Isaac Asimov (from a 1988 interview), providing a different perspective on trust, incentives, and guardrails:

It’s insulting to imply that only a system of rewards and punishments can keep you a decent human being. Isn’t it conceivable a person wants to be a decent human being because that way he feels better?

// 06.29.26

From Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, by Annie Dillard:

Thomas Merton wrote, “There is always a temptation to diddle around in the contemplative life, making itsy-bitsy statues.” There is always an enormous temptation in all of life to diddle around making itsy-bitsy friends and meals and journeys for itsy-bitsy years on end. It is so self-conscious, so apparently moral, simply to step aside from the gaps where the creeks and winds pour down, saying, I never merited this grace, quite rightly, and then to sulk along the rest of your days on the edge of rage. I won’t have it. The world is wilder than that in all directions, more dangerous and bitter, more extravagant and bright. We are making hay when we should be making whoopee; we are raising tomatoes when we should be raising Cain, or Lazarus.

Ezekiel excoriates false prophets as those who have “not gone up into the gaps.” The gaps are the thing. The gaps are the spirit’s one home, the altitudes and latitudes so dazzlingly spare and clean that the spirit can discover itself for the first time like a once-blind man unbound. The gaps are the cliffs in the rock where you cower to see the back parts of God; they are the fissures between mountains and cells the wind lances through, the icy narrowing fiords splitting the cliffs of mystery. Go up into the gaps. If you can find them; they shift and vanish too. Stalk the gaps. Squeak into a gap in the soil, turn, and unlock-more than a maple—a universe. This is how you spend this afternoon, and tomorrow morning, and tomorrow afternoon. Spend the afternoon. You can’t take it with you.

Lush prose, serious advice for living. Dillard won the Pulitzer Prize for this in 1975. It feels and reads very human.

// 06.19.26

From the ending of Leonard Mlodinow’s Subliminal: How Your Unconscious Mind Rules Your Behavior:

We choose the facts that we want to believe. We also choose our friends, lovers, and spouses not just because of the way we perceive them but because of the way they perceive us. Unlike phenomena in physics, in life, events can often obey one theory or another, and what actually happens can depend largely upon which theory we choose to believe. It is a gift of the human mind to be extraordinarily open to the theory of ourselves that pushes us in the direction of survival and even happiness.

// 06.12.26

Dr. Cort Wernz, writing about a private equity buyout “Negotiating Blind” in his Substack, The Impression:

The upfront payout the Las Vegas radiologist described wasn’t arbitrary generosity. It wasn’t a bonus. It was his own future income, pulled forward, discounted and paid to him upfront in exchange for accepting less later.

[…]

The radiologist in Las Vegas wasn’t undone by a bad deal. He was undone by a predictable one, structured by people who understood exactly what they were buying, signed by people who understood it less well. That’s not a character flaw. It’s what happens when a profession doesn’t place any serious value on business literacy.

Nice to see a new voice in radiology just doing their thing.

// 06.10.26