something fundamentally is broken in the system and the way I like to describe it to bitcoin is it's kind of like most people understand what inflation is it's a it's an invisible tax that requires no
- Concept
- inflation
- Score
- 4 · must · fundamental
- Status
- candidate — not yet promoted to canon
Corpus evidence — top 10 passages
Most-relevant passages from the entire indexed corpus (67,286 paragraph chunks across YouTube transcripts, PubMed, arXiv, archive.org, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, OpenAlex, and more) ranked by semantic similarity (bge-small-en-v1.5).
- 01 · yt0.797
Everything is relative, so that means it's quantum mechanical. Uh Bitcoin's not based on that. And I will tell you, people have asked me on other podcasts, especially about Bitcoin, is there technically another level to Bitcoin? I believe there is because of this reason. Because it's based on Newtonian physics. It's not actually based on quantum mechanical stuff. So, when you hear a lot of the the negativities, you know, that, oh, when we build the quantum computer, that uh Satoshi's device will be taken out. I chuckle at that. Why? Because nature's already built that quantum computer. It's in…
yt/jtMu-KFyKxM-bitcoin-is-a-time-machine-with-dr-jack-kruse/transcript.txt
- 02 · yt0.784
But let's also be very frank here. I think, you know, BTC sessions is also pointing this out. There's been a huge fallacy with the Treasury companies Yeah. that's falling apart, like the narratives that we all thought at the beginning of this cycle that it was good to get governments involved in Bitcoin. I probably been the lone wolf on this issue. When I was at Prague, the first year, I had dinner with, with Michael Saylor and another prominent bitcoin, who, you guys know Parker Lewis, and we kept our mouths shut the first year. But from that meeting, I got the sense that there was a huge pro…
yt/A0onGcn17fQ-it-took-a-brain-surgeon-to-uncover-terrifying-threat-to-bitc/transcript.txt
- 03 · yt0.782
And if you think about it, this is one of the the very interesting uh things at the heart of decentralized medicine that I think PhDs don't really understand because I think they take the esoteric part of it, but they don't understand really what I'm saying. When you have time is absolute, that's when causation like cause and effect exists. When time is relative, there is no cause and effect. And this is so counterintuitive to people. And then when you think about talking about medicine, what's the standard uh gold standard in medicine? It's randomized control clinical trials that is based on …
yt/Omug2kdB8VM-dr-jack-kruse-on-the-biological-implications-of-time-cancer-/transcript.txt
- 04 · yt0.781
I actually put the first blockchain up. You know the first blockchain ever created by humans was the Sumerian alphabet. And it was categorized in stone. And why should that resonate with a Bitcoiner? When you actually think about it, the Rosetta Stone, the Sumerian alphabet, you know, the Phoenicians, you know, anything written in stone, what did that do? It made the ledger immutable. Immutable in those days. Now, we know that it's really not immutable cuz you could get rid of the stones. But, ironically, those stones still sit in our museums today. So, I would tell you the ancients were prett…
yt/jtMu-KFyKxM-bitcoin-is-a-time-machine-with-dr-jack-kruse/transcript.txt
- 05 · blog0.774
Depending on the context, this could be a claim either about the definition of “art” or about the ontology of art. Beardsley rejects both claims, but it’s important to distinguish them. In speaking of money as “essentially institutional”, a person is probably claiming no more than that the definition or truth conditions of “this is money” include a reference to social institutions. The claim isn’t that quarters, dimes, nickels, and so on fall under a distinct ontological category other than physical objects, namely, cultural or institutional objects. If taken ontologically, on the other hand, …
blog/plato-stanford-edu/beardsley-s-aesthetics.md
- 06 · yt0.774
Jack Mallers sat down with the same president I did and told him the story of money. And we have a millennial philosopher king that said, "This is a good idea. I think it's a good idea for my people. We use American money because of our civil wars, our central bank was [ __ ] completely ruined our money. Okay, we'll use the United States money, but then we'll give people an insurance policy with Bitcoin behind it." So, what did that do? That bought people in El Salvador more time. Do you see how every time I give you an example, what do we always come back to? Those three footnotes i…
yt/jtMu-KFyKxM-bitcoin-is-a-time-machine-with-dr-jack-kruse/transcript.txt
- 07 · yt0.772
You probably know in my day job I'm a brain surgeon so I not know a lot about how the brain works. We're very subject to the Dunning Krueger effect. The only way to go against the Dunning Krueger effect is become a first principles thinker. So the case that I'm laying out to Bitcoin is I think that the reason why I'm a Serbic and why people get pissed off at me is because I lay this stuff out. But I want to lay this out so that we all understand before I shut up. I want you to think about a chef and a cook. Okay. First principle of thinking is a chef will go and buy all the best ingredients he…
yt/3ILmWtMX_ys-epstein-samurai-take-down-bitcoin-no-one-s-connecting-the-do/transcript.txt
- 08 · yt0.770
Well, here's a fun basic analogy to help you understand. Fermat's law is like when you're trying to get to a swimming pool as quickly as possible from a sandy beach. You know you can run fast on the sand, but once you hit the water, you have to swim slower. So, instead of running straight into the water, you might run a bit further on the sand to save time. Light does something similar when it moves from one material to another, like from air into water, it thinks about which path will get it to its destination the quickest and it takes that route. Light always finds the fastest way, not neces…
yt/jtMu-KFyKxM-bitcoin-is-a-time-machine-with-dr-jack-kruse/transcript.txt
- 09 · yt0.767
I don't have time to explain it to you if your mind's not open. Now, I'm going to assume with your question, the mind is open. I would use a very simple analogy and I make it for El Salvador. Four years ago, if you went to Super Selecto, you could fill the grocery basket up very, very easily. Today, it's very, very sparse. And you're in a country that has both American money and Bitcoin. Now look at the difference of what Bitcoin has done. When Boulli brought it in, it was $41,000. Now it's $1067. So in four years, you doubled your money. So that means you have that discussion with people and …
yt/pa9Fni5IHkk-013-dr-jack-kruse-part-2-why-bitcoiners-fear-his-vision-all-/transcript.txt
- 10 · yt0.766
It's called the randomized control clinical trial. That's what peer review is. And that's considered our gold standard. When you understand what Einstein really said in 1905, can a randomized control clinical trial really give you the truth? No, the answer is cuz there is no cause and effect. But, here's the funny thing. The Sumerian um alphabet in stone or the Rosetta Stone taught us another lesson that Satoshi had to know. Is that it took a ledger and made it immutable in the real world. What Satoshi did is he actually made it immutable in the digital world. And how did he do that? He reject…
yt/jtMu-KFyKxM-bitcoin-is-a-time-machine-with-dr-jack-kruse/transcript.txt
Curation checklist
- ☐ Verify excerpt against source recording
- ☐ Tag tier (axiom · law · principle · primary derivation · observation)
- ☐ Cross-cite to ≥1 primary source (PubMed / arXiv / archive.org)
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bucket-canon/06-cosmology/