Vitalik Buterin pfp
Vitalik Buterin
@vitalik.eth
A heuristic for how freedom-friendly your urbanism aesthetic is: If you draw an image of a city with your urbanism aesthetic, and then replace a random building with a McDonalds, how much worse does it become? Lunarpunk clearly beats solarpunk on this dimension.
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Devon pfp
Devon
@devon
That is one branch of solarpunk art, but I prefer this interpretation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UqJJktxCY9U It's also more resilient to the McDonalds test (although not perfectly so) I hope the Dear Alice style is what people think of as solarpunk becomes more mainstream, though I think it's unlikely
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Devon pfp
Devon
@devon
The most common style of solarpunk art depicts scenes from an aerial view, rather than a human perspective As a result, many solarpunk artists systematically underrate the texture of real life Maybe it's because real life is messy, and it's harder to depict it without getting bogged down by the mundanity of it all
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Devon pfp
Devon
@devon
Ironically, cyberpunk dystopias do a very good job depicting the grungy details and discordances of life I think this is because details are inherently complex and never as shiny and orderly as a skyline looks from afar It's easier to depict a utopia when you don't need to explain any of the details
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