Observation Dharma: Difference between revisions
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At least one kind of participant in [[Multicellular Mankind]] has observation dharma explicitly: explorers. But all actions that one can take could be this since all actions explore the space of things possible in the Universe. The geneto-memetic ecosystem does mean that chronicling sensitive information in a proximate effort to be observable can lead to an ultimate defeat in the objective of exploration. Therefore, [[Purity Is Sin|strict adherence to complete transparency isn't required]]. | At least one kind of participant in [[Multicellular Mankind]] has observation dharma explicitly: explorers. But all actions that one can take could be this since all actions explore the space of things possible in the Universe. The geneto-memetic ecosystem does mean that chronicling sensitive information in a proximate effort to be observable can lead to an ultimate defeat in the objective of exploration. Therefore, [[Purity Is Sin|strict adherence to complete transparency isn't required]]. | ||
== Examples == | |||
Jake Seliger chronicled his death of squamous cell carcinoma<ref name=jakeseliger/>. | |||
Sid Sijbrandij, creator of [[wikipedia:GitLab Inc.|Gitlab Inc.]] | |||
{{Tweet | |||
| name = Sid Sijbrandij | |||
| username = sytses | |||
| text = I’m going Founder Mode on my cancer. | |||
Below is Elliot Hershberg’s article about my cancer journey. It gave language to something I’d been doing instinctively over the past year: managing my health in Founder Mode. | |||
Manager mode assumes that existing systems will surface the best options. When I was first diagnosed with cancer in 2022, I delegated the crucial analyses and decisions about my care to others. In late 2024, when my cancer reappeared and my doctors told me I had exhausted the standard of care and there were no trials for my situation, I realized that assumption might, quite literally, kill me. Founder Mode was my only option. | |||
Founder Mode meant going deep on every diagnostic and treatment option. It meant assembling a team of physicians and scientists to work from first principles to understand what was possible beyond standard protocols. Together, we paved new roads to access the very cutting edge of science and technology. Today, thanks to the efforts of many people around the world and the support of my wife Karen, I currently have no evidence of disease. | |||
But my fight with cancer is far from over. My team and I continue to develop treatments and strategies in case it returns. More importantly, I now understand firsthand the challenges patients face in order to secure their own data and necessary treatments, particularly personalized medicines. I increasingly see my role as removing structural barriers—breaking down walls that prevent data, treatments, and technologies from flowing where they’re needed. | |||
One of the core principles of the first company I founded, GitLab, was radical transparency, and it’s a principle I am bringing to my cancer care. To that end, I am going to be sharing more about my experiences, my treatments, my data, and what I am building to make the path that I’ve been on easier for others to follow. Please subscribe to my mailing list on http://sytse.com to stay updated. | |||
Lastly, I want to thank those who have been on this journey with me. There have been too many to all thank here but I appreciate every one of you. I did want to mention Jacob Stern, Alfredo Gonzalez, and Jeremiah Wala; the amazing teams at Private Health Management (shoutout to Jenn and Eva) and Willy Hoos and Pathfinder Oncology; Nima Afshar and Private Medical; Sant Chawla and the Sarcoma Oncology Center; John Connolly and his team at the Parker Institute; Will Hudson at Baylor College of Medicine; Kamil Slowikowski for his work on http://osteosarc.com; and Jeff Tsao, Will Gibson, Ali Samiei, Scott McConnell and the rest of the team at the Briger Foundation for Oncology Research. | |||
Going Founder Mode On Cancer | |||
https://centuryofbio.com/p/sid | |||
| date = Jan 19, 2026 | |||
| ID = 2013441820630643136 | |||
| ref-name = Tweet_2013441820630643136 | |||
| block = true | |||
}} | |||
== Notes == | |||
<references> | |||
<ref name=jakeseliger>{{cite web |url=https://jakeseliger.com/2023/07/22/i-am-dying-of-squamous-cell-carcinoma-and-the-treatments-that-might-save-me-are-just-out-of-reach/ |title=I am dying of squamous cell carcinoma, and the treatments that might save me are just out of reach |author=Jake Seliger |date=2023-07-22 |website=The Story's Story |access-date=2026-01-20}} | |||
</ref> | |||
</references> | |||
{{#seo:|description=Observation Dharma defines purpose as witnessing existence itself—exploration through experience where even failure serves understanding, balancing visibility with prudence in discovery.}} | {{#seo:|description=Observation Dharma defines purpose as witnessing existence itself—exploration through experience where even failure serves understanding, balancing visibility with prudence in discovery.}} | ||
[[Category:Concepts]] | [[Category:Concepts]] | ||
Latest revision as of 06:24, 21 January 2026
Observation Dharma is the idea of one's purpose being to act as a lens and recorder into existence through experiencing it. Even failure at one's proximate objectives meet observation dharma, though ideally such failures are visible for intelligent beings so that they can make informed choices about the Universe. At the least, others with this purpose can more efficiently cover the space of things possible.
At least one kind of participant in Multicellular Mankind has observation dharma explicitly: explorers. But all actions that one can take could be this since all actions explore the space of things possible in the Universe. The geneto-memetic ecosystem does mean that chronicling sensitive information in a proximate effort to be observable can lead to an ultimate defeat in the objective of exploration. Therefore, strict adherence to complete transparency isn't required.
Examples[edit]
Jake Seliger chronicled his death of squamous cell carcinoma[1].
Sid Sijbrandij, creator of Gitlab Inc.
Sid Sijbrandij @sytses I’m going Founder Mode on my cancer.
Below is Elliot Hershberg’s article about my cancer journey. It gave language to something I’d been doing instinctively over the past year: managing my health in Founder Mode.
Manager mode assumes that existing systems will surface the best options. When I was first diagnosed with cancer in 2022, I delegated the crucial analyses and decisions about my care to others. In late 2024, when my cancer reappeared and my doctors told me I had exhausted the standard of care and there were no trials for my situation, I realized that assumption might, quite literally, kill me. Founder Mode was my only option.
Founder Mode meant going deep on every diagnostic and treatment option. It meant assembling a team of physicians and scientists to work from first principles to understand what was possible beyond standard protocols. Together, we paved new roads to access the very cutting edge of science and technology. Today, thanks to the efforts of many people around the world and the support of my wife Karen, I currently have no evidence of disease.
But my fight with cancer is far from over. My team and I continue to develop treatments and strategies in case it returns. More importantly, I now understand firsthand the challenges patients face in order to secure their own data and necessary treatments, particularly personalized medicines. I increasingly see my role as removing structural barriers—breaking down walls that prevent data, treatments, and technologies from flowing where they’re needed.
One of the core principles of the first company I founded, GitLab, was radical transparency, and it’s a principle I am bringing to my cancer care. To that end, I am going to be sharing more about my experiences, my treatments, my data, and what I am building to make the path that I’ve been on easier for others to follow. Please subscribe to my mailing list on http://sytse.com to stay updated.
Lastly, I want to thank those who have been on this journey with me. There have been too many to all thank here but I appreciate every one of you. I did want to mention Jacob Stern, Alfredo Gonzalez, and Jeremiah Wala; the amazing teams at Private Health Management (shoutout to Jenn and Eva) and Willy Hoos and Pathfinder Oncology; Nima Afshar and Private Medical; Sant Chawla and the Sarcoma Oncology Center; John Connolly and his team at the Parker Institute; Will Hudson at Baylor College of Medicine; Kamil Slowikowski for his work on http://osteosarc.com; and Jeff Tsao, Will Gibson, Ali Samiei, Scott McConnell and the rest of the team at the Briger Foundation for Oncology Research. Going Founder Mode On Cancer
Jan 19, 2026[2]
Notes[edit]
- ↑ Jake Seliger (2023-07-22). "I am dying of squamous cell carcinoma, and the treatments that might save me are just out of reach". The Story's Story. Retrieved 2026-01-20.
- ↑ Sid Sijbrandij [@sytses] (Jan 19, 2026). "I'm going Founder Mode on my cancer. Below is Elli..." (Tweet) – via Twitter.
