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Metafilter tags Blog, Complexity, Curiosity, Engineering, Epistemology, Essay, History, Intelligence, Invention, Knowledge, OpenMindedness, Physics, Reality
Author: Rhaomi
Surprising detail is a near universal property of getting up close and personal with reality. You can see this everywhere if you look. For example, you've probably had the experience of doing something for the first time, maybe growing vegetables or using a Haskell package for the first time, and being frustrated by how many annoying snags there were. Then you got more practice and then you told yourself 'man, it was so simple all along, I don't know why I had so much trouble'. We run into a fundamental property of the universe and mistake it for a personal failing.

Blogger John Salvatier talks stair carpentry, boiling water, the difference between invisible and transparent detail, and how paying closer attention to the beguiling complexity of everyday life can help you open your mind and break out of mental ruts and blind spots.


Related:

Ask HN: Do you also marvel at the complexity of everyday objects?

It was such an odd moment, but it's has caused a lasting perspective shift. almost every day I'll look at some commonplace object I took for granted and think "this is actually so complex, no single human has all the knowledge or expertise to create it".

I'm curious if anybody else has had a similar experience and/or what are some simple everyday objects that give you pause when you stop to think about their complexity

xkcd: Work (and appropriately, the hidden complexity behind it)

I, Pencil

I, Pencil, simple though I appear to be, merit your wonder and awe, a claim I shall attempt to prove. In fact, if you can understand me—no, that's too much to ask of anyone—if you can become aware of the miraculousness which I symbolize, you can help save the freedom mankind is so unhappily losing. I have a profound lesson to teach. And I can teach this lesson better than can an automobile or an airplane or a mechanical dishwasher because—well, because I am seemingly so simple.

Simple? Yet,
not a single person on the face of this earth knows how to make me.

Meteuphoric: Why did everything take so long? (previously)

One of the biggest intuitive mysteries to me is how humanity took so long to do anything.

Humans have been 'behaviorally modern' for about 50 thousand years. And apparently didn't invent, for instance:

  • rope until 28 thousand years ago.
  • the wheel until at least 4000BC
  • writing until 3000BC
  • woodblock printing until 200AD

This kind of thing seems really weird introspectively, because it is hard to imagine going a whole lifetime in the wilderness without wanting something like rope, or going a whole day wanting something like rope without figuring out how to make something like rope. Yet apparently people went for about a thousand lifetimes without that happening.

...and the follow-up post: Why everything might have taken so long

The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows (previously):

sonder n. the realization that each random passerby is living a life as vivid and complex as your own—populated with their own ambitions, friends, routines, worries and inherited craziness—an epic story that continues invisibly around you like an anthill sprawling deep underground, with elaborate passageways to thousands of other lives that you'll never know existed, in which you might appear only once, as an extra sipping coffee in the background, as a blur of traffic passing on the highway, as a lighted window at dusk.

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in reply to @Metafilter-feed's post:

There are many ways to blow out your mind contemplating sonder, but one that really works on me is looking up at an airliner at cruising altitude and thinking there are two or three hundred times my inner thoughtscape in that tiny speck.

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