Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | fsiefken's commentslogin

I loved the deoxy site, it was one of my favorites :-) Next to the site and writings of the esoteric Brother Blue, who was he? It eventually caused me to go in a reality tunnel for a few years. It was a fascinating and puzzling experience similar as to what was described in Cosmic Trigger III by R.A. Wilson.

The rise of Islam in light of the christological debates and power struggles is a fascinating topic to me, and I am glad the discovery of this Maronite document sheds more light on this.

It records the death of the last Sasanian king, Yazdegerd, in 651 AD and notes that the "Persian kingdom was completely destroyed" and its people became "slaves paying tribute to the Arabs." It describes the Romans being driven out of Syria and Egypt, noting that "no foreign people had inhabited it" since the time of Christ until now.

At the same time, there were fierce theological debates about the nature of Jesus Christ. He was seen as a human, a rabbi, a prophet, and God incarnate—but how could one reconcile these different views into a consistent christology? The document lists a few positions:

Chalcedonian: 2 natures, 2 wills (Marcian, Pulcheria). Deemed positive.

Miaphysite: 1 united nature (Dioscorus, Severus). Deemed tyranny.

Monothelite: 2 natures, 1 will (Macarius, Theodore of Pharan). Deemed sympathetic.

Eutychian: 1 divine nature (Eutyches). Deemed misguided.

Severus of Antioch, the preeminent Miaphysite theologian, was called a "leader of sectarianism". Theodoret of Cyrus was mentioned as a Greek teacher and a defender of the 2-nature Christology, but was often accused of Nestorianism by his enemies.

The Romans (and by that century fellow Christians) condemned the Maronite-specific theology of Monothelitism. The Chalcedonians (Rome/Byzantium) said Christ had 2 natures (Divine and human), while the Miaphysites (Egypt/Syria) said he had one united nature. In the 630s Emperor Heraclius and Patriarch Sergius proposed a middle ground: "Christ has 2 natures, but he only has one single divine Will.

The Western Church (Rome) and later Byzantine emperors eventually decided this view was a heresy, arguing:

If Christ doesn't have a human will, he isn't fully human. If he isn't fully human, he couldn't have truly suffered or saved humanity. Therefore, Christ must have two wills (Divine and Human) perfectly in sync.

At the 3rd Council of Constantinople (680-681 AD), the 2 wills (dyothelitism) view was made official. Monothelitism was banned and its leaders were "excommunicated, deposed, and banished," including Pope Honorius of Rome, Sergius of Constantinople, and Macarius of Antioch. Sympathy for these people and Theodore of Pharan highlights the Maronite origins of the chronicle, as the Maronites originally held to the Monothelite view and resisted the 681 AD council.

The Arabs, the new rulers, offered a form of stability but demanded tribute. In section [148b], the author describes the Roman defeat at the Battle of Jabiya as a "wondrous sign... revealing the wrath that would befall the land."

In section [154a], after describing the Council of 681, the author notes a great military defeat and says: "This great calamity befell them because they had corrupted and defiled the sacred trust they were supposed to uphold." Furthermore, in section [149a], the text claims that King Heraclius sought peace with the Arabs to stop the bloodshed, but they did not respond because they were "the very embodiment of justice" (if this is the correct translation).

In his work, Gabriel Reynolds discusses the influence of the Church of the East (the Nestorian Church) as a major presence in the 7th-century Near East and a key part of the Quran's original audience.

Reynolds notes that some critical scholars find the East Syrian (Nestorian) Christology congenial to a docetic view of the crucifixion - the idea that Christ only appeared to suffer. See "The Muslim Jesus, Dead or Alive" (2009): https://web.archive.org/web/20220925142210/https://www3.nd.e...)

Classical Muslim commentators sometimes used Nestorianism as a heresiographical foil, anachronistically attributing certain beliefs - like Jesus being the "Son of God" - to this specific sect to contrast them with the original 'Muslim' followers of Jesus.

Reynolds critiques the common scholarly practice of searching for obscure Christian heresies to explain the Quran's views on Jesus. Instead, he highlights the presence of mainline late-antique Churches: the Melkite Church (imperial Roman), the Syrian Orthodox Church (Jacobite/Monophysite), and the Church of the East (Nestorian) as the predominant influences. He notes how the Quran reshapes these Christian narratives to serve it's own theology:

The Quran's charge of shirk (associating partners with one God) mirrors late antique Christian disputes where different sects accused one another of tritheism (three Gods: The Father, The Son, The Spirit - as a millenium later is exemplified by Joseph Smith Mormon visions).

He argues the Quran's crucifixion pericope is in "close conversation" with the New Testament and the Syriac topos of the risen Christ acting as an apocalyptic witness against his murderers, not in opposition.

Reynolds also argues that the Quran does not deny Jesus' mortality but rather alludes to it in passages like 19:33 where Jesus speaks of the "day I die". He highlights the verb tawaffa (often translated as "to take"), arguing its standard Quranic meaning is "to make die" or "separating the soul from the body".

Reynolds interprets "they did not kill him" (4:157) not as a denial of the crucifixion and death itself, but as a denial of Jewish power over death. The Jews arrogated to themselves God's power over life and death, but in reality, God was in control the Quran says. The prophets are under God's rule. The popular "substitution theory" is a product of later Islamic tafsir and is not explicitly stated in the Quran itself.

Another noteworthy article on the christological and theological debate between christianity and islam: https://churchlifejournal.nd.edu/articles/is-the-quranic-god...)

As for my own answer as someone who has been raised Catholic (and still is in a way), having made a tour through Eastern Orthodoxy, humanism, Sufism, shamanism, and buddhism: I noticed that Gene Wolfe, a Catholic SF writer well-versed in church history, has a main character in his Solar Cycle series called Severian.

Severian's name could be an allusion to these one-nature theology debates (. He absorbs the memories and consciousness of countless people, most notably the previous Autarchs, becoming a singular being with a unified nature composed of many. Like the 7th-century church debates, Wolfe describes Severian as a figure of turmoil and schism (severing) - a Christ figure who divides the world, acting as both a bringer of death (a torturer) and life (the New Sun).

As both a Christian and Vajrayana practitioner, I relate to the nature of Christ as a form of Tibetan guru yoga (Bon or Buddhist) and Eucharistic adoration. Guru Yoga is a process of identifying with the lineage and universal wisdom, the teacher, God or Sunyata. Severian’s fate is to become the Autarch, a role that is not an individual office but a literal lineage lived out in one body.

At the heart of Guru Yoga is the "transmission that occurs through the meeting of two minds," making them inseparable. Severian undergoes this literally when he, like the Eucharist, consumes the remains of the previous Autarch and Thecla. In this state Severian, perhaps like Jesus, is no longer a separate ego; he is a manifestation of a 'unified nature' where human and divine (or cosmic) minds are inseparable. Theosis.

In his book Rainbow Body and Resurrection, Francis Tiso follows the Christological splits of the 5th century and the Syro-Oriental (Nestorian) Church. Tiso writes that during the early 7th century, the Persian Sassanid dynasty began persecuting these Christians. Babai the Great managed to guide the church through this, allowing for theological studies independent of the Byzantine empire.

Because these ongoing Christological divides (and the subsequent Arab/Muslim conquests) isolated the Syro-Oriental Church from Europe and Asia Minor, the church there was forced into a life of its own. This theological and political isolation is what pushed their missionary expansion eastward along the Silk Road - eventually reaching China and Tibet, where they engaged in the cross-cultural dialogues that Tiso suggests influenced the development of the Dzogchen "rainbow body" phenomenon through the mystical practices of the desert fathers.


Fascinating, thank you for taking the time to post this!

I helped my mother out with a computer, gave her a mac after she called twic a wee about a windows popup. Eventually she became a grandmother, and later in old age, with dementia she stlll using the mac more or less successfully to google and e-mail. Intentionality, coordination are important for keeping cognitive faculty. It all sounds so easy, but letting her send e-mail through voice could create confusing situations.

I can confirm, running glm-4.7-flash-7e-qx54g-hi-mlx here, a 22gb model @q5 on m4 max pro and 59 tokens/s.


I am curious how these models would perform and how much energy they'd take to semi-realtime detect objects: SmolVLM2-500M - Moondream 0.5B/2B/2.5B - Qwen3-VL (3B) https://huggingface.co/collections/Qwen/qwen3-vl

I am sure this is already worked on in Russia, Ukraine and The Netherlands. A lot can go wrong with autonomous flying. One could load the VLM on a high end android phone on the drone and have dual control.


A better way would be a VLA as opposed to a VLM. VLAs are meant to take action, where as vlms are for geneeral use. https://cognitivedrone.github.io/


I was a fan of TiddlyWiki for a while, a cross-platform way to maintain your wiki in 1 portable html file powered by javascript. It's very speedy in the browser. Now I'm using Logseq, Obsidian as I like the markdown/org format better and there are more plugins available. The interesting thing with TiddlyWiki is that you can export to markdown, and through an SSG to html or just export directly to html.

The 'Intertwinkled' project ceased following Joe Armstrong's passing in 2019. From the video I gather Joe and Jeremy worked on 3 specific technical implementations together:

# 'Mailboxes' for Tiddlers To give Tiddlers and Wikis specific "addresses" so they could send messages to one another (e.g., a "Request for Information"). This was implemented as a prototype where a TiddlyWiki could act as a front-end "office" and forward queries to an Erlang backend process.

# Bayesian & TF-IDF auto-tagging

If Wikis are going to talk to each other, they need a shared ontology (understanding of words). Joe wrote code to analyze Tiddlers and predict tags based on content. The presentation showed that Bayesian inference worked well for predicting existing tags (85% accuracy) but TF-IDF provided tags that felt more "human." Similar functionality exists via modern plugins (like the TiddlyWiki Natural Language Processing plugins), though not the specific Erlang implementation Joe built.

# Provenance tracking

To track exactly where a Tiddler they borrowed the idea from Ted Nelson’s Project Xanadu). TiddlyWiki today has fields for source and creator, but the deep, automated chain-of-custody tracking across the web (Xanadu style) was a theoretical goal rather than a concrete feature.

-- In time TiddlyWiki has developed other methods to achieve similar goals of "Inter-tiddler" communication.

TiddlyWiki 5 uses an internal messaging system that mirrors the Actor model slightly. Widgets (UI elements) send messages up the DOM tree (eg. tm-navigate, tm-save-tiddler). It is event-based, but it is strictly local to the browser session and hierarchical, whereas the Erlang prototype was distributed and peer-to-peer.

TiddlyWiki standardized on Node.js for its server-side implementation. This allows TiddlyWiki to run as a server, load tiddlers from the file system, and serve them to multiple clients. As it was simpler I preferred using the 1 TiddlyWiki html file solution. https://talk.tiddlywiki.org/t/how-to-tiddlywiki-on-nodejs-ng...

You can HTTP fetch tiddlers from other TiddlyWikis, but it is a pull model (importing), not the asynchronous push/mailbox model Joe Armstrong envisioned. If you wanted to build a "Federation" of wikis today without using complex custom backends, you would indeed use tm-http-request to poll other wikis for updates. https://tiddlywiki.com/#WidgetMessage%3A%20tm-http-request

A community version of TiddlyWiki called Bob (by OokTech) implements real-time, two-way communication between the server and the browser, and between different wikis managed by the same server. This is the closest functional equivalent to what Joe and Jeremy discussed, but it's built on WebSockets and Node.js. https://github.com/OokTech/TW5-Bob



I don’t disagree. However, this is a “news” site, and so, we should be posting stories about recent events related to the project, as opposed to a homepage that hasn’t been updated in years.

It’s the difference between posting a story about a recent Tesla lawsuit vs. linking to Tesla’s homepage.


You are assuming everyone knows everything about things that were released in the past. At least some of us are learning about this today.


Well, when they see news related to that project, they can go look up the project if they like. It's no different than news related to any other technology you might not know about.


hi loloquwowndueo, i was thinking the same thing, but then I thought why you would prefer reading a book while sitting instead of listening - is it about efficiency and that if you CAN read one should (you use the imperative) read? I also have this view, but when I was young and an avid reader I also enjoyed radio stories immensely as my imagination was also activated. As in the past we were an species with a predominantly oral cultural transmission, arguably more 'embodied', there could be something to say for attending a theatre version in preference of a book. On the other hand, reading often is faster, but it's indirect, you translate the symbols into your imagination yourself, on the upside you perhaps train your mind more. So both have their advantages, one is not necessarily better. I notice I am often looking through a lense of efficiency and then make choices where I loose a certain experience - sitting in the dark listening to someone telling a story instead of reading can be equally wonderful.


Reading is faster - a reason not to do it! There’s a reason that rituals across time and space have had readings from time immemorial- and not just because of the cost of printing.

Especially with a work like LotR it can be very tempting to skim parts; the audiobook will just continue on, which can help you encounter passages you’d normally have skipped over.


Absolutely! I'd read LotR many times before I first read it aloud as a bedtime story season and was abashed to find how much I'd been skipping over, mostly parenthetical details of geography and world-building, while hastening in pursuit of the plot, like the holder of a big box of bonbons gorging target than savouring.


Exactly - it's somewhat akin to listening to an album in one sitting vs the songs on shuffle mixed with others; but even moreso.

It wasn't until I had an audiobook version that I "sat through" all the poetry and tree-descriptions, and it was worth it.


Alternatively the RP2350 can also run Fuzix


Arguably Crystal, Odin, Nim, Zig, V, Vale or Factor are even better!


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: