antivenom

Antivenom

๐˜๐˜ฆ๐˜ฏ๐˜ฆ๐˜ฏ๐˜ถ๐˜ฎ ๐˜ด๐˜ฐ๐˜ญ๐˜ข ๐˜ง๐˜ข๐˜ค๐˜ช๐˜ต ๐˜ฅ๐˜ฐ๐˜ด๐˜ช๐˜ด

Your Brain is Just a Prediction Machine, and Play is How It Hacks Reality

Think youโ€™re in control? Think again. William Glasser says youโ€™re just acting out your deepest psychological cravings, tweaking reality to match some idealized fantasy world in your head. But waitโ€”William T. Powers disagrees! He says youโ€™re not reacting to the world at all; youโ€™re manipulating your own perception just to feel like youโ€™re in charge.

Then Karl Friston kicks down the door with the Free Energy Principle, yelling, โ€œSurprise is death! Minimize uncertainty or perish!โ€ Turns out, your entire existence is just a desperate attempt to avoid the cosmic horror of the unknown.

But donโ€™t worry! Thereโ€™s a built-in safety net: learningโ€”a mental vaccine against future surprise. And whatโ€™s the brainโ€™s favorite way to train? Simulated danger. Also known as play. Thatโ€™s rightโ€”your childhood games of tag were just low-stakes war simulations designed to prevent you from short-circuiting when real chaos hits.

Meanwhile, AI researchers are out here building robots that โ€œplayโ€ so they can avoid embarrassing themselves like Boston Dynamics bots on ice. Schools should take notes, but they wonโ€™t, because they still think memorizing facts beats learning how to handle uncertainty.

So, what have we learned? Your brain is an anxious little prediction engine, constantly tweaking its world model to avoid existential dread. And play? Play is just evolutionโ€™s way of making sure you donโ€™t completely fall apart the first time life throws a curveball.

Click here to find out if YOU are a victim of surprise-induced existential meltdown!