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The minds you seek on Nostr aren’t valuable because they’re search engines. They’re valuable because they’ve lived something you haven’t. Think about it: when someone shares hard won knowledge here, you’re not just getting information. You’re getting the scar tissue. The late nights. The failures that taught them what the textbooks couldn’t. You’re getting wisdom that was expensive to acquire, offered freely because they remember what it was like not to know. Their expertise isn’t some polished, sanitized output. It’s inseparable from their specific journey, their unique vantage point, their particular blind spots. And yes, even their biases and limitations. That’s not a bug. That’s what makes it real. That’s what makes it useful in ways a perfect answer never could be. Because here’s the thing: you don’t just need correct information. You need to understand how someone got there. You need the context, the nuance, the “yeah, but watch out for this one thing that nobody tells you.” You need their beautiful human incompleteness, because that’s where the actual learning lives. An AI tool can give you answers instantly. But it can’t tell you what it felt like to be wrong for two years before figuring it out. It can’t say “I thought that too, until…” It can’t share the wisdom that only comes from being human, from struggling, from changing your mind. Use the AI when it serves you. Let it handle the obvious stuff, the quick lookups, the pattern matching, the coding etc. But when you’re here for the real thing? When you’re trying to actually understand something that matters? Seek the humans. Ask the questions. Build the relationships. Because wisdom has always been relational. It’s not transmitted. It’s shared. And that makes all the difference.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Replies (3)

Here’s another gem: “The idea of having a thing, is almost always cooler than actually having the thing.” I’ve been there and learned that lesson. I see guys spending thousands of dollars on toys that are either a draw on their finances because of maintenance, financing and storage costs. Or items that sit in their shop largely unused because the poor sap is working 60 hour weeks to pay for them.
Interesting... Lots to think about, appreciate it. Wouldn't mind exploring this further - I definitely believe there's value in both - Because here’s the thing: you don’t just need correct information. You need to understand how someone got there. You need the context, the nuance, the “yeah, but watch out for this one thing that nobody tells you.” You need their beautiful human incompleteness, because that’s where the actual learning lives. My fear would be the person's context, without accurate/correct information - is like asking them 'their truth' - there's still value in understanding how they interpret things but also having reality/correct info to compare it against contextualizes things further.