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Joshua Levy

Engineering, AI, publishing, knowledge tools

Joshua Levy is a co-founder and the CEO of Holloway, with a strong background in writing, editing, engineering, design, AI, and information architecture.

He studied at Budapest Semesters in Mathematics and completed his MA at the University of California, Berkeley.

Joshua has held various key roles in notable organizations, including being the Co-Founder (Content and Product) and currently CEO at Holloway, as well as serving as an advisor at early-stage and growing startups.

His previous experience includes being the Head of Operations and Infrastructure at Viv Labs, Founding Engineer, Head of Operations at BloomReach, Director of Engineering at Cuil, and Software Engineer at SRI International.

Joshua Levy is passionate about building knowledge value chains and welcomes discussions on writing, editing, engineering, design, AI, and information architecture, especially for individuals working on book projects.

Highlights

Jan 17 · twitter

Just think the answer was so simple all along https://t.co/HB2I5EhHi1

Just think the answer was so simple all along https://t.co/HB2I5EhHi1
Dec 27 · twitter

Even if you aren’t sure how to have positive agency in your life, the miraculous thing is that often all you need is to think optimistically.

Feelings are hard to control (and in fact, trying to control them too much will likely have the opposite effect). But thoughts guide feelings. And you guide your thoughts.

If you begin to genuinely feel appreciation and see possibilities, then expose yourself to new situations, your own mind and the minds of others will follow with positive connections and actions.

Optimism is upstream of positive agency. The first step to making something a reality is to see it. The first step to helping yourself and others is cultivating a tendency for look for what is positive.

More profoundly, this works at the emotional level as well. People are deeply social and emotional creatures. Just as a dog will sense and feel happy or sad based on your emotions, people sense it as well. Their thoughts then follow their feelings.

This is not blind mysticism or superstition. It is not about denying that tragic things are happening every day. It is not saying that you do not need to work hard. It is not saying that even if you try your best, you will not sometimes have pain, disappointment, and failure.

Genuine optimism arises from seeing and feeling the true and practical reasons for being optimistic even in a world often filled with loneliness, loss, and suffering.

Genuine optimism of this kind is a rare skill. But I believe it’s entirely possible to develop it, even if you feel overwhelmed or cynical or depressed at a given moment. Somewhere inside you, even if you’ve been hurt so much that it’s hidden from you right now, is the capacity for seeing and for creating good in the world.

One of the kindest and most helpful things you can do is to cultivate genuine optimism. Model the ability to see the good in others and in the world. In fact, once you see this, you also see why being cynical about yourself, others, and the world is not just a form of small-mindedness: it is also irresponsible.

I hope I’ve explained this well, because it is not understood by so many young people I talk to. When I was younger, I felt like “being realistic” was going to protect me from disappointment. Perhaps it did. But it was also a form of cynicism that protected me from seeing positive possibilities too. I didn’t understand what genuine optimism was. I’m glad it took me only about 20 years to realize this.

“Everything that needs to be said has already been said. But since no one was listening, everything must be said again.” —André Gide

Mar 18 · CTV News
Russian oligarchs drop lawsuit over Trump dossier - CTV News
Russian oligarchs drop lawsuit over Trump dossier - CTV News
Golders Green Hippodrome planning verdict 'expected' July 19 | Hampstead Highgate Express - Hampstead Highgate Express
Joshua Levy
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San Francisco Bay Area