On 4/16/19 11:52 PM, David West wrote:
I am currently in Amsterdam - probably moving here for several years as two 
colleagues and I are starting a software development business.

I'm jealous! A friend of mine in Utrecht suggested we start an organization 
together.  But until Renee' finished school we were rooted here.

While abandoning the institution of religion, the Dutch (who I am coming to know) remain 
religious in the sense that they still have a belief system. It is a syncretic 'religion' 
that seamlessly blends humanism, (mostly) Protestantism, and "sciencism." This 
religion has no dogma, no dictats, no fatwas. An anthropomorphized/personified God is far 
closer to metaphor than literal assertion. What remains is a shared 'sense' of how to 
interpret all that is about you and how to interact with each other.

This sounds similar to the way my Swedish client's 20-something kids and their 
crowd believe(d).  It felt much more like an ethical system than a religion. As 
usual, I spent more time with the kids than with the adults ... maybe because 
I'm so immature ... or maybe I'm a social vampire. But by the nature of my 
skeptical questioning, some of the kids reacted (defensively) as if some of the 
ideas were religious belief. But not very different from some of the 
near-religious beliefs in some technical circles (e.g. the Singularity and 
strong AI).  I also can't help but associate their blended philosophy with the 
free flow of Molly in their crowd.  That group flowed smoothly between art and 
tech, equally enthusiastic about microcontrollers and VR as they were about 
music and art installations. The drug seemed to facilitate the blending.

As I've watched them age and settle into life paths, the frenetic activity has 
waned, but the philosophy remains.

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