoin is the worlds fourth most popular cryptocurrency by market cap, after bitcoin, Ethereum, and Ripple. Find out everything you need to know about the global decentralized currency today.

Litecoin is a blockchain-based cryptocurrency that works in a similar way to Ethereum and bitcoin. Its a peer-to-peer internet currency that allows for instant, near-zero cost payments to anyone in the world. Its a decentralized payment network that isnt managed by any central authorities. The network, like other blockchains, is secured by mathematics. Individuals can control their own finances without relying on third parties like banks or traditional financial institutions.

The Litecoin.org website describes how the currency doesnt want to work as an alternative to bitcoin, but as a complementary force:

With substantial industry support, trade volume and liquidity, Litecoin is a proven medium of commerce complementary to bitcoin.

One of the first advantages that Litecoin has over bitcoin is its higher transaction volume: the blockchain generates blocks more frequently, which means transactions can be processed more quickly (2.5 minutes as opposed to 10 minutes).

Lets take a closer look at some of Litecoins most prominent features.

Litecoin offers all of the following features:

You can find general information as well as a list of services and exchanges that support Litecoin. General information can be found at the Litecoin Wiki, while up-to-the-minute network stats can be found at Litecoin Block Explorer Charts. Meanwhile, the source code for Litecoin Core is all open and available to anyone through GitHub.

Like most members of the cryptocurrency community, Litecoin is open source software. The software project was released under the MIT/X11 license, which means users have the power to run, modify, and copy the software and to distribute, at your option, modified versions of the software. Litecoin has a transparent release process that facilitates the independent verification of binaries and their corresponding source code.

The Litecoin blockchain can handle higher transaction volume than bitcoin. Thats because the Litecoin blockchain has more frequent block generation. The network supports more transactions without the need to modify the software in the future. As a result, merchants enjoy faster confirmation times while still having the ability to wait for more confirmations when selling bigger ticket items.

Like all good cryptocurrencies, your Litecoins can be encrypted. You can secure your wallet, view transactions, and check your account balance using the Litecoin projects own wallet. Before you spend Litecoins, however, youll need to enter your password.

Mining rewards are a crucial part of any blockchain. With the Litecoin blockchain, miners are currently awarded (as of June 2017) with 25 new Litecoins per block. That amount gets cut in half about once every 4 years (or every 840,000 blocks). The Litecoin network is scheduled to produce 84 million Litecoins, which is 4 times as many currency units as bitcoin.

Litecoin and bitcoin are two very similar cryptocurrencies. Litecoin was originally based on a bitcoin fork, so the two have a common foundation. However, there are some key differences between Litecoin and bitcoin, including:

Litecoin processes blocks every 2.5 minutes, instead of the 10 minutes taken by bitcoins blockchain. There are pros and cons to this processing time: theres a higher probability of orphaned blocks, for example. On the positive side of things, Litecoins faster processing time means a greater resistance to a double spending attack over the same period as bitcoin. However, total work done is also a consideration so if the network has 10 times less computing work done per block than bitcoin, then bitcoins confirmation is about 10 times harder to reverse even though the Litecoin network can add confirmation blocks at a rate four times faster.

Litecoin uses Scrypt in its proof of work algorithm, which is a sequential memory-hard function requiring asymptotically more memory than an algorithm that isnt memory-hard. That generally means you need more memory in your miners compared to blockchains that dont use Scrypt.

The Litecoin blockchain plans to release 84 million Litecoins in total, or four times as many currency as the total supply of bitcoin.

The use of Scrypt was an interesting choice. The purpose of using Scrypt was to allow miners to mine both bitcoin and Litecoin at the same time. It was also chosen as a way to avoid giving an advantage to GPU, FPGA, and ASIC miners over CPU miners. The other component of using the Scrypt algorithm is that FPGA and ASIC devices made for mining Litecoin tend to be more complicated to create and more expensive to produce than they are for bitcoin, which uses SHA-256. This is because the Scrypt hashing scheme is more memory intensive, and ASICs and FPGAs have higher memory requirements as a result.

Litecoin was introduced to the internet in October 2011. The first release occurred on October 7, 2011, via an open source client released on GitHub. Litecoins first release (0.8.5.1) was a fork of the Bitcoin Core client created by Charlie Lee, a former Google employee. The key improvement over Bitcoin was its decreased block generation time (2.5 minutes, instead of 10 minutes with bitcoin).

Other advantages included the increased maximum number of coins, different hashing algorithm (Scrypt-based, instead of SHA-256), and a slightly modified GUI.

Litecoin remained a lesser-known altcoin until around November 2013, when it exploded with growth. The aggregate value of Litecoin surged by 100% within a 24 hour period during that month. By the end of November 2013, Litecoin had a market cap of $1 billion. In early 2017, the currencys market cap stood at around $1.5 billion. As of June 2017, Litecion has a market cap over $2 billion, with a price of around $30 to $40 per token.

Litecoin has also distinguished itself from the cryptocurrency community for other reasons. In May 2017, Litecoin became the first of the top 5 cryptocurrencies (by market cap) to adopt Segregated Witness. Later that month, the company completed the first Lightning Network transaction through Litecoin, when it transferred 0.00000001 LTC from Zurich to San Francisco in under one second.

You can contact the Litecoin project development team at [emailprotected]

Litecoin has remained steady as the worlds fourth most popular cryptocurrency (by market cap). The only currencies ahead of Litecoin in market cap are bitcoin, Ethereum, and Ripple. With a market cap of over $2 billion, Litecoin has grown from a small bitcoin fork project into a giant of the digital economy. You can learn more about Litecoin by visiting Litecoin.org today.

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Litecoin Review - Charlie Lee's Open Source P2P LTC ...

Litecoin vs Bitcoin: The 2 Most Popular Digital Coins Compared

Litecoin vs Bitcoin

Litecoin vs Bitcoin. Which one is better? Everyone from qualified economists to Redditors have been comparing the two since Litecoin came into existence in 2011.

The conversation not only discusses these coins individually and against each other, but also pertains to a more complex debate over what it takes to become a successful cryptocurrency.

Bitcoin is the clear poster-child for the crypto-community. However, Litecoin has developed a user base from those who are skeptical of some aspects of Bitcoin but still strongly believe in the future of cryptos.

While Bitcoin and Litecoin have some slight technical differences, they both set out to accomplish the same thing: transfer value using cryptographic principles. Yet once the two coins face off, its clear why Bitcoin has come out the winner.

Note:On mobile devices, swipe and scroll table.

We can compare cryptocurrencies from many angles, but the most popular method is looking at their market capitalization. Market cap is essentially the amount of currency on the market (usually in U.S. dollars). Bitcoin is currently ranked number one with a market cap of over $56 billion, and Litecoin is ranked fifth with a market cap of $2.56 billion. Bitcoin is the standard cryptocurrency that most users and platforms prefer. You might be thinking, So why are we talking about Litecoin? Its market cap may be a tiny sliver of cake compared to Bitcoins $45 billion, but its one of the few altcoins with an active user base and legitimate credentials.

(You can view current market caps in the table above to see how theyve changed since this article was published.)

Litecoin functions like Bitcoin: It is an online payment system that uses cryptocurrency instead of a national currency like U.S, dollars, Bitcoin and Litecoin carry out transactions using bitcoin and Litecoin respectively. As cryptocurrencies, they both garner a similar community and image, as well as rely on similar cryptographic principles.

Bitcoin was released in 2009 as the first cryptocurrency. Litecoin launched only two years later in 2011 but has been sprinting to catch up to Bitcoin ever since.

Litecoins developers have stated that their intention was to create a silver to Bitcoins gold. Although Litecoin tech is arguably better than Bitcoins, it was born inferior.

The two cryptos may seem similar, but they are actually quite distinct in their market acceptance and technical mechanics.

In the following four points, we will discuss what makes each crypto distinct. You will come to understand how Litecoins arguably superior algorithm will likely forever be subordinate due to Bitcoins pervasive network.

With a market cap roughly 22.5x the size of Litecoins, Bitcoins overwhelming popularity makes it the obvious choice for the crypto investment community.

According to Google Trends, Litecoin hardly holds a candle to Bitcoins search popularity. For scale, 100 indicates the peak popularity a term. A value of 50 means the term is half as popular, and a value of 0 means the term was less than 1% as popular as the peak.

Since cryptos are viewed as inherently risky, Bitcoin seems relatively stable with its extremely high market cap. Sure, Bitcoins price can still be incredibly volatile. Yet while a mere $1 billion loss would decimate Litecoins market cap in half, Bitcoin would need a crash of $40 billion in market cap for effects to be just as catastrophic.

Despite all this, Litecoin is still fairly relevant in the crypto community.

Many crypto traders account for the total number of coins each cryptocurrency is programmed to make. Bitcoin is capped at 21 million coins, but Litecoin can make up to 84 million coins.

Both coins technically still have a long ways to go until they hit their cap limits but it remains a concern because of the price volatility expected as the coins reach their maximums. Bitcoin currently has roughly 16.5 million coins in circulation, and Litecoin has about 52 million. This means Bitcoin is currently at 78% of its maximum, and Litecoin is about 61% of its maximum. If Bitcoin nears its maximum coin amount first, then Litecoin may pick up more traction with traders buying into Litecoin to avoid the Bitcoin volatility.

The above point in favor of Litecoin, however, is largely a misunderstanding: Since both Bitcoin and Litecoin can be divided into fractional amounts, the maximum coin shouldnt impact the value storage of either coin. For example, Bitcoin users can transfer as little as 0.00000001 bitcoins. The ability to accommodate more coins is then kaput.

Bitcoins average transaction confirmation time is a little over 9 minutes per transaction, whereas Litecoins is roughly 2.5 minutes per transaction. This makes Litecoins transactions roughly four times faster than Bitcoins, offering an attractive advantage for users who frequently conduct transactions, such as merchants .

Keep in mind that transactions technically occur instantaneously on both Bitcoin and Litecoin networks, but the transaction confirmation by other network participants does take some time. Waiting the full 9 minutes for a Bitcoin transaction or 2.5 minutes for a Litecoin transaction ensures the transaction was valid. Merchants can accept the transactions instantaneously without waiting for a confirmation, but they run the risk of becoming victim to a double spend attack.

This seemingly large advantage Litecoin has over Bitcoin, however, is minimized by third-party solutions that make instantaneous transactions more secure.

Long-term cryptocurrency users consider the technical components of Bitcoins and Litecoins different cryptographic algorithms when comparing the two.

Bitcoin uses the SHA-256 algorithm and Litecoin uses an algorithm called Scrypt. These algorithms determine the mining process for new coins. Miners confirm the transactions of other users, and are rewarded units of that currency in exchange.

Many consider Bitcoins SHA-256 algorithm more complex than Litecoins Scrypt, which therefore allows for a higher degree of parallel processing. Bitcoin miners have built sophisticated methods to mine bitcoins at a highly efficient rate. The most dominant method uses ASICsApplication-Specific Integrated Circuits. ASICs are essentially hardware systems (similar to CPUs) created purely to mine bitcoins.

The Bitcoin competition for mining is fierce due to the sheer amount of miners, as well as technical innovations such as the ASICs. New miners struggle to establish themselves without adequate computing power, capital to handle expenses, and the know-how to outcompete experienced competition.

Litecoin was largely created to appeal to miners who could no longer mine Bitcoin because their CPUs couldnt compete with ASICs. Scrypt is more accessible for new miners. It was designed to be less conducive to custom hardware solutions such as in ASIC-based mining. Scrypt, however, is not immune to the innovation and there is increasingly development that hinders the easy-access mining Scrypt was partially designed for.

While Litecoins efforts to make mining more accessible to everyone is a notable gesture that speaks volumes about the Litecoin community, it also pigeonholes itself into a niche. Instead of appealing to a massive community of people to achieve a network to contend with Bitcoins, Litecoin focused on minor differentiating factors. Litecoin essentially functions the same as Bitcoin and doesnt offer enough for users to convert from Bitcoin.

Its safe to assume that most crypto-traders, those responsible for the large crypto market caps, arent valuing tech over substantial profit. Litecoins value proposition simply sounds like another altcoin pitch to them. Less tech-savvy adopters hardly know what the mining process is like, let alone the difference between SHA-256 and Scrypt. So while Litecoins price has increased significantly over the past few months, it simply isnt as attractive as Bitcoins.

Litecoin additionally took a hard jab in the gut when Ethereum exploded onto the scene in early 2017 and knocked Litecoin down to the #4 market cap position. Ethereum has developed nearly 10x that of Litecoins market cap in a short amount of time.

Since Litecoins purpose initially was to be silver to Bitcoin gold, it really begs the question of whether it will ever be anything more than Bitcoins minion.

Litecoin technically has a superior algorithm but this is largely irrelevant, as Bitcoins popularity has cemented it as the gold standard for old and new crypto traders.

When it comes to cryptocurrency adoption, Bitcoin and Litecoin are in the same boat. Think of it this way: Bitcoin and Litecoin are both good guys. But Bitcoin is the main protagonist and Litecoin is the inferior supporting actor. Bitcoin is the Goku, Aragon, and Batman. Litecoin is the Vegeta, Boromir, and Harvey Dent. In the end, Bitcoin will likely end up in every sequel, while Litecoin is killed off due to lack of popularity.

An extensive user network is essential in the crypto community. No matter how hard Harvey Dent altcoins may try, even their technical superiority cant beat the popularity of the Batman Bitcoin .

Additionally, Bitcoins liquidity cannot be overlooked. The fact that cryptocurrencies tend to be very volatile plays a huge role in the minds of new users. Many new users start with Bitcoin because it offers stability and a large preexisting market.

The network effect ultimately determines which cryptos survive and as more users buy into Bitcoin, Litecoin will likely become increasingly obscure. Litecoins relevancy is debatable and its recent spikes in price are largely due to the current rise in cryptocurrency prices as a whole.

Its interesting to theorize situations where Litecoin could overtake Bitcoin. Litecoin loyalists cling to the fact that Litecoin is one of the only high-value value-exchange alternatives. In the unlikely case that any of Bitcoins potentially problematic features like its 21 million coin limit remain unaddressed and start to create substantial problems, people could shift towards Litecoin. However, the downfall of Bitcointhe flagship of the cryptocurrency worldcould spell doomsday for the cryptocurrency market at large.

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Litecoin vs Bitcoin: The 2 Most Popular Digital Coins Compared

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Best Beaches in the World - TripAdvisor