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  • I think it's important to get a diversity of social interactions. That way you learn how broad the world is, and people can disabuse you of your wack ideas. It doesn't really matter how you find that diversity though, so if your dad has lots of friends, that sounds like a good avenue (albeit not super diverse).

    You could also look around for clubs or groups of people that do the hobbies you're into, and go check them out (perhaps with your dad).

  • Awesome! Ping me when you're done, if you like. Happy to chat more.

    I agree heuristics are a good approach, but I'm not conviced maths people are the ones to do it - at least not alone. There is too much messy sociology at the edges of the problem to ensure good problem specification. Some interdisciplinary approach could kill it though. If you get through that intro article, there's a short article in the same journal that gives a neat intro the Critical Systems Heuristics, which seems like an excellent wrapper around this kind of approach.

  • A version of this focussed on a gift economy/trading platform (e.g. like freecycle, or the buy nothing groups on facebook) would also be cool.

    Also person-to-person buying/selling, rather than business-to-person would be nice to have, like craigslist, reverb.com, gumtree, or used items on ebay.

    If this was focused on a craigslist/gumtree style of selling, where most of the actual trade is done off-site/in-person with cash or bank transfers, it would completely side-step the payment processor problem.

  • Also:

    • gift economy/trading platform (e.g. like freecycle)
    • buying/selling (e.g. like ebay)
    • local community/bioregionalism networks (e.g. what nextdoor should be)

    These seem kind of ideal for a federated network, IMO.

    I actually think Lemmy would be a pretty decent format for something stackoverflow like - just maybe needs to UI tweaks to minimise the visual space that replies take up, plus maybe answered post flair

  • Yes! They are both forms of systems thinking, for sure.

    I guess the intermediate discipline would be systems engineering? But one of the problems with systems thinking is that it's extremely diverse, and there's a lot of similarly-named fields that aren't quite the same thing. I posted about DSRP, which is an attempt to universalise the fundamental concepts of all of those fields, from science and engineering to sociology and art.

  • There's a pretty decent broad overview of systems thinking (aka complexity theory, the study of complex adaptive systems) in the wikipedia page linked in the sidebar - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systems_thinking

    I'd say it's more of a way-of-thinking than anything (so I guess philosophy?), kind of a counterpart to reductionism. In practice, it applies (and has been applied) to basically any field, definitely including physics - early work was very physics focused, but later on the field expanded to include economics and other social science questions. There are models that do use maths/computation (especially some of the earlier approaches), but there's also a lot of qualitative work associated with it as well.

    So I guess the answer to all your questions is "yes"? :)

    The first two posts on the community are good deeper introductions to the field.