EFTA01817284.pdf

DataSet-10 2 pages 550 words document
D6
👁 1 💬 0
📄 Extracted Text (550 words)
To: Victoria Stodden From: Jeffrey Epstein Sent: Fri 9/11/2009 7:07:35 PM Subject: Re: Books no true„ for example subliminal experminets. showed a strong bias toward info without a concious recognition. . predisposition towards certain outcomes based on faster than cognizable inputs.. , and just think that if statisically, a large numbncr of people arc doing the same thing , but have wildly different rationales. , wouldn;t we be able to discount their explanaitons. On Fri, Sep I I, 2009 at 3:01 PM, Victoria Stoddcn wrote: But your hypothesis isn't falsifiable: we can't tell whether one's internal decision making occurs before or after the decision, if we assume the thinker always believes it to be before regardless of the truth. It seems like the free will controversy - if it feels like free will, does it really matter if it isn't? On 9/11/09 5:26 AM, "Jeffrey Epstein" <[email protected]> wrote: thank you„ i will do so this weekend.. however, my view is they like most others suffer from the socializaition gene. The behavior dictated by what benefits the group, and then rationalized in the individual mind. this is much more exciting. On Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 7:02 PM, Victoria Stodden wrote: Dear Jeffrey, I wanted to explain the books that should have arrived at your house today. They both can up in our discussion in responses to questions you had. 1. iWoz: I immediately identified with Steve Wozniak's thinking within the first few pages (honesty, truth, sense of discovery, building). The reason I sent it is that he does an excellent job of articulating why and how he feels a desire to be useful and helpful to others, as a framing philosophy in life. Personally, I find this discourse fascinating. Here's a quote from the book: "I felt these were really mighty goals in life: looking consciously at the sort of person you want to be, the sort of life you want to live, the sort of society you want to help build." 2. Atomic Bomb: You asked the question this book is trying to answer - how did they pull together such a project? You also mentioned Szilard. This book makes an effort to tell Szilard's story and even starts with his perspective - I hope you'll glance at the first few pages. You can get a glimpse of his underlying goals, one based on HG Wells' _The Open Conspiracy_: Szilard's "deepest ambition, more profound even than his commitment to science, was somehow to save the world. ... The Open Conspiracy was to be a public collusion of science-minded industrialists and financiers to establish a world republic. Thus to save the world. Szilard appropriated Wells' term and used it off and on for the rest of his life." Crazy! And so fascinating. EFTA_R1_00189012 EFTA01817284 *********************************************************** The information contained in this communication is confidential, may be attorney-client privileged, may constitute inside information, and is intended only for the use of the addressee. It is the property of Jeffrey Epstein Unauthorized use, disclosure or copying of this communication or any part thereof is strictly prohibited and may be unlawful. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately by return e-mail or by e-mail to [email protected], and destroy this communication and all copies thereof, including all attachments. EFTA_R1_00189013 EFTA01817285
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
4318fcc5223e262b772335f1d678fc852bdb209ba69d1bb8c4a8e60d422797a7
Bates Number
EFTA01817284
Dataset
DataSet-10
Type
document
Pages
2

Community Rating

Sign in to rate this document

📋 What Is This?

Loading…
Sign in to add a description

💬 Comments 0

Sign in to join the discussion
Loading comments…
Link copied!