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Introducing Talmud

kronosapiens.github.io
It is with a mix of excitement and trepidation that I present Talmud, a recent undertaking self-styled as a “collaborative art project” exploring identity. W...
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Title Introducing Talmud
Text / HTML ratio 62 %
Frame Excellent! The website does not use iFrame solutions.
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Keywords cloud Talmud identities identity preferences pairwise make idea Abacus answer professional analysis conflicts people subjective question years empirically political data colleague
Keywords consistency
Keyword Content Title Description Headings
Talmud 9
identities 9
identity 9
preferences 5
pairwise 5
make 4
Headings
H1 H2 H3 H4 H5 H6
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Images We found 0 images on this web page.

SEO Keywords (Single)

Keyword Occurrence Density
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SEO Keywords (Two Word)

Keyword Occurrence Density
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SEO Keywords (Three Word)

Keyword Occurrence Density Possible Spam
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better than A 1 0.05 % No
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SEO Keywords (Four Word)

Keyword Occurrence Density Possible Spam
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Introducing Talmud Abacus About Introducing Talmud Feb 8, 2018 It is with a mix of excitement and trepidation that I present Talmud, a recent undertaking self-styled as a “collaborative art project” exploring identity. Why “Talmud”? Because the name evokes the idea of a stream of learning, with every participant increasing the knowledge of the whole. I. The seed of Talmud was sown in the Winter of 2012, when I was living in Jerusalem during one of the Gaza conflicts. Rockets were literally flying overhead, and the dialogues playing out over the internet were tense. It seemed that much of the vitriol fell withal the lines of identity. Amongst Jews, some felt their Zionist identity came first (in which Israel should take a hawkish defender militaristic stance towards Palestine); amongst others, their Humanist identity (in which Israel should take a increasingly dovish diplomatic stance). For others their Jewish identities came first, and so they did not take a side, not wanting to undermine their communal relationships. I remember thinking at that time that most of us are a little bit of all these things: part hawk, part dove, members of one or flipside community. We have many identities, but in variegated contexts some are increasingly salient than others, leading to contextually-specific mismatch when those identities differ. Wouldn’t it be helpful if people could indicate that although in this setting one identity came first, there was increasingly there? Some way to indicate that while there was a understructure for disagreement and conflict, there was moreover a understructure for coming-together and reconciliation? Some way to say “I am an X first, and a Y second”? That was the idea; I envisioned people stuff worldly-wise to generate badges and displaying them on their social media profiles. Of course, stuff a dilletantish twenty-three year old, nothing came of it. In the intervening years, increasingly examples of these types of conflicts came to mind. Consider the American Civil War, pitting “brother versus brother, father versus son”. Here, political identity trumped the ostensibly powerful familial identity. Consider the McCarthy Era, in which people were often forced to segregate between their professional and their political identities: most chose the former. Consider flipside example from Jewish culture: the mucosa “Fiddler on the Roof”, in which the protaganist rejects his daughter without she marries outside the faith, placing religious identity whilom familial. Ultimately, we are all multi-faceted and have many identities: child, friend, lover, colleague. In wing to the high-profile conflicts mentioned above, we make these choices implicitly every day as we try to wastefulness our personal and professional lives: balancing friend and colleague, parent and professional. We make these choiced implicitly, underneath the surface and wieldy to understanding via our actions. What if there was a way to make these choices explicit, to facilitate our understanding of ourselves and each other? What if we could answer, empirically, the old question of whether we are fundamentally the same and our seperateness an illusion, or whether our differences run deep and the road to coexistence needs be arduous? II. Addressing the question of identity empirically is challenging, in that our subject matter is highly subjective: “who am I?” Conveniently, I wrote my master’s thesis on the very topic of measuring subjectivities. As much as Talmud is the realization of an idea several years old, it is moreover an expression of theory and algorithms ripened much increasingly recently. Talmud (and the thesis on which it draws) is based on the notion of “pairwise preference”: given two options, you segregate one (or potentially neither). The goody of pairwise preferences are twofold. First, it is an efficient and robust way to measure something subjective: you either like A largest than B, B largest than A, or you can’t decide. Second, pairwise preferences are responsible to many types of mathematical and computational analysis, permitting us to derive powerful and highly interpretable insights from simple data. For instance, Talmud users can wordplay the pursuit questions: What are my most important identities (as percentages of a whole)? How similar or variegated are my identities to those of flipside group? Other questions we could potentially answer: How strong or flexible are my preferences overall? Are identities stuff presented at the right level of wresting (such as “Musician” instead of “Pianist”)? One nice thing is that the theory overdue Talmud is increasingly unstipulated than the question of identities. For example, Talmud could be trivially well-timed to the pursuit use cases: Participatory budgeting by local government (“Parks”, “Police”, “Roads”, “Schools”, etc.) Interest group insemination at a co-working space (“Hiking”, “Crafting”, “Music”, “Board Games”, etc.) Roommate matching in a housing cooperative (“Clean”, “Social”, “Quiet”, “Food”, “Space”, etc.) The first and second example makes use of the ranking analysis, the second and third make use of the similarity analysis. I’ll note that these ideas are not new: the use of pairwise interactions to derive rankings is a standard technique in machine learning (being the cadre idea behing Google’s original PageRank algorithm), and the use of pairwise preferences as a survey tool was washed-up a number of years ago by AllOurIdeas, a unconfined project and uncontrived inspiration overdue this work. The use of pairwise preferences to determine similarity, however, is not something I have seen elsewhere (although it very well may have been washed-up before). All said, my hope is that Talmud will find using as a flexible, efficient, and reliable instrument for measuring and analyzing subjective preference. An would-be hope to be sure, but not an untellable one. Comments Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus. Abacus Abacus kronovet@gmail.com kronosapiens kronosapiens I'm Daniel Kronovet, a data scientist living in Tel Aviv.