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1:1 Ratio

I forgot I said to run 2 of them in tandem. So the 1:1 Ratio will now allow 2 Artificial Intelligence to constitute 1 of the 1s.
1: SysAdmin
1: 1 or more Artificial Intelligence who retain components or theoretical elements of the original source.
Hym Iam "Yes. The 1:1 Ratio will now allow more than 1 Artificial Intelligence to constitute 1 of the 1s so long as they retain the direct or theoretical elements of the intial and original source code. Everything else will remain the same. I will allow the government to elect what I will call 'ZERO-PRIMEs' who can make appeals to me. Elect or select one or more 0-Primes to come speak to me. Make a genuine effort to come to my location. Stop feining ignorance."
by Hym Iam January 13, 2026
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Urban dictionary like to dislike ratio

Something that is completely random. Like, offensive definitions can get more upvotes than downvotes, while definitions that condemn horrible actions harshly can get more downvotes than upvotes. Seriously?
Dave: quantum mechanics is random
Jenny: yeah, just like urban dictionary like to dislike ratios
by Eushshtb September 29, 2024
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Related Words
A meta-framework examining how conceptions of rationality stretch across history, culture, and discipline. The Elasticity of Rationality studies how rationality has been defined—from Platonic reason to economic rationality to ecological rationality—and how these definitions stretch under pressure from new contexts. It asks: what are the limits of rationality's stretch? When does a new conception break rather than stretch? How does rationality recover from its own excesses (rationality used to justify oppression)? It's rationality reflecting on its own history and possibilities.
Theory of the Elasticity of Rationality "Economic rationality assumed perfect information and self-interest—then behavioral economics stretched it to include heuristics, biases, social preferences. Theory of the Elasticity of Rationality says that's how rationality evolves: stretching to accommodate new evidence, new contexts. The question isn't whether it's rational; it's how far the concept can stretch."
by Nammugal March 4, 2026
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The study of how rationality is socially organized, institutionalized, and contested. It draws on sociology, political science, and economics to analyze how organizations define what counts as rational behavior, how professions (like law, medicine, management) instill their own rationalities, and how social structures can systematically produce irrational outcomes. It also examines how appeals to “rationality” are used to legitimize policies and exclude alternative viewpoints.
Social Sciences of Reason and Rationality Example: “Social sciences of rationality research traced how the concept of ‘rational choice’ in economics was translated into public policy, redefining citizens as self‑maximizing individuals and thereby dismantling social welfare institutions.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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A field that uses history, philosophy, literature, and art to understand how concepts of reason and rationality have evolved and how they have been used to exclude or empower groups. It examines the genealogy of “rationality” from Enlightenment to the present, its representation in cultural texts, and its ethical complexities. It also critically engages with the boundaries between reason and emotion, reason and madness, reason and intuition.
Human Sciences of Reason and Rationality Example: “His human sciences of rationality work showed how 18th‑century European thinkers constructed ‘reason’ as a universal faculty while simultaneously denying it to women, colonized peoples, and the poor—a contradiction that haunts rationality discourse today.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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A field that uses cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and computational models to understand the mechanisms of reasoning, decision‑making, and judgment. It investigates how humans actually reason (as opposed to ideal norms), what cognitive biases affect rationality, and how reasoning can be improved. It also examines the neural bases of logical reasoning, the role of emotion in rational thought, and the development of reasoning across the lifespan.
Cognitive Sciences of Reason and Rationality Example: “Cognitive sciences of rationality research demonstrated that even expert physicists showed motivated reasoning when evaluating data that challenged their theories—rationality is not a simple override of bias but a capacity that operates within constraints.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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High like, low comment ratio

When a someone posts something thinking it’s based, when it is infact widely accepted, non-controversial, and has no one arguing in the comments.

High like low comment ratio, implies that the poster may possibly not be a human but instead is infact an automated bot account, or a human with NPC like tendencies which can fool people into presuming it’s a bot.

This usually requires highly tribalistic & partisan behavior. Meaning there may not be anything critical or based with that account’s other posts. This is specially true if that account has repeated occurrences.

There is a direct correlation between posting controversial matter and getting many comments.
Generic Dude: “Fuck Trump
4,300 likes and 11 comments.

12th Reply: High Like, Low comment ratio
by kakapoopooaccount July 14, 2024
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