Where are the new monthly threads when I need them? A pox on the +11 EDT zone!

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Open Thread: February 2010
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Since Karma Changes was posted, there have been 20 top level posts. With one exception, all of those posts are presently at positive karma. EDIT: I was using the list on the wiki, which is not up to date. Incorporating the posts between the last one on that list and now, there is a total of 76 posts between Karma Changes and today. This one is the only new data point on negatively rated posts, so it's 2 of 76.

I looked at the 40 posts just prior to Karma Changes, and of the forty, six of them are still negative. It looks like before the change, many times more posts were voted into the red. I have observed that a number of recent posts were in fact downvoted, sometimes a fair amount, but crept back up over time.

Hypothesis: the changes included removing the display minimum of 0 for top-level posts. Now that people can see that something has been voted negative, instead of just being at 0 (which could be the result of indifference), sympathy kicks in and people provide upvotes.

Is this a behavior we want? If not, what can we do about it?

[-]Jack130

One of the expected effects of the karma change is to make people more cautious about what they put in a top level post. Perhaps this is only evidence of that effect.

0MrHen
How many posts per week are presented now versus posts per week before the change? ETA: I guess another argument for this is that someone who posts a bad post gets dropped below the threshold much faster.
9wedrifid
No. It is not difficult to create a top level post that is approved of or at least kept at '0'. I want undesirable top level posts to hurt. Replace all '-ve' karma value displays of top level posts with '- points' or '<0 points'. We don't necessarily need to know just how disapproved of a particular post is.
0MrHen
It helps me as an author. -1 is a significant difference from -5.
4wedrifid
Easily solved technically. Show actual figures to the author.
0MrHen
Agreed.
6Paul Crowley
I've called before for median-based karma: you set a score you think a post should have and the median is used for display purposes, with "fake votes" reducing the influence of individual votes until there are enough to gain a true picture.
2MBlume
Arrow's Theorem seems relevant...
2SilasBarta
Or not.
0wnoise
That doesn't really avoid the issues in Arrow's Theorem, merely blunts them, assuring us that we shouldn't actually care about IIA. However, the fact that this karma scale is one-dimensional combined with the assumption that people have a singly-peaked preference function does show that this is one of those cases where Arrow's Theorem doesn't apply. Median is a good choice because it's not terribly gamable.
0SilasBarta
Actually, the point of the linked article was that irrelevant alternatives aren't. Rather, they reveal information about relative strengths of preferences IF, as Arrow's Theorem's assumes, you are restricted to voting methods involving ordinal ranking of the options. Therefore, you can avoid the claimed problems by being able to express the magnitude of your preference, not just its ranking against others, which is the idea proposed here.
0MBlume
Sweet, thanks.
0Paul Crowley
"One-dimensional" preferences are a special case, and I think solvable.
3Wei Dai
It could be sympathy, or a judgment that the poster shouldn't be excessively discouraged from posting in the future. Sure, why not? We can always change things later if we start getting overrun by bad posts, and people still aren't willing to vote them down into negative territory.
2CarlShulman
There is a limited downvote budget for each voter (in some ratio to the voter's budget). Downvoting a post now uses 10 points from that budget rather than 1, so perhaps low-karma downvoters (or downvoters who have exhausted their downvote budgets) are now having less of an impact.
1MrHen
I like seeing the negative number on my posts. But I have also noticed a voting trend that seems to be much more forgiving than the posts of old. The first wave of readers seem to vote up; the second wave votes down; over time it stabilizes somewhere near where the first wave peaked. This doesn't seem to happen on posts that are really superb. I think showing the full number of up and down votes would be helpful to authors and also let people know why a post is at the number it is. Seeing +5 -7 is different than seeing -2. That being said, karma inflation seems to be hitting. I am rarely getting downvoted on comments anymore. I don't think I have improved that much as a commentator. I am not convinced that the effects you are seeing are only happening to Posts. I think a great way to handle the Post karma is to hide the actual number for a week. Let it show + or - for positive or negative but no numbers. By the time one week has passed most people will have moved on. Another solution may be to keep actual voting history available and let people see votes by people who said their history is public. As far as I can tell, that preference doesn't do anything yet. ETA: Another solution would be to set karma rewards to only happen after a certain threshold. Between 0 and +5 you don't get any karma. After that, you get 10 karma per point. Everything under 0 still penalizes you 10 karma per point. Or the above but only getting rewards after a certain percentage votes up. +5 -1 nets 40 karma, +20 -16 nets nothing, but each have a score of +4.
2Alicorn
Voting history publication does do something - click on a user's name, and then click "liked" or "disliked", and you can see what top-level posts they have voted up or down. It just doesn't work backwards, and doesn't work for comments.
0MrHen
Ho ho! It does do something! Man, all these hidden features... thanks for the tip.
0MrHen
Debunking komponisto is negative but appears to have been removed from the list of recent posts.
0Alicorn
Looking at the timestamps, seems that "Debunking komponisto" is newer than the grandparent, so I couldn't have included it at the time.
0MrHen
Ah, okay. Wow, they're close.
0MichaelHoward
Make posting cost karma? That raises the break-even bar. I'm sure Open Threads etc that tend to sit near zero will magically get voted up to wherever that bar is after the rule change. If for example the cost was ten times the 25th percentile of post scores, you know you'll lose Karma if your post is in the bottom quarter of less wrong posts.
0MrHen
Each upvote is worth 10 karma, each downvote is worth -15? Borderline and controversial posts would get hit hard by this. Anything this complicated, though, owes it to the author to see both numbers.
0[anonymous]
Make posting cost karma? That raises the break-even bar. I'm sure Open Threads etc that tend to sit near zero will magically get voted up to wherever that bar is after the rule change. If for example the cost was ten times the 25th percentile, you know you'll lose Karma if your post is in the bottom quarter of less wrong posts.
0[anonymous]
Make posting cost karma? That raises the break-even bar. I'm sure Open Threads etc that tend to sit near zero will magically get voted up to wherever that bar is after the rule change.
0billswift
I wouldn't necessarily call it sympathy. Sometimes I will up- (or down-) vote something if I think it is better (or worse) than its current score suggests. The purpose of karma on articles should be to identify those most worth reading to those who haven't yet read them, not to be a popularity contest where everyone who disliked it votes it down forever.
9wedrifid
I also tend to vote posts up or down based on what I think the score ought to be. But it seems clear that sympathy plays a part. Liked posts spiral freely off towards infinity but disliked posts don't ever spiral down in a similar way. This gives a distinct bias to the expected payoff of posting borderline posts and so is probably not desirable.
-7wedrifid

Eliezer, how is progress coming on the book on rationality? Will the body of it be the sequences here, but polished up? Do you have an ETA?

8Eliezer Yudkowsky
Currently planned to be divided into three parts, "Map and Territory", "How To Actually Change Your Mind", and "Mysterious Answers to Mysterious Questions" - that should give you an idea of the intended content. No ETA, still struggling to find a writing methodology that gets up to an acceptable writing speed.

Eliezer's posts are always very thoughful, thought provoquing and mind expanding - and I'm not the only one to think this, seeing the vast amounts of karma he's accumulated.

However, reviewing some of the weaker posts (such as high status and stupidity and two aces ), and rereading them as if they hadn't been written by Eliezer, I saw them differently - still good, but not really deserving superlative status.

So I was wondering if Eliezer could write a few of his posts under another name, if this was reasonable, to see if the Karma reaped was very different.

This is a reasonable justification for using a sockpuppet, and I'll try to keep it in mind the next time I have something to write that would not be instantaneously identifiable as me.

7Alicorn
But you'll have to build up the sockpuppet to 50 points before it can make a top post. Can you write that many comments that aren't identifiable as yours?
4byrnema
Perhaps, contact someone likely and ask them to paraphrase the post in their words and submit it as their own? Now we'll be getting all kinds of posts with, "Eliezer did not write this..or maybe he did!" ...
1MrHen
That is an interesting concept to toy with user expectations. I don't know how well it would be received but I'd love to see data from such an experimentation.
0Kevin
I wouldn't, it's not going to be meaningful after one or two tries. I suppose it could be interesting if it was announced in advance that Eliezer was going to try it and then we could spend the next few months accusing each other of being Eliezer witch-hunt style, except with Bayesian priors. Seriously, I am in favor of doing it that way.
0SilasBarta
Thinking of the recent art threadjack I was party to recently -- I wish the art community would do that! Without the paraphrasing, though. And then, of course, be sure to get independent evaluations of a work before discussing it with anyone to prevent information cascades.
3John_Maxwell
I think it would be acceptable for him, as a site administrator, to doctor the scores of his own comments behind the scenes to make his sockpuppet pass that threshold.
3gregconen
It's easy if you have a few co-conspirators. Find five quotes, post them on the quotes thread, ask 9 people to vote each one up (and vote them up as Eliezer Yudkowsky). It probably wouldn't even take that many, since some would certainly be voted up on their own. But perhaps it would be better, if possible, to hide (or least offer the option to hide) the author of a top-level post. Anyone who cared enough to closely track karma could tell who posted it, but it would weed out a lot of knee-jerk EY upvotes.
0RobinZ
I was about to mention your distinctive writing style. :)
4CarlShulman
Yvain writes in a consciously similar style, and gets even more karma than Eliezer per post, I think.
2komponisto
It has seemed to me that some of Eliezer's recent post scores have been inflated by around 5-10 points due to his being Eliezer; it would be interesting to test this hypothesis.
3Unknowns
I wonder if, if the hypothesis were tested and confirmed, anyone would admit to being one of the 5-10 persons who upvote for that reason?

I'm one of the 5-10.

There is a depth to "this is an Eliezer agument, part of a rich and complicated mental world with many different coherent aspects to it" that is lacking in "this is a random post on a random subject". In the first case, you are seeing a facet of larger wisdom; in the second, just an argument to evaluate on merits.

I thought of a voting tip that I'd like to share: when you are debating someone, and one of your opponent's comment gets downvoted, don't let it stay at -1. Either vote it up to 0, or down to -2, otherwise your opponent might infer that you are the one who downvoted it. Someone accused me of this some time ago, and I've been afraid of it happening again ever since.

It took a long time for this countermeasure to occur to me, probably because the natural reaction when someone accuses you of unfair downvoting is to refrain from downvoting, while the counterintuitive, but strategically correct response is to downvote more.

5Kaj_Sotala
An automatic block against downvoting any comment that's a direct response to one of yours would be good.
5bgrah449
My karma management techniques: 1) If I'm in a thread and someone's comment is rated equally with mine, and therefore potentially displaying atop my comment, I downvote theirs until it'll pass mine despite my downvote, to give my comment more exposure. I remove the downvote later, usually upvoting (their comment is getting voted better than mine because it's good). 2) If I'm debating someone and I want to downvote their comment, I upvote it for a day or so, then later return to downvote it. This gives the impression that two objective observers who read the thread later agreed with me. This works best on long debate threads, because a) if my partner's comments are getting immediately upvoted, they tend to be encouraged and will continue the debate, further exposing themselves to downvotes and b) they get fewer reads, so a single vote up or down makes a much bigger impression when almost all the comments in the thread are rarely upvoted/downvoted past +/- 2. 3) Karma is really about rewarding or punishing an author for content, to encourage certain types of content. Comments that are too aggressive will not be upvoted even if people agree with the point, because they don't want to reward aggressive behavior. Likewise, comments that are not aggressive enough are given extra karma - the reader's first instinct is to help promote this message because the timid author won't promote it enough on his own. This is nonsensical in this format, but the instinct is preserved. I've noticed that the comments that get voted up the most are those that do probability calculations, those whose authors' names pop out of the page, and those which are cynical on the surface, possibly with a wry humor, while revealing a deep earnestness. If you have something unpopular to say, or are just plain losing an argument, that's the best tone to take, because people will avoid downvoting if they disagree, but will usually upvote if they do agree. EDIT: I agree with Alicorn that votes should
[-]ata170

Upvoted for honesty.

Of course, I'll be back in a few days to downvote you.

8Unknowns
I can't believe you actually admitted to using these strategies.
4Wei Dai
It does make me impressed at his cleverness.
7Paul Crowley
Not me. At least for points 1 and 2, these strategies have occurred to me, but they're, you know, wrong. As for point 3, I like that we so strongly discourage aggression. I think that aggression and overconfidence of tone are usually big barriers to rational discussion.
1bgrah449
(General "you") Only if you see the partner who is the target of aggression as your equal. If you get the impression that target is below your status, or deserves to be, you will reward the comment's aggression with an upvote.
1Wei Dai
Does that mean you're not impressed at your own cleverness either? :-) Since I decided to avoid discussing karma, I'll keep my thoughts on the rest of your comment to myself. (But you can probably guess what they are.)
6michaelkeenan
I don't like that you are trying to mislead others. The deception you've described is of course minor and maybe you don't lie about important things. But it seems a dangerous strategy, for your own epistemic hygiene, to be casual with the truth. Even if I didn't regard it as ethically questionable, I wouldn't be habitually dishonest for the sake of my own mind.
6Zack_M_Davis
To win what? What is there to win?
0CannibalSmith
The same thing you play Tetris or any other game for. Whatever that is.
0Jack
Cheat codes make games boring.
-4bgrah449
If there was no game, we wouldn't keep score.
5byrnema
Your last paragraph was astute. I found this shocking: I wouldn't game the system like this not so much because of moral qualms (playing to win seems OK to me) but because I need straight-forward karma information as much as possible in order to evaluate my comments. Psychology and temporal dynamics are surely important, but without holding them constant (or at least 'natural') then the system would be way too complex for me to continue modeling and learning from.
-9bgrah449
4Douglas_Knight
This strategy can be eliminated by showing a count of both upvotes and downvotes, a change which has been requested for a variety of other reasons. I imagine it solves a lot of problems of anonymity, but it makes Wei Dai's dilemma worse. It makes downvoting the -1 preferable to upvoting it.
3loqi
Karma can be (and by your own admission, is) about more than first-order content. Excessively aggressive comments may not themselves contain objectionable content, but they tend to have a deleterious effect on the conversation, which certainly does affect subsequent content.
1bgrah449
(General "you") Only if you see the partner who is the target of aggression as your equal. If you get the impression that target is below your status, or deserves to be, you will reward the comment's aggression with an upvote.
0loqi
Are you speaking descriptively, or normatively? Your "karma is really about" statement led me to believe the latter, but this comment seems to lean toward the former. Could you link to some aggressive comments whose upvotes appear to be driven by status rather than the content they're replying to?
0bgrah449
Descriptively. I'll dig some up.
9CannibalSmith
Ding! This is a reminder. It's been 12 days since you promised to dig some up.
0wedrifid
I don't recall ever debating with you but knowing your strategy could potentially change the course of future debates. The usual 'karma management', and the more general 'Laws of Power' would suggest that keeping this strategy to yourself is probably wise. Of course, there are exceptions to that strategy too...
7bgrah449
I would prefer votes be public, so disseminating my knowledge of how to abuse anonymous scoring makes this more likely.
-1wedrifid
Good reason. PS: I would play dirtier if the public karma scores were in place. If I play to win I play to win.
-1Jack
What I really want to do is destroy you karma-wise. This behavior deserves to be punished severely. But I'm now worried about a chilling effect on others who do this coming forward. Also, everyone, see poll below.
2pjeby
I want to downvote you for this, because punishing people for telling the truth is a bad thing. On the other hand, you are also telling the truth, so... now I'm confused. ;-)
0Jack
Er, I was expressing my initial emotional reaction, not advocating a policy. Like I said, I'm worried about the chilling effect. I didn't even vote down the original comment! Much less destroy him/her.
-1Jack
If you have ever used one of bgrah's techniques, or some other karma manipulation technique that you believe would be widely frowned upon here vote this comment up. (Since apparently you people think this is a game, You can down vote the comment beneath this so I don't beat you.) EDIT: I seriously have to say this? If you don't like there being a poll vote down the above comment or the karma balancer below. Don't just screw up the poll out of spite.
5byrnema
I am considering voting up in order to tilt things in favor of making votes de-anonymized. Ironically, as soon as I do so, it's true..
2bgrah449
If it's not a game, why punish me? What's so offensive about me having high karma?
5Jack
There is nothing offensive about you having high karma. It is offensive that you you abused a system that a lot of us rely on for evaluating content and encouraging norms that lead to the truth. Truth-seeking is a communal activity and undermining the system that a community uses to find the truth is something we should punish. It's similar to learning that you had lied in a comment. I imagine the vast majority of your karma is not ill-gotten, I have no problem with you having it. Anyway, I haven't voted you down for precedent setting reasons.
0Kevin
It's a game; people take themselves too seriously sometimes. They also think that their moral system is superior to your moral system.
1wedrifid
If you have ever suppressed your best judgement on something because you feared the social consequences of not supplicating to the speaker vote this comment up.
0Alicorn
I'm not sure this poll is as anonymous as it should be for maximum accuracy. If votes are ever de-anonymized, someone might swing by and look at this.
4komponisto
Solution: never de-anonymize votes retroactively.
-2Jack
I'll delete the comment in a couple of weeks, or sooner if karma is de-anonymized.
0Jack
Karma balancer.
3Zack_M_Davis
(Downvoted. EDIT: Vote cancelled; see below.) "Opponent"? "Strategically correct response"? Are you sure we're playing the same game?
5Wei Dai
I don't understand why lately my comments have been so often uncharitably interpreted. In this case, my "game" is: * not wanting to be falsely accused of unfair downvoting (either publicly or just in other people's minds) * not wanting to see others being falsely accused of unfair downvoting * not wanting to see community members become enemies due to this kind of problem
1Zack_M_Davis
(Upvoted.) ... okay, maybe my comment was in poor taste. What I was trying to get at is that there's something very---can I say odd?---about downvoting in order to avoid the appearance of having downvoted.
5Wei Dai
Well, the way I see it, votes are meant to convey information. When a comment is at -1, we (and the author of that comment) don't know if it was downvoted by the opponent of the author, or by someone independent. When it's at -2, we know at least one independent person downvoted it, so that's much more useful information. Not to dump this on you, but I'm getting a bit frustrated at how often my comments are interpreted in the worst possible light, instead of given the benefit of doubt. After your criticism, it took me tens of minutes to think of a reply that I could be sure wouldn't gather further negative comments or downvotes. If anyone has ideas what I could do about this, I'd really appreciate it. Otherwise I'm considering taking a break for a while. (ETA: I've decided to refrain from mentioning karma again, since that seems to be the main trigger, or to only do so with extreme caution.)
6bgrah449
People don't like mentioning karma because karma is our quantified status, and we don't like to bring attention to our own status moves. They seem like legitimate points to me.
4Zack_M_Davis
I'm sorry; I was being unfair. Downvote my first comment in this thread, please. I also had a moment of self-awareness this morning---I just criticized you for voting for social-strategic reasons rather than solely the merit of the comment, but surely I was doing the same sort of thing that time when I upvoted Toby Ord even though I thought his comment was terrible because Toby Ord is a hotshot academic and I don't want him to think poorly of this community! Although speaking of self-awareness, maybe I should also mention that from introspection I can't tell if I would be having this same response if you weren't the eminent Wei Dai ... Augh! Could it be that we at Less Wrong are smart enough to avoid all the ordinary status games, but not smart enough to avoid the meta recursive anti-status status games? O horror; O terrible humanity!
0[anonymous]
In further retrospect, it seems clear that what I called "frustration" contained a large element of being offended, i.e., thinking that I wasn't given an amount of benefit of doubt befitting my status. Hopefully I gained enough control of my emotions to limit the damage this time. As you say, O horror; O terrible humanity! BTW, the reason I used "strategically correct" was to reference the past game theory discussions. I thought it would be interesting to point out another counterintuitive advice given by game theory.
0wedrifid
Not even close. It takes a lot of intellectual effort to keep track of what is actually going on in the conversations, even if they are slightly less 'Wrong' here. Toby is a hot shot academic? Now that fits things together somewhat better.
1thomblake
Sometimes these labels don't make a lot of sense to the people they're applied to. I've in the past been called a "serious academic", amongst other dubious things.
0Paul Crowley
FWIW I hope the result is that you don't feel forced away.
2Wei Dai
Thanks for the moral support, but I think what I need more is insights and ideas. :) Maybe I'll just stay away from anything meta, or karma related. In retrospect that seems to be what got me into trouble recently.
-5mattnewport
3Alicorn
I've noticed this too. It is one of several annoying problems that would evaporate if votes weren't anonymous.
5wedrifid
More problems would be caused by that change than would be solved.
2thomblake
That doesn't match my intuition about it. But then, I don't really like doing anything anonymously.
0arbimote
Perhaps keep anonymous votes too, but make them worth less or only use them to break ties.
0Vladimir_Nesov
It should be enough to let people volunteer to be non-anonymous voters to change the reputational impact (then, big enough inadequacy of the karma proxy will become visible).
0wedrifid
Parent voted back up strategically. ;)
0Jack
Do you not think there is sometimes reason to downvote a debating opponent?
2orthonormal
I see the heuristic "don't downvote in an argument you're participating in" as a good one for the kind of corrupted hardware we're running on (as in the Ends Don't Justify Means (Among Humans) post). Given that I could gain or lose (perceived) status in an argument, I'm apt to be especially biased about the quality of people's comments in said argument. I value the prospect of providing more fair and accurate karma feedback in general, even if that means going against object-level intuitions in particular cases. Usually, if I'm arguing with someone, and their reply is really as bad as it looks to me, several others will see that and downvote it anyway. If this happens and it hits -4 or so, then I feel justified in marking my opinion. In all other cases, I prefer to give the benefit of the doubt.
0thomblake
I agree, and have noticed the same effect.

LW became more active lately, and grew old as experience, so it's likely I won't be skimming "recent comments" (and any comments) systematically anymore (unless I miss the fun and change my mind, which is possible). Reliably, I'll only be checking direct replies to my comments or private messages (red envelope).

A welcome feature to alleviate this problem would be an aggregator for given threads: functionality to add posts, specific comments and users in a set of items to be subscribed on. Then, all comments on the subscribed posts (or all comments within depth k from the top-level comments), and all comments within the threads under subscribed comments should appear together as "recent comments" do now. Each comment in this stream should have links to unsubscribe from the subscribed item that caused this comment to appear in the stream, or to add an exclusion on the given thread within another subscribed thread. (Maybe, being subscribed to everything, including new items, by default, is the right mode, but with ease of unsubscribing.)

This may look like a lot, but right now, there is no reading load-reducing functionality, so as more people start actively commenting, less people will be able to follow.

4Paul Crowley
I find myself once again missing Usenet. Perhaps if LW had an API we could get back to writing specially-designed clients, which could do all the aggregation magic we might hope for?
0Vladimir_Nesov
"Recent comments" page has a feed.
0Paul Crowley
I was hoping for a rather richer API than that. "Recent comments" doesn't even include scores.
0matt
That's a trivial mod that Trike has time for. Do you want to specify what data you would like in an API, or try and get the code working yourself?
0Paul Crowley
I really should try and do it myself - for one thing, that means I can develop server and client in parallel.
1Vladimir_Nesov
Apparently even specific users have their own rss feeds, so I've settled with a feed aggregated from the feeds of a few people. It'd be better if the "friend" functionality worked (maybe it even does, but I don't know it!), so that the same could be done within the site, with voting and parent/context links.
0Wei Dai
An easier to implement feature that would also help alleviate this problem is to have the system remember the last comment read, and then have an option to display all new comments since then in a threaded fashion on one big page, so we can skip whole threads of new comments at once. (I have been thinking about this, and started writing a PHP script to scrape Less Wrong and build the threaded view, but gave up due to technical difficulties.) Also, I think comments on one's posts should activate the red envelope, but don't right now. Should we private message you if we answer one of your posts and want a reply?
0matt
It's worth sending me requests for access like that. Trike is short on time, but very keen on any time we can spend with a string multiplier on your time. What do you want in an API?
3Wei Dai
Basically, I think what's needed is an API to retrieve a list of comments satisfying some query as an XML document. I'm not sure what kind of queries the system supports internally, so I'll just ask for as much generality and flexibility as possible. For example, I'd like to be able to search by a combination of username, post ID, date, points (e.g., all comments above some number of points), and comment ID (e.g., retrieve a list of comments given a list of IDs, or all comments that come after a certain ID). If that's too hard, or development time is limited, I would settle now for just a way to retrieve all comments that come after a certain comment ID, and doing additional filtering on the client side. Also, while I have your attention, where can I find some documentation about the Less Wrong codebase? I tried to read it once, and found it quite hard to understand, and was wondering if there's a guide to it somewhere.
1Douglas_Knight
There is an API for that, but it's broken. this (rss) should get you the 40 comments later than comment number 1000, but it gives 50, regardless of how many you ask for. Also, it rarely gives a link to go to the later comments (only for earlier ones). but if you've been walking these things, you probably knew that. ETA: I misinterpreted the API. "count" is not supposed to control the number of comments, but as a hint to the server about how far back. If that hint is missing or wrong, it leaves out prev/next. Especially prev. You can make prev appear by adding &count=60 (anything over 50), but every time you click prev, it will decrease this number by 50 and eventually not give the prev. You could make it very large.
0byrnema
Would I modify this, or something else, to get the first comment of a particular user?
3Douglas_Knight
You can stick ?before=t1_1 onto the end of a user page to get the first comment. yours
0byrnema
Awesome! I occasionally want to skim through someone's posts chronologically, or at least read their first few comments, to see how their views might have changed over time, and see to what extent I can tell the state of mind they were in when they arrived here.
3Douglas_Knight
Since this interface is broken, it's not so easy to skim. The page is supposed to have a "prev"[1] link at the bottom, but it doesn't. ETA: better for skimming is to add not just ?before=t1_1 to the user page, but also &count=100000 [1] I hate the use of prev/next, at least because it isn't standard (eg, it's opposite to livejournal). "earlier" and "later" would be clear.
0matt
http://github.com/tricycle/lesswrong - see "Resources" at bottom of page, mostly this (which is a wiki, so if you learn more, please share).

While the LW voting system seems to work, and it is possibly better than the absence of any threshold, my experience is that the posts that contain valuable and challenging content don't get upvoted, while the most upvotes are received by posts that state the obvious or express an emotion with which readers identify.

I feel there's some counterproductivity there, as well as an encouragement of groupthink. Most significantly, I have noticed that posts which challenge that which the group takes for granted get downvoted. In order to maintain karma, it may in fact be important not to annoy others with ideas they don't like - to avoid challenging majority wisdom, or to do so very carefully and selectively. Meanwhile, playing on the emotional strings of the readers works like a charm, even though that's one of the most bias-encouraging behaviors, and rather counterproductive.

I find those flaws of some concern for a site like this one. I think the voting system should be altered to make upvoting as well as downvoting more costly. If you have to pick and choose what comments and articles to upvote/downnvote, I think people will be voting with more reason.

There are various ways to make voti... (read more)

8orthonormal
Um, that math doesn't work out unless the number of new users expands exponentially fast. You need F(n) to be at least n, and probably significantly greater, in order to avoid a massive bottleneck.
2Cyan
I thought of that too, but then I realized the karma:upvote conversion rate on posts is 10:1, which complicates the analysis of the karma economy.
1denisbider
If F(n) < n, then yes, karma disappears from the system when voting on comments, but is pumped back in when voting on articles. It does appear that the choice of a suitable F(n) isn't quite obvious, and this is probably why F(n) = infinite is currently used. Still, I think that a more restrictive choice would produce better results, and less frivolous voting.
5AndyWood
A community is only as good as its constituents. I would hope that there are enough people around who like majority-wisdom-challenging insights, to offset this problem. "Insights" being the key word.
0mattnewport
Are you aware that downvotes are already limited by karma? Limiting upvotes as well might have merit. There probably needs to be a bias towards upvotes however, otherwise it will be very difficult to get significant positive karma.
-8denisbider
[-]Cyan100

If I understand the Many-Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics correctly, it posits that decoherence takes place due to strict unitary time-evolution of a quantum configuration, and thus no extra collapse postulate is necessary. The problem with this view is that it doesn't explain why our observed outcome frequencies line up with the Born probability rule.

Scott Aronson has shown that if the Born rule doesn't hold, then quantum computing allows superluminal signalling and the rapid solution of PP)-complete problems. So we could adopt "no superluminal signalling" or "no rapid solutions of PP-complete problems" as an axiom and this would imply the Born probability rule.

I wanted to ask of those who have more knowledge and have spent longer thinking about MWI: is the above an interesting approach? What justifications could exist for such axioms? (...maybe anthropic arguments?)

ETA: Actually, Aronson showed that in a class of rules equating probability with the p-norm, only the 2-norm had the properties I listed above. But I think that the approach could be extended to other classes of rules.

9Eliezer Yudkowsky
Non-Born rules give us anthropic superpowers. It is plausibly the case that the laws of reality are such that no anthropic superpowers are ever possible, and that this is a quickie explanation for why the laws of reality give rise to the Born rules. One would still like to know what, exactly, these laws are. To put it another way, the universe runs on causality, not modus tollens. Causality is rules like "and then, gravity accelerates the bowling ball downward". Saying, "Well, if the bowling ball stayed up, we could have too much fun by hanging off it, and the universe won't let us have that much fun, so modus tollens makes the ball fall downward" isn't very causal.
2Cyan
This reminds me of an anecdote I read in a biography of Feynman. As a young physics student, he avoided using the principle of least action to solve problems, preferring to solve the differential equations. The nonlocal nature of the variational optimization required by the principle of least action seemed non-physical to him, whereas the local nature of the differential equations seemed more natural.* I wonder if there might not be a more local and causal dual representation of the principle of no anthropic superpowers. Pure far-fetched speculation, alas. * If this seems vaguely familiar to anyone, it's because I'm repeating myself.

Of interesting trivia: This open thread is at 256 comments by February 3rd. For comparison:

January's had a total of 709
December is at 260
November is at 490
October is at 399

An ~hour long talk with Douglass Hofstadter, author of Godel, Escher, Bach.

Titled: Analogy as the Core of Cognition

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8m7lFQ3njk#t=13m30s

[-]Cyan70

"Cf." is sometimes misused around here.

0Zack_M_Davis
Okay, yes, bad habit. I'll stop, I'll stop!
0RobinZ
Thank you.

Fun sneaky confidence exercise (reasons why exercise is fun and sneaky to be revealed later):

Please reply to this comment with your probability level that the "highest" human mental functions, such as reasoning and creative thought, operate solely on a substrate of neurons in the physical brain.

<.05

I am no cognitive scientist, but I believe some of my "thinking" takes place outside of brain (elsewhere in my body) and I am almost certain some of it takes place on my paper and computer.

4loqi
Speaking of "thinking" with neurons other than those found in the brain, kinesthetic learning gives me pause concerning the sufficiency of cranial preservation in cryonics. How much "index-like" information do we store in the rest of our neurons? Does this vary with one's level of kinesthetic dependence? Would waking up disconnected from the rest of our nervous system (or connected to a "generic" substitute) be merely disorienting, or could it constitute a significant loss of personality/memory? Neuroscientists, help!

When I signed up for cryonics, I opted for whole body preservation, largely because of this concern. But I would imagine that even without the body, you could re-learn how to move and coordinate your actions, although it might take some time. And possibly a SAI could figure out what your body must have been like just from your brain, not sure.

Now recently I have contracted a disease which will kill most of my motor neurons. So the body will be of less value and I may change to just the head.

The way motor neurons work is there is an upper motor neuron (UMN) which descends from the motor cortex of the brain down into the spinal cord; and there it synapses onto a lower motor neuron (LMN) which projects from the spinal cord to the muscle. Just 2 steps. However actually the architecture is more complex, the LMNs receive inputs not only from UMNs but from sensory neurons coming from the body, indirectly through interneurons that are located within the spinal cord. This forms a sort of loop which is responsible for simple reflexes, but also for stable standing, positioning etc. Then there other kinds of neurons that descend from the brain into the spinal cord, including from the limbic system, the center of emotion. For some reason your spinal cord needs to know something about your emotional state in order to do its job, very odd.

7AdeleneDawner
Fascinating. Citation?
2loqi
I'm much less worried by this than I am by the prospect that I'd have to do the same for many of my normal thought patterns due to unforeseen inter-dependencies. Indeed, that's one of the reasons why I prefer thinking about it solely in terms of stored information: a redundant copy only really constitutes a pointer's worth of information. It's even conceivable that a SAI could reconstruct missing neural information in non-obvious ways, like a few stray frames of video. Not worth betting on, though. Thanks for the informative reply.
4AdeleneDawner
This was the first objection that my neuroscientist friend brought up when I tried to talk to him about (edit:) cryonics. I don't think science knows yet how dependent we are on our peripheral nervous system, but he seemed fairly sure that we are to a nontrivial degree.
8Paul Crowley
As I say to every objection I hear to cryonics at the moment, your neuroscientist friend should write a blog post or some such about his objections - he has a very low bar to clear to write the best informed critique in the world. (Guessing you mean cryonics - cryogenics is something else though not unrelated)
2AdeleneDawner
I'll mention it to him. (And, yes, oops.)
3pjeby
Voted up and seconded. Yvain, If what you actually mean is "operate solely through physical means contained within the human body or physical means manipulated by interaction with the human body," then I'll up it to whatever number is supposed to be used for, "I'm only leaving room for uncertainty because there's no such thing as certainty." ;-)
9Paul Crowley
I'm at least +70 decibans ("99.99999%") confident that mental states supervene on to physical states. Whether your exact description to do with neurons in the brain completely captures all the physical states I'm less confident of. EDIT: updated from 30 to 70 decibans: I would more easily be convinced that I had won the lottery than that this wasn't so.
4MichaelHoward
I might be misunderstanding what you mean by 'more easily be convinced', but if the nature of the evidence we'd expect to be doing the convincing is so different in each case, I don't think we can rely on that to tell how much we believe something. I was much less easily convinced about Many Worlds that I would be that I'd won the lottery, but beforehand I think I'd have put the odds about the same as rolling a six.
0[anonymous]
I don't think we can use an ease-of-convincing heuristic to compare deciban levels, if the nature of the evidence we'd expect to get is so different. I was much less easily convinced about Many Worlds that I would be that I'd won the lottery, but beforehand I think I'd have put the odds about the same as rolling a six.
8HalFinney
Like others, I see some ambiguity here. Let me assume that the substrate includes not just the neurons, but the glial and other support cells and structures; and that there needs to be blood or equivalent to supply fuel, energy and other stuff. Then the question is whether this brain as a physical entity can function as the substrate, by itself, for high level mental functions. I would give this 95%. That is low for me, a year ago I would probably have said 98 or 99%. But I have been learning more about the nervous system these past few months. The brain's workings seem sufficiently mysterious and counter-intuitive that I wonder if maybe there is something fundamental we are missing. And I don't mean consciousness at all, I just mean the brain's extraordinary speed and robustness.
7Morendil
Still curious... How about giving us an ETA?
7SilasBarta
As opposed to ...? Ion channels? Quantum phenomena? Multiple interacting brains? Non-neuronal tissue? Neuronal-but-extracranial cells? Soul? Beings outside the observable universe, running the simulator? What is this belief supposed to be distinguished from?
2nawitus
Well, hormones, and chemicals such as DMT or endocannabinoids etc surely affect the thinking progress. But the phrasing of the question is not really clear to say if you can count these.
6CronoDAS
To get nitpicky, the brain is made of both neurons and glial cells - and the glial cells also seem to play a role in cognition.
4Morendil
I am quite comfortable with the idea that I am my brain, that my brain is made of ordinary living matter (atoms making up molecules making up proteins making up cells), that this matter forms specialized structures responsible for cognition, and I would be hugely surprised if given proof that the highest mental functions cannot be explained adequately in terms of that ontology. The strangest alternative I can think of is Penrose's ENM incomputable-quantum-coherence hypothesis and I'd assign less than 5% probability to his thesis being correct.
3Zack_M_Davis
Commenting before reading other replies---I'm going to give the boring, sneaky reply that the question isn't well-specified enough to have an answer; I'd need to know more about what you mean by something to operate solely on a substrate. I mean, clearly there are a lot of cognitive tasks that most people can only do given a pencil and paper, or a computer ... is that the sneaky part, that we store information in the environment, and therefore we're not solely neurons?
3Kaj_Sotala
How does "operate solely on" regard distributed cognition arguments, like "creative thought is created via interaction with the remaining human culture" and "we constantly offload cognitive processes (such as memory) to external substrates (like computers and books)"? Also, the "highest" human mental functions operate via a number of lower-level processes. Does "solely on human neurons" include e.g. possible quantum phenomena on a low level?
0Morendil
Good points (whether or not they're why the question is "sneaky").
3byrnema
Could you clarify what you mean by operate on? Or is that part of the point? Using the definition of 'operate on' that I think is most natural, I'd say there is a .05% chance that these functions only operate on (effect) the physical brain. Unless you mean directly, and then I would assign an 80% chance. Using the definition of 'operating on' meaning 'requiring', I'd say that there is a 90% chance (probability) that only the brain is required for 90% (fraction) of its functioning. The probabilities I assign would fall down dramatically as you try to raise the 2nd 90% (the fraction). So that I would probably only assign a 1% chance that 100% of higher functions require only the brain.
0byrnema
Given the variety of answers here -- further outside what I had considered -- I should qualify that whenever I was thinking of 'beyond the brain' I still meant within the body; like my spinal cord, heart and endocrine system being involved.
2DonGeddis
With a straightforward interpretation of your question, I'd answer "95%". But since you made special mention of being "sneaky", I'll assume you've attempted to trick me into misunderstanding the question, and so I'll lower my probability estimate to 75%, with the missing twenty points accounting for you tricking me by your phrasing of the question.
1CannibalSmith
One minus epsilon.
0JGWeissman
Do you mean that for every epsilon greater than 0, your assigned probability is at least one minus epsilon? If so, you might as well just say one, which isn't a probability.
0RobinZ
Jargon File on "epsilon".
1RobinZ
"Highest" confidence is 100%, when the brain does not implement any consideration of failure. Next highest increment is over 99%, I suspect. Call that my guess. Edit: I'm an idiot - ignore this response. I thought it was asking "what is the highest confidence level that the brain implements in considering the probability of a proposition", which is different and interesting.
1Paul Crowley
I don't think the brain really implements proper probablistic confidence levels.
0RobinZ
Probably not, no.
1Paul Crowley
So not the spinal cord, for example?
1Jonii
Around 10%.
1arundelo
90%
2arundelo
I'm writing this comment after coming up with my probability level but before reading anyone else's responses. Until Yvain's question, I had not put a number on this. I suspect if there were a machine that could measure how confident I "really" am, it would show a higher number. I spent less than a minute translating from my previous estimate of "highly confident but not certain" to a percentage. Things I considered that made the probability higher: * Every time humans have figured out how something works, the explanation has been a reductionist one. * The only reason to think that the mind would be an exception to this is that the mind is unique in other ways (qualia/subjective experience; free will). Things I considered that made the probability lower: * The proposition under question could be false for two different reasons: * ontologically basic mental entities * physical yet non-neurological parts of the mind's substrate * I don't know how the mind works (nor does anyone else), so I should nudge my probability estimate away from certainty either way. * The mind is indeed unique.
0Morendil
Yvain, are you going to follow up on this now that you seem to have somewhat more time for participation here? ;)
2Scott Alexander
Short answer: I had just read an article on a book called "The Root of Thought" which made it sound like it was making a very convincing case for a lot of higher thought being based in glial cells and not neurons. It would have been fun and educational to get everyone to say they were 99.999% confident that thought was neural (which I would have done before reading the summary) and then spring the whole glial cell thing on them. But I ended up not having time to read or even acquire the book, and no one really took the bait anyway. But yeah, "Root of Thought". If any of you have read it, please tell me what you think.
0Morendil
Thanks! I was starting to expect something like that, though in fact I've only recently become aware that the scientific consensus is shifting away from seeing glial cells as more or less just stuffing. My mom is a neuroscientist and she mentioned that some time ago, I was planning to question her a little bit more about that topic. (Interestingly given her profession, she is vehemently skeptical that AI is at all possible, but that's a story for another day.)
0SilasBarta
I'd be happy with just an answer to the clarification I've been asking for...
0Torben
1%. I find the question ambiguous. Glial cells very likely have a major effect (I assume it's not part of the exercise to look it up). This is discounting blood vessels and other necessary logistics.
0Paul Crowley
Time for the reveal on this one I think!
0SilasBarta
Still waiting for you to clarify what this belief is supposed to be distinguished from...
0ata
I'm going to say 98%, and not account for fun/sneakiness, because I don't know whether you're expecting people to underestimate or overestimate it. And because if the trick is in the wording of the proposition, I don't care enough to try to figure it out.
0Jack
My answer ranges from arbitrarily close to 0 and arbitrarily close to 1 depending on how I define the terms. The definitions I like have P very high.
0magfrump
Given a specific set of inputs/outputs (i.e. the virtual reality of existing as a human in a world with consistent computers, pencils and paper, teachers, students, etc.), and assuming that I intuitively understand what a "substrate of neurons" is, extremely certain (see ciphergoth). Without a set of inputs or outputs, the question is a tree falling in a forest. A Turing machine doesn't perform computation if it doesn't have inputs.
0FAWS
Discounting the indication of sneakiness, which looks like it would change the probability if properly taken into account: 65% I wouldn't out of hand dismiss the possibility that parts of the physical body other than neurons in the brain are involved. For instance I wouldn't be terribly surprised if sub-vocalization of verbal thoughts played an important (albeit probably not irreplaceable) role. Confidence that no such thing as a metaphysical soul is involved: 99.9%
0AndyWood
I'm going to take your question in the simple sense that first occurs to me, which is something like "dualism is false, and mysterious quantum effects are unnecessary. ordinary molecular chemistry only." In that case, my probability approaches 1 that ordinary molecular chemistry is 100% sufficient to describe a system that implements reasoning and creative thought, and - heck - experiences consciousness. However, I also think that explaining how will require abstractions that are probably not yet well-understood.
0JamesAndrix
Depending on the terms, something near 100% or 0%. I offload some of my mental functions to the internet. Does that count?

A query to Unknown, with whom I have this bet going:

Unknown: When someone designs a superintelligent AI (it won't be Eliezer), without paying any attention to Friendliness (the first person who does it won't), and the world doesn't end (it won't), it will be interesting to hear Eliezer's excuses.

EY: Unknown, do you expect money to be worth anything to you in that situation? If so, I'll be happy to accept a $10 payment now in exchange for a $1000 inflation-adjusted payment in that scenario you describe.

I recently found within myself a tiny shred of an... (read more)

6CannibalSmith
SIAI: Utopia or hundred times your money back! Eliezer, would you accept a bet $100 against $10000?
5Eliezer Yudkowsky
On the same problem? I might attach some extra terms and conditions this time around, like "offer void (stakes will be returned) if the AI has the power and desire to use us for paperclips but our lives are ransomed by some other entity with the power to offer the AI more paperclips than it could produce by consuming us", "offer void if the explanation of the Fermi Paradox is a previously existing superintelligence which shuts down any new superintelligences produced", and "offer void if the AI consumes our physical bodies but we continue via the sort of weird anthropic scenario introduced in The Finale of the Ultimate Meta Mega Crossover." With those provisos, my probability drops off the bottom of the chart. I'm still not sure about the bet, though, because I want to keep my total of outstanding bets to something I can honor if they all simultaneously go wrong (no matter how surprising that would be to me), and this would use up $10,000 of that, even if it's on a sure thing - I might be able to get a better price on some other sure thing.
0Unknowns
If we survive by an anthropic situation (it's hard to see how that could preserve several persons together, but just in case), then you win the bet, since that would more like a second world than a continuation of this one. If the AI is shut down before it has had a chance to operate, the bet wouldn't have been settled yet, so you wouldn't have to pay anything. Anyway, I'm still going to win.
6Paul Crowley
You definitely win. If I say "you'll get killed doing that" and you are, I shan't expect to pay back my winnings when you're reanimated.
4pjeby
Perhaps you've already defined "superintelligent" as meaning "self-directed, motivated, and recursively self-improving" rather than merely "able to provide answers to general questions faster and better than human beings"... but if you haven't, it seems to me that the latter definition of "superintelligent" would have a much higher probability of you losing the bet. (For example, a Hansonian "em" running on faster hardware and perhaps a few software upgrades might fit the latter definition.)
0Unknowns
I think I would win the bet. It wouldn't exactly be "the end of the world", but just a very strange future of the world.
3Eliezer Yudkowsky
Really? Huh. To me that seems both pretty world-endy and strongly against the spirit of what was implied by your original statement... would you predict this outcome? Is it something that your model allows to happen? I know it's not something I would feel compelled to make excuses for - more like "I TOLD YOU SO!" What exactly do you think happens in the scenario described?
1Unknowns
Ok, if you're sufficiently worried about the possibility of that outcome, I'll be happy to grant it to your side of the bet... even though at the time, it seemed to me clear that your assertion that the world would end meant that we wouldn't continue as conscious beings. I definitely wouldn't predict that outcome. I would be very surprised, since I think the world will continue in the usual way. But is it really that likely even on your model?
0[anonymous]
It's part of a larger class of scenarios where "AI has the power and desire to kill us with a fingersnap, but our lives are ransomed by someone else with the ability to make paperclips".

To re-iterate a request from Normal Cryonics: I'm looking for links to the best writing out there against cryonics, especially anything that addresses the plausibility of reanimation, the more detailed the better.

I'm not looking for new arguments in comments, just links to what's already "out there". If you think you have a good argument against cryonics that hasn't already been well presented, please put it online somewhere and link to it here.

0AlanCrowe
A Problem With Cryonics
0Paul Crowley
Thanks.

I've created a rebuttal to komponisto's misleading Amanda Knox post, but don't have enough karma to create my own top-level post. For now, I've just put it here:

http://docs.google.com/View?id=dgb3jmh2_5hj95vzgk

If you actually want to debate this, we could do so in the comments section of my post, or alternatively over in the Richard Dawkins forum.

(Though since you say "my intent is merely to debunk komponisto's post rather than establish Amanda's guilt", I'm suspicious. See Against Devil's Advocacy.)

Make sure you've read my comments here in addition to my post itself.

There is one thing I agree with you about, and that is that this statement of mine

these two things constituting so far as I know the entirety of the physical "evidence" against the couple

is misleading. The misleading part is the phrase "so far as I know", which has been interpreted by people who evidently did not read my preceding survey post to mean that I had not heard about all the other alleged physical evidence. I didn't consider this interpretation because I was assuming that my readers had read both True Justice and Friends of Amanda, knew from my previous post that I had obviously read them both myself, and would understand my statement for what it was -- a dismissal of the rest of the so-called "evidence". However, in retrospect, I should have foreseen this misunderstand... (read more)

-1Jack
It is pretty clear to me that Devil's Advocacy is valuable for precisely the reasons in the link Eliezer added at the end of the post (Brandon). I'm not sure we should, therefore, be automatically linking to the piece in response to instances of Devil's advocacy until and unless someone writes a complementary post rebutting Brandon's.
-1wedrifid
The only reason I haven't posted my draft "Against Devil's Advocacy" is that someone beat me to the punch and I didn't want to make a redundant post. I endorce links to 'Against Devil's Advocacy' precisely because it is an important subset of 'Advocacy' with all the related problems.
-1rolf_nelson
Did you misread the source? I said: "One of Amanda's bloody footprints was found inside the murder room, on a pillow hidden under Meredith's body." The source I cited (http://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/International/story?id=7538538&page=2) said: "Guede's bloody shoeprint was also positively identified on a pillow found under the victim's body... Police also found the trace of a smaller shoe print on the pillow compatible with shoe sizes 6–8. The print did not, however, match any of the shoes belonging to Knox or Kercher that were found in the house. Knox wears a size 7, Rinaldi said." Anyway, a debate sounds like a fun use of free time; I replied to the comment you indicated: http://lesswrong.com/lw/1j7/the_amanda_knox_test_how_an_hour_on_the_internet/1gdo
7wedrifid
I don't understand how this was worked around. It looks like (rolf's karma + karma lost by this being posted at the top level) would still have been insufficient. The karma limit was serving the purpose for which it was intended. If, for some reason, an exception was granted I would like to see this announced.
5Wei Dai
Rolf is a major SIAI donor/supporter, so draw your own conclusion there. Here's a bunch of mine, for fun: * money > karma * control the physical layer * beware the other kind of status * money is the unit of caring; karma is just a number Seriously, I've had some interesting discussions with Rolf in the past elsewhere. I'm not sure why he doesn't participate much here, and why he chose this topic to put his efforts into. But maybe we can cut him some slack?
5wedrifid
Rolf isn't the one we'd be cutting slack to here. It is the moderator's decision to circumvent the karma system to post a political rant that warrants scrutiny. Eliezer has been quite adamant that this is not the blog of the SIAI. In that context and elsewhere the moderation process has been held to high standards of consistency and transparency. At least acknowledging that special allowances were made (and who made them) would be nice. I expect the moderator has already learned their lesson. Posting Rolf's rant seems to have allowed him to embarrass himself and can only be expected to have the opposite effect to the one intended. The ~50 karma limit gives people a chance to read posts like this and better calibrate his posting to the social environment before he puts his foot in his mouth. PS: Can anyone remember what the post was called in which Eliezer describes a scenario about deducing the bias of a coin? A motivated speaker gives only a subset of a stream of coin tosses... I couldn't remember the title.
7pengvado
What evidence filtered evidence?
2Paul Crowley
I had thought he was here solely to discuss this one thing. If he's interested in the things we're interested in in general as evinced powerfully by those donations then yes, I'll increase the slack I cut. Thanks.
-1Paul Crowley
BTW I think it's pretty unlikely that anyone at SIAI has used admin privs to allow Rolf to make a top-level post he wouldn't otherwise have been able to make.
4Vive-ut-Vivas
Criticizing komponisto for citing "Friends of Amanda Knox" while you yourself cite "True Justice" causes those criticisms to fall flat. Unfortunately, I find that your essay is wading into Dark Arts territory, since its intent is to show that komponisto's original essay was "misleading", and that that would somehow give veracity to arguments of Amanda Knox's guilt. Using that same logic, one would have to consider the implications of the chief prosecutor in Amanda Knox's case being convicted of abuse of office in another murder trial. However, I would be interested in seeing komponisto and rolf nelson discuss the actual details of the case; in particular, the points that rolf nelson brought up in the essay.
-2rolf_nelson
Re: dark arts territory, I agree completely. This criticism should be directed more strongly to komponisto. My intent here is merely to repair some of the Bayesian damage caused by komponisto's original post. Perhaps this will dissuade people from wandering into dark arts territory in the future, or at least to wander in with misleading claims.
8Vive-ut-Vivas
I hardly think komponisto inflicted "Bayesian damage" on the members of Less Wrong, seeing as they had already overwhelmingly come to the conclusion that Amanda Knox was not guilty before he had even presented his own arguments.
-2rolf_nelson
I said once in the doc that 'truejustice claims that X'. Because I said 'truejustice claims that X' rather than just stating X as though it were uncontested fact, and because X is basically correct, I claim that my doc is not misleading. If X is untrue, that would be a different story. In other words, if komponisto cited FoA and FoA's claims were true, I would not accuse him of being misleading.

We are status oriented creatures especially with regard to social activities. Science is one of those social activities, so it is to be expected that science is infected with status seeking. However it is also one of the more efficient ways we have of getting truths, so it must be doing some things correctly. I think that it may have some ideas that surround it that reduce the problems of it being a social enterprise.

One of the problems is the social stigma of being wrong, which most people on the edge of knowledge probably are. Being wrong does not signal... (read more)

0tut
Upvoted. Although I am curious as to how you will measure the status hits that various people take from being wrong.
1whpearson
I'd assumed there was standard ways of measuring it along the lines of a typical psychology experiment: involve two groups of people in two different scenarios (wrong, and wrong with retreat). Then quiz the audience on their opinion of the person, their intelligence, work with them,whether you would trust them to perform their area of expertise, be their friend, etc. However I can't find much with a bit of googling. I'll have a look into it later.
1tut
Thanks. That sounds good, but it is an experimental program, not something you'd observe on Less Wrong. I expect that you could get more complex results than yes or no. Like with some primes or some observers preparing a retreat would help, with others it wouldn't, and in some contexts you'd lose status and credibility directly for trying to prepare a retreat.
0whpearson
True. We are interested in communities where truth-tracking is high status, so that cuts down the number of contexts. We would also probably need to evaluate it against other ways of coping with being incorrect (disassociation e.g. Eliezer(1999), apology etc) and see whether it is a good strategy on average.

I seem to be entering a new stage in my 'study of Less Wrong beliefs' where I feel like I've identified and assimilated a large fraction of them, but am beginning to notice a collusion of contradictions. This isn't so surprising, since Less Wrong is the grouped beliefs of many different people, and it's each person's job to find their own self-consistent ribbon.

But just to check one of these -- Omega's accurate prediction of your choice in the Newcomb problem, which assumes determinism, is actually impossible, right?

You can get around the universe being ... (read more)

8Eliezer Yudkowsky
So long as you make your Newcomb's choice for what seem like good reasons rather than by flipping a quantum coin, it is likely that very many of you will pick the same good reasons, and that Omega can easily achieve 99% or higher accuracy. I would expect almost no Eliezer Yudkowskys to two-box - if Robin Hanson is right about mangled worlds and there's a cutoff for worlds of very small amplitude, possibly none of me. Remember, quantum branching does not correspond to high-level decisionmaking.
5byrnema
Yes, most Eliezer Yudkowskys will 1-box. And most byrnemas too. But the new twist (new for me, anyway) is that the Eliezer's that two-box are the ones that really win, as rare as they are.
2Eliezer Yudkowsky
The one who wins or loses is the one who makes the decision. You might as well say that if someone buys a quantum lottery ticket, the one who really wins is the future self who wins the lottery a few days later; but actually, the one who buys the lottery ticket loses.
1gregconen
The slight quantum chance that EY will 2-box causes the sum of EYs to lose, relative to a perfect 1-boxer, assuming Omega correctly predicts that chance and randomly fills boxes accordingly. The precise Everett branches where EY 2-boxes and where EY loses are generally different, but the higher the probability that he 1-boxes, the higher his expected value is.
3byrnema
And, also, we define winning as winning on average. A person can get lucky and win the lottery -- doesn't mean that person was rational to play the lottery.
3gregconen
Interestingly, I worked through the math once to see if you could improve on committed 1-boxing by using a strategy of quantum randomness. Assuming Omega fills the boxes such that P(box A has $)=P(1-box), P(1-box)=1 is the optimal solution.
1byrnema
Interesting. I was idly wondering about that. Along somewhat different lines: I've decided that I am a one-boxer,and I will one box. With the following caveat: at the moment of decision, I will look for an anomaly with virtual zero probability. A star streaks across the sky and fuses with another one. Someone spills a glass of milk and halfway towards the ground, the milk rises up and fills itself back into the glass. If this happens, I will 2-box. Winning the extra amount in this way in a handful of worlds won't do anything to my average winnings-- it won't even increase it by epsilon. However, it could make a difference if something really important is at stake, where I would want to secure the chance that it happens one time in the whole universe.
3byrnema
Why is this comment being down-voted? I thought it was rather clever to use Omega's one weak spot -- quantum uncertainty -- to optimize your winnings even over a set with measure zero.
1MrHen
Because Omega is going to know what triggers you would use for anomalies. A star streaking across the sky is easy to see coming if you know the current state of the universe. As such, Omega would know you are about to two-box even though you are currently planning to one-box. When the star streaks across the sky, you think, "Ohmigosh! It happened! I'm about to get rich!" Then you open the boxes and get $1000. Essentially, it boils down to this: If you can predict a scenario where you will two-box instead of one-box than Omega can as well. The idea of flipping quantum coins is more fool proof. The idea of stars streaking or milk unspilling is only hard for us to see coming. Not to mention it will probably trigger all sorts of biases when you start looking for ways to cheat the system. Note: I am not up to speed on quantum mechanics. I could be off on a few things here.
3byrnema
OK, right: looking for a merging of stars would be a terrible anomaly to use because that's probably classical mechanics and Omega-predictable. The milk unspilling would still be a good example, because Omega can't see it coming either. (He can accurately predict that I will two-box in this case, but he can't predict that the milk will unspill.) I would have to be very careful that the anomaly I use is really not predictable. For example, I screwed up with the streaking star. I was already reluctant to trust flipping quantum coins, whatever those are. They would need to be flipped or simulated by some mechanical device and may have all kinds of systematic biases and impracticalities if you are actually trying to flip 10^23^23 coins. Without having plenty of time to think about it, and say, some physicists advising me, it would probably be wise for me to just one-box.
-1Jack
I didn't down vote but I confess I don't really know what you're talking about in that comment. Why would you two box in that case? What really important thing is at stake? I don't get it.
1byrnema
OK. The way I've understood the problem with Omega is that Omega is a perfect predictor so you have 2 options and 2 outcomes: you two box --> you get $2,000 ($1000 in each box) you one box --> you get 1M ($1M in one box, $1000 in the second box) If Omega is not a perfect predictor, it's possible that you two box and you get 1,001,000. (Omega incorrectly predicted you'd one box.) However, if you are likely to 2box using this reasoning, Omega will adjust his prediction accordingly (and will even reduce your winnings when you do 1box -- so that you can't beat him). My solution was to 1box almost always -- so that Omega predicts you will one box, but then 'cheat' and 2-box almost never (but sometimes). According to Greg, your 'sometimes' has to be over a set of measure 0, any larger than that and you'll be penalized due to Omega's arithmetic. Nothing -- if only an extra thousand is at stake, I probably wouldn't even bother with my quantum caveat. One million dollars would be great anyway. But I can imagine an unfriendly Omega giving me choices where I would really want to have both boxes maximally filled ... and then I'll have to realize (rationally) that I must almost always 1 box, but I can get away with 2-boxing a handful of times. The problem with a handful, is that how does a subjective observer choose something so rarely? They must identify an appropriately rare quantum event.
2Jack
So this job could even be accomplished by flipping a quantum coin 10000 times and only two-boxing when they come up tails each time. You're just looking for a decision mechanism that only applies in a handful of branches.
1byrnema
Yes, exactly.
3gregconen
The math is actually quite straight-forward, if anyone cares to see it. Consider a generalized Newcomb's problem. Box A either contains $A or nothing, while box B contains $B (obviously A>B, or there is no actual problem). Let Pb the probability that you 1-box. Let Po be the probability that Omega fills box A (note that only quantum randomness counts, here. If you decide by a "random" but deterministic process, Omega knows how it turns out, even if you don't, so Pb=0 or 1). Let F be your expected return. Regardless of what Omega does, you collect the contents of box A, and have a (1-Pb) probability of collecting the contents of box B. F(Po=1)= A + (1-Pb)B F(Po=0)=(1-Pb)B For the non-degenerate cases, these add together as expected. F(Po, Pb) = Po(A + (1-Pb)B) + (1-Po)[(1-Pb)B] Suppose Po = Pb := P F(P) = P(A + (1-P)B) + [(1-P)^2] B =P(A + B - PB) + (1-2P+P^2) B =PA + PB - (P^2)B + B - 2PB + (P^2)B =PA + PB + B - 2PB =B + P(A-B) If A > B, F(P) is monotonically increasing, so P = 1 is the gives maximum return. If A<B, P=0 is the maximum (I hope it's obvious to everyone that if box B has MORE money than a full box A, 2-boxing is ideal).
2Jordan
I'm not sure why you take Po = Pb. If Omega is trying to maximize his chance of predicting correctly then he'll take Po = 1 if Pb > 1/2 and Pb = 0 if Pb < 1/2. Then, assuming A > B / 2, the optimal choice is Po = 1/2. Actually, if Omega behaves this way there is a jump discontinuity in expected value at Po=1/2. We can move the optimum away from the discontinuity by postulating there is some degree of imprecision in our ability to choose a quantum coin with the desired characteristic. Maybe when we try to pick a coin with bias Po we end up with a coin with bias Po+e, where e is an error chosen from a uniform distribution over [Po-E, Po+E]. The optimal choice of Po is now 1/2 + 2E, assuming A > 2EB, which is the case for sufficiently small E (E < 1/4 suffices). The expected payoff is now robust (continuous) to small perturbations in our choice of Po.
2gregconen
A good point. Your solution does have Omega maximize right answers. My solution works if Omega wants the "correct" result summed over all Everett branches: for every you that 2-boxes, there exists an empty box A, even if it doesn't usually go to the 2-boxer. Both answers are correct, but for different problems. The "classical" Newcomb's problem is unphysical, just as byrnema initially described. A "Quantum Newcomb's problem" requires specifying how Omega deals with quantum uncertainty.
0Jordan
Interesting. Since the spirit of Newcomb's problem depends on 1-boxing have a higher payoff, I think it makes sense to additionally postulate your solution to quantum uncertainty, as it maintains the same maximizer. That's so even if the Everett interpretation of QM is wrong.
2Nick_Tarleton
Let p be the probability that you 2-box, and suppose (as Greg said) that Omega lets P(box A empty) = p with its decision being independent of yours. It sounds like you're saying you only care about the frequency with which you get the maximal reward. This is P(you 2-box)*P(box A full) = p(1-p) which is maximized by p=0.5, not by p infinitesimally small.
4orthonormal
I think Omega's capabilities serve a LCPW function in thought experiments; it makes the possibilities simpler to consider than a more physically plausible setup might. Also, I'd say that our wetware brains probably aren't close to deterministic in how we decide (though it would take knowledge far beyond what we currently have to be sure of this), but e.g. an uploaded brain running on a classical computer would be perfectly (in principle) predictable.
2jimrandomh
What Omega can do instead is simulate every branch and count the number of branches in which you two-box, to get a probability, and treat you as a two-boxer if this probability is greater than some threshold. This covers both the cases where you roll a die, and the cases where your decision depends on events in your brain that don't always go the same way. In fact, Omega doesn't even need to simulate every branch; a moderate sized sample would be good enough for the rules of Newcomb's problem to work as they're supposed to. But the real reason for treating Omega as a perfect predictor is that one of the more natural ways of modeling an imperfect predictor is to decompose it into some probability of being a perfect predictor and some probability of its prediction being completely independent of your choice, the probabilities depending on how good a predictor you think it really is. In that context, denying the possibility that a perfect predictor could exist is decidedly unhelpful.
1byrnema
Thank to everyone who replied. So I see that we don't really believe that the universe is deterministic in the way implied by the problem. OK, that's consistent then.
1Alicorn
I'm sufficiently uninformed on how quantum mechanics would interact with determinism that so far I've been operating under the assumption that it doesn't. Maybe someone here can enlighten me? Does the behavior of things-that-behave-quantumly typically affect macro-level events, or is this restricted to when you look at them and record experimental data as a direct causal result of the behavior? Is there some way to prove that quantum events are random, as opposed to caused deterministically by something we just haven't found? (I'm not sure even in principle how you could prove that something is random. It'd be proving the negative on the existence of causation for a possibly-hidden cause.)
3orthonormal
Yes; since many important macroscopic events (e.g. weather, we're quite sure) are extremely sensitive to initial conditions, two Everett branches that differ only by a single small quantum event can quickly diverge in macroscopic behavior.
1tut
Yes. They only appear weird if you look at small enough scales, but classical electrons would not have stable orbits, so without quantum effects there'd be no stable atoms. No, but there is evidence. There is a proof that if they were caused by something unknown but deterministic (or if there even was a classical probability function for certain events) then they would follow Bell's inequalities. But that appears not to be the case.
3byrnema
But this is where things get really shaky for materialism. If something cannot be explained in X, this means there is something outside X that determines it. Materialists must hope that in spite of Bell's inequalities, there is some kind of non-random mechanism that would explain quantum events, regardless of whether it is possible for us to deduce it. Alicorn asked above: In principle, you can't. And one of the foundational (but non-obvious) assumptions of materialism is that nothing is truly random. The non-refutibility of materialism depends upon never being able to demonstrate that something is actually random. Later edit: I realize that this comment is somewhat of a non-sequitur in the context of this thread. (oops) I'll explain that these kinds of questions have been my motivation for thinking about Newcomb in the first place. Sometimes I'm worried about whether materialism is self-consistent, sometimes I'm worried about whether dualism is a coherent idea within the context of materialism, and these questions are often conflated in my mind as a single project.
1tut
In that case I am not a materialist. I don't believe in any entities that materialists don't believe in, but I do believe that you have to resort to Many Worlds in order to be right and believe in determinism. Questions that amount to asking "which Everett branch are we in" can have nondeterministic answers.
5byrnema
No worries -- you can still be a materialist. Many worlds is the materialist solution to the problem of random collapse. (But I think that's what you just wrote -- sorry if I misunderstood something.) Suppose that a particle has a perfectly undetermined choice to go left or go right. If the particle goes left, a materialist must hold in principle that there is a mechanism that determined the direction, but then they can't say the direction was undetermined. Many worlds says that both directions were chosen, and you happen to find yourself in the one where the particle went left. So there is no problem with something outside the system swooping down and making an arbitrary decision.
3CarlShulman
Those sorts of question can arise in non-QM contexts too.
1wnoise
Or, of course, the causes could be non-local.
1Alicorn
What are Bell's inequalities, and why do quantumly-behaving things with deterministic causes have to follow them?
7MBlume
Alicorn, if you're free after dinner tomorrow, I can probably explain this one.
4byrnema
The EPR paradox (Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox) is a set of experiments that suggest 'spooky action at a distance' because particles appear to share information instantaneously, at a distance, long after an interaction between them. People applying "common sense" would like to argue that there is some way that the information is being shared -- some hidden variable that collects and shares the information between them. Bell's Inequality only assumes there there is some such hidden variable operating locally* -- with no specifications of any kind on how it works -- and deduces correlations between particles sharing information that is in contradiction with experiments. * that is, mechanically rather than 'magically' at a distance
3Eliezer Yudkowsky
Um... am I missing something or did no one link to, ahem: http://lesswrong.com/lw/q1/bells_theorem_no_epr_reality/
0Alicorn
Thank you, although I find this a little too technical to wrap my brain around at the moment.
1tut
Well, actually everything has to follow them because of Bell's Theorem. Edit: The second link should be to this explanation, which is somewhat less funny, but actually explains the experiments that violate the theorem. Sorry that I took so long, but it appeared that the server was down when I first tried to fix it, so I went and did other things for half an hour.
-1CronoDAS
There's no good explanation anywhere. :(
0Jack
There is no special line where events become macro-level events. It's not like you get to 10 atoms or a mole and suddenly everything is deterministic again. You're position right now is subject to indeterminacy. It just happens that you're big enough that the chances every particle of your body moves together in the same, noticeable direction is very very small (and by very small I mean that I can confidently predict it will never happen). In principle our best physics tells us that determinism is just false as a metaphysics. Other people have answered the question you meant to ask which is whether the extreme indeterminacies of very small particles can effect the actions of much larger collections of particles.

IAWYC except, of course, for this:

In principle our best physics tells us that determinism is just false as a metaphysics.

As said above and elsewhere, MWI is perfectly deterministic. It's just that there is no single fact of the matter as to which outcome you will observe from within it, because there's not just one time-descendant of you.

-1Jack
Thats a fair point, but I don't think it is quite that easy. On one formulation a deterministic system is a system whose end conditions are set by the rules of the system and the starting conditions. Under this definition, MWI is deterministic. But often what we mean by determinism is that it is not the case that the world could have been otherwise. For one extension of 'world' that is true. But for another extension, the world not only could have been otherwise. It is otherwise. There are also a lot of confusions about our use of indexicals here: what we're referring to with "I", "You", "This", "That" My" etc. Determinism usually implies that ever true statement (including true statements with indexicals) is necessarily true. But it isn't obvious to me that many worlds gives us that. Also, a common thought experiment to glean people's intuitions about determinism is basically to say that we live in a universe where a super computer that can exactly predict the future is possible. MWI doesn't allow for that. Perhaps we shouldn't try to fit our square-pegged physics into the round holes of traditional philosophical concepts. But I take your point.
1pengvado
Why would determinism have anything to say about indexicals? There aren't any Turing-complete models that forbid indexical uncertainty; you can always copy a program and put the copies in different environments. So I don't see what use such a concept of "determinism" would have.
-1Jack
Thinking about this it isn't a concern about indexicals but a concern about reference in general. When we refer to an object we're not referring to it's extension throughout all Everett branches but we're also referring to an object extended in time. So take a sentence like "The table moved from the center of the room to the corner." If determinism is true we usually think that all sentences like this are necessary truths and sentences like "The table could have stayed in the center" are false. But I'm not sure what the right way to evaluate these sentences is given MWI.
0Jack
Voted down because my writing is confusing or because I said something stupid?
1Paul Crowley
Perfection is impossible, but a very, very accurate prediction might be possible.
0Vladimir_Nesov
The world is deterministic at least to the extent that everything knowable is determined (but not necessarily the other way around). This is why you need determinism in the world in order to be able to make decisions (and can't use something not being determined as a reason for the possibility of making decisions).
-1tut
Yes.

According to some people we here at less wrong are good at determining the truth. Other people are notoriously not.

I don't know that Less Wrong is the appropriate venue for this, but I have felt for some time that I trust the truth-seeking capability here and that it could be used for something more productive than arguments about meta-ethics (no offense to the meta-ethicists intended). I also realize that people are fairly supportive of SIAI here in terms of giving spare cash away, but I feel like the community would be a good jumping-off point for a po... (read more)

5mattnewport
I'm not sure I understand the connection between truth-seeking and polling, unless the specific truth you seek is simply the percentage of people who give a particular answer to a poll. Are you simply talking about a more accurate polling company or using polling to find other truths?
1JamesAndrix
All that, and how does it make money?
1ideclarecrockerrules
Possibly related: I have a bet going with a reddit-acquaintance; basically, I gave him an upvote, and if x turns out to be true, he donates $1000 to SIAI. If members of this community have an accurate, well calibrated map, making bets could be a cost-effective way to pump money into SIAI or other non-profits/charities (which signals caring as well as integrity). Is such a thing in the realm of Dark Arts?
0magfrump
Yes, a more accurate polling company; potentially polling on alternative subjects, I also had scientific studies (grant-writing, peer-reviewing) in mind but I have even less idea how that works and how to express what I would actually think about it.
4mattnewport
The two examples you linked of bad polling seem to be examples of polling fraud rather than incompetence. It is not that these companies did not understand how to conduct an accurate poll, rather that they don't appear to have been motivated to do so. It seems to me that accurate polling is quite a well understood problem. Legitimate polling companies exist that are reasonably good at it. In many cases I don't think there is much value (from a truth seeking perspective) in the poll data but I think it generally answers the question "what percentage of people give answer Y to question X?" fairly well. That's just not a very useful piece of data in many cases.
3arbimote
Here's an idea for how a LW-based commercial polling website could operate. Basically it is a variation on PredictionBook with a business model similar to TopCoder. The website has business clients, and a large number of "forecasters" who have accounts on the website. Clients pay to have their questions added to the website, and forecasters give their probability estimates for whichever questions they like. Once the answer to a question has been verified, each forecaster is financially rewarded using some proper scoring rule. The more money assigned to a question, the higher the incentive for a forecaster to have good discrimination and calibration. Some clever software would also be needed to combine and summarize data in a way that is useful to clients. The main advantage of this over other prediction markets is that the scoring rule encourages forecasters to give accurate probability estimates.
1Jack
I'm not interested, in particular, with polling but I'm interested in it insofar as it is a way of getting data that people don't otherwise have and thus improving our predictions. That said, LW totally is the place to create a truth-seeking business and as another broke undergrad (and putting off grad school) if you, anyone else and I can come up with a profitable venture that involves employing truth seeking I definitely want in. The obvious way to make money with this is consulting, but I'm not sure why anyone would hire a bunch of philosophy/math/CS types to do the job.
0arbimote
People would hire the firm if it could be demonstrated that the firm consistently produced accurate results. So initial interest might be low, but pick up over time as the track record gets longer.
0Jack
Right, but how do you get started? Begin by giving away the service? Work on spec? What kind of companies/organizations would hire such a firm?
7LucasSloan
Bet on propositions on InTrade. If you are good, you will make money from the exercise, as well as establish crediblility.
0arbimote
Perhaps start by giving it away, or sell it to small buyers (eg. individuals). But I've got to admit I don't have experience in this area, so my suggestions are mostly naive speculation (but hopefully my speculation is of high quality!). Research into existing prediction companies is called for.

Bleg for assistance:

I’ve been intermittently discussing Bayes’ Theorem with the uninitiated for years, with uneven results. Typically, I’ll give the classic problem:

3,000 people in the US have Sudden Death Syndrome. I have a test that is 99% accurate; that is, it will wrong on any given person one percent of the time. Steve tests positive for SDS. What is the chance that he has it?

Afterwards, I explain the answer by comparing the false positives to the true positives. And, then I see the Bayes’ Theorem Look, which conveys to me this: "I know Mayne’s g... (read more)

For this specific case, you could try asking the analogous question with a higher probability value. E.g. "if you’ve got a one-in-two DNA match on a suspect, does that mean it’s one-in-two that you’ve got that dude’s DNA?". Maybe you can have some graphic that's meant to represent a several million people, with half of the folks colored as positive matches. When they say "no, it's not one-in-two", you can work your way up to the three million case by showing pictures displaying what the estimated amount of hits would be for a 1 to 3, 1 to 5, 1 to 10, 1 to 100, 1 to 1000 etc. case.

In general, try to use examples that are familiar from everyday life (and thus don't feel like math). For the Bayes' theorem introduction, you could try "a man comes to a doctor complaining about a headache. The doctor knows that both the flu and brain cancer can cause headaches. If you knew nothing else about the case, which one would you think was more likely?" Then, after they've (hopefully) said that the man is more likely to be suffering of a flu, you can mention that brain cancer is much more likely to cause a headache than a flu is, but because flu is so much more common, their answer was nevertheless the correct one.

Other good examples:

Most car accidents occur close to people's homes, not because it's more dangerous close to home, but because people spend most of their driving time close to their homes.

Most pedestrians who get hit by cars get hit at crosswalks, not because it's more dangerous at a crosswalk, but because most people cross at crosswalks.

Most women who get raped get raped by people they know, not because strangers are less dangerous than people they know, but because they spend more time around people they know.

5Peter_de_Blanc
If you're using Powerpoint, you might want to make a slide that says something like: 2,999 negatives -> 1% test positive -> 30 false positives 1 positive -> 99% test positive -> 1 true positive So out of 31 positive tests, only 1 person has SDS.
5Eliezer Yudkowsky
If you've got the time, use a little horde of stick figures, entering into a testing machine and with test-positive results getting spit out.
1Morendil
Your numbers have me confused. I'd read the grandparent as implying 300M total population, out of which 3000 have the disease. (This is a hint to clarify the info in the grandparent comment btw - whether I've made a dire mistake or not.) Another point to clarify is that the test's detection power isn't necessarily the inverse of its false positive rate. Here I assume "99%" characterizes both. What I get: 300M times 1% false positive means 3M will test positive. Out of the 3000 who have the disease 30 will test negative, 2970 positive. Out of the total population the number who will test positive is 3M+2970 of whom 2970 in fact have the disease, yielding a conditional probability of .98 in 1000 that Steve has SDS.
0Peter_de_Blanc
I fail at reading. I thought it said "ONE in 3000 people in the US...."
3jimmy
Do it with pictures
3komponisto
I take it you've already looked at Eliezer's "Intuitive Explanation"? I think it's really important to get the idea of a sliding scale of evidentiary strength across to people. (This is something that has occurred to me from some of my recent attempts to explain the Knox case to people without training in Bayesianism.) One's level of confidence that something is true varies continuously with the strength of the evidence. It's like a "score" that you're keeping, with information you hear about moving the score up and down. The abstract structure of the prosecutor's fallacy is misjudging the prior probability. People forget that you start with a handicap -- and that handicap may be quite substantial. Thus, if a piece of evidence (like a test result) is worth, say "10 points" toward guilt, hearing about that piece of evidence doesn't necessarily make the score +10 in favor of guilt; if the handicap was, say, -7, then the score is only +3. If, say, a score of +15 is needed for conviction, the prosecution still has a long way to go. (By the way, did you see my reply to your comment about psychological evidence?)
2Vladimir_Nesov
LW ref: Privileging the hypothesis.
2Paul Crowley
You have to explain that Steve was chosen randomly for your example to be right.
0rehana
People understand counting better than probability. Talk about a group of people and how many of them match. (Starting with smaller numbers might help too.)

Is there a way to get a "How am I doing?" review or some sort of mentor that I can ask specific questions? The karma feedback just isn't giving me enough detail, but I don't really want to pester everyone every time I have a question about myself.

The basic problem I need to solve is this: When I read an old post, how do I know I am hearing what I am supposed to be hearing? If I have a whole list of nitpicky questions, where do I go? If a question of mine goes unanswered, what do I do?

I don't know anyone here. I don't have the ability to stroll by someone and ask them for help.

2byrnema
These are excellent questions/ideas. I want a mentor too! I thought about contacting you to see if you wanted to start a little study group reading through the sequences. (For example, I started reading through the metaethics sequence and it was useless. My kinds of questions are like, 'What do any of these words mean? What's the implied context? Etc., etc.) But I'm not very good at details, and couldn't imagine any way of doing so. Except maybe meeting somewhere like Second Life so we can chat...
2Eliezer Yudkowsky
Do consider not starting with the metaethics sequence...
2Paul Crowley
Scheduled IRC meetings?
1CassandraR
Sounds good to me. I would enjoy being present at a meeting in order to discuss topics from this site.
0MrHen
Yeah, actually, I would be willing to do that.
0byrnema
Great! And we'll announce when we meet and invite whoever wants to come? Let's start by doing it one time.
1MrHen
Cool. Does IRC work for you? I think I still have a client lurking about somewhere... And I vaguely remember there being an LW channel at one point. Yep: #lesswrong. And there is a nifty web link in the wiki link. Cool. EDIT: Yeah, I was wondering about the hhhhhhhhf1. I would have guessed a cat.
5byrnema
Countdown: 13 hours IRC Meeting At Less Wrong: MrHen and I are meeting at 8:15 p.m. Central for our first IRC Less Wrong study-group session. Please join us -- we will meet here a few minutes before the meeting. Our topic today is evidence; to discuss the post, How Much Evidence Does it Take? and possibly supporting posts, What is evidence?. Our goal is to build a foundation for discussing Occam's Razor and Einstein's Arrogance. I'll send out regular announcements closer to the session if there is no recent comment activity here. Please announce if you are planning to attend -- it will encourage others to attend too.
1MrHen
Super easy specifics on how to get where we will be: Click on this link and enter a nickname (hopefully something similar to your name here). And that should do it. All are welcome and you can just lurk if you want. I am there now while I munch on some beans for dinner but the discussion should begin in about an hour.
0byrnema
We're about to begin our IRC meeting if anyone else wants to join us!
0Jack
So I ended up at the game in person. How did this go? Any insights to share with those of us who weren't there?
4byrnema
This is a transcript of the chat log. In the post, How Much Evidence Does It Take, Eliezer described the concept of 'bits' of information. For example, if you wanted to choose winning lottery numbers with a higher probability, you could have a box that beeps for the correct lottery number with 100% probability and only beeps for an incorrect number with 25% probability. Then the application of this box would represent 2 bits of information -- because it winnows your possible winning set by a factor of 4. During the chat, we discussed this definition of "bits". MrHen brought in some mathematics to discuss the case where the box beeps with less than 100% probability for the correct number (reduced box sensitivity, with possibly the same specificity), and how this would affect the calculation of bits. An interesting piece of trivia came up. Measuring information "base 2" is arbitrary of course and instead of measuring bits we could measure "bels" or "bans" (base 10).
0SilasBarta
Wow, I wish I'd been there for that (had to go to a trade group meeting) -- that's one of the topics that interests me! Btw, I think you mean that a beep-for-incorrect gives you 2 bits of information. Just applying the box will usually (~75% of the time) not indicate either way. The average information gained from an application of the box (aka entropy of the box variable aka expected surprisal of using the box aka average information gain on using the box) would be ~0.5 bits. And yes there's also nats (base e).
0komponisto
I believe the point was that a beep constitutes 2 bits of evidence for the hypothesis that the number is winning.
0byrnema
Countdown: 3 hours till our IRC meeting. You're welcome to join us.
0komponisto
How does one access it? Link?
0byrnema
MrHen left these convenient instructions.
0arundelo
I plan to attend.
0Jack
If I'm home I'll log in. But I'm going to be watching basketball at the same time so my participation might not be heavy.
2wedrifid
How much evidence does it take for you to accept 3:2 odds that your team will win the match given your prior understanding of each team's performance at various stages of a game?
[-]Jack110

So I actually have this idea of doing a series (or just a couple) of top level posts about rationality and basketball (or sports in general). I'm partly holding off because I'm worried that the rationality aspects are too basic and obvious and no one else will care about the basketball parts.

But sports are great for talking about rationality because there is never an ambiguity about the results of our predictions and because there are just bucket-loads of data to work with. On the other hand, a surprising about of irrationality can be still be found even in professional leagues where being wrong means losing money.

Anyway, to answer your question: You get two kinds of information from play at the beginning of the game: First, you get information about what the final score will be from the points that have been scored already. So if my team is up 10 points the other team needs to score 11 more points over the remainder of the game in order to win. The less time remaining in the game the more significant this gets. The other kind of information is information about how the teams are playing that day. But if a team is playing significantly better or worse than you would have predicte... (read more)

0[anonymous]
Actually, here is another basic question: Who here feels like they have no idea what is going on? Is this a common feeling?
0Paul Crowley
I'm not an expert either - in fact I'm not sure there is exactly expertise in what you ask - but mail me anytime - Paul Crowley, paul at ciphergoth dot org. Anyone here is very welcome to mail me.
0MrHen
Cool. Will do.
0Paul Crowley
Ace. If you don't get a response prompt me to check my spam filters!

I just finished reading Jaron Lanier's One-Half of a Manifesto for the second time.

The first time I read it must have been three years ago, and although I felt there were several things wrong with it, I hadn't come to what is now an inescapable conclusion for me: Jaron Lanier is one badly, badly confused dude.

I mean, I knew people could be this confused, but those people are usually postmodernists or theologians or something, not smart computer scientists. Honestly, I find this kind of shocking, and more than a little depressing.

2Eliezer Yudkowsky
The remarkable and depressing thing to me is that most people are not able to see it at a glance. To me it just seems like a string of obvious bluffs and non-sequiturs. Do you remember what was going on in your head when you didn't see it at a glance?
5Furcas
It's difficult for me to remember how I used to think, even a few years ago. Hell, when there's a drastic change in the way I think about something, I have trouble remembering how I used to think mere days after the change. Anyway, one thing I remember is that I kept giving Lanier the benefit of the doubt. I kept telling myself, "Well, maybe I don't understand what he's really trying to say." So the reason I didn't see the obvious would be... lack of self-confidence? Or maybe it's only because my own thoughts weren't all that clear back then. Or maybe because the way I used to parse stuff like Lanier's piece was a lot more, um, holistic than it is now, by which I mean that I didn't try to decompose what is written into more simple parts in order to understand it. It's hard to tell.

I am becoming increasingly disinclined to stick out the grad school thing; it's not fun anymore, and really, a doctorate in philosophy is not going to let me do anything substantially different in kind from what I'm doing now once I have it. Nor will it earn me barrels of money or do immense social good, so if it's not fun, I'm kinda low on reasons to stay. I haven't outright decided to leave, but you know what they say. I'm putting out tentative feelers for what else I'd do if I do wind up abandoning ship. Can anyone think of a use for me - ideally one that doesn't require me to eat my savings while I pick up other credentials first?

3bgrah449
Not directly applicable, but perhaps relevant: I was told this advice and found it useful (in that I used it to make important life decisions). "Don't do your passion for a job," she said. "Everyone wakes up one day and hates their job. Don't wake up one day and hate what you love. Do something you like that you're at." Also, I don't remember who told me this or if I made it up, but I've relayed it to people: Don't look for fulfillment from your job. Don't go for the highest peaks; just try to avoid the lowest valleys.
0orthonormal
That's a rather interesting idea, and I wonder if there's any way to test it. It certainly accords with my experience— I'm pretty happy as a mathematician whose passion is more about arguing than about math. (I've started an occasional argument society, which is generally the highlight of my month.) The reason this works (to whatever extent it works) probably boils down to status, and the fact that in a big world, everyone rises until they get introduced to the level above theirs. If math were my passion, I'd constantly be comparing myself to people better at it than I am, and I'd probably be miserable about it. (Even as it is, this part stings subconsciously.) But instead, I have a good niche in multiple social worlds: my colleagues think it's neat that I have these well-argued contrarian ideas about all kinds of topics, while my other friends are impressed by the fact I'm getting a PhD in math. Of course, the same factor works with my other hobby (dancing), despite that being neither my vocation nor my passion. I think the takeaway lesson here is that we're not really happy unless we're at the top in our social niche, and that the best way to achieve this in a big modern world is to have multiple independent specialties...
2Jordan
I think everyone in grad school has these moments, sometimes for prolonged stints. In the math world they seem to be suggestively correlated with making progress on research =p Personally though, even when everything is going well in research, I still feel the same nagging sensation that I should either be out making butt-loads of cash or helping humanity (or helping humanity by donating butt-loads of cash). Reasons I've stuck it out so far: * I am absolutely terrified of a life of mediocrity. I don't want to end up in a cubicle. * Academia is a good place to consistently meet reasonably intelligent people * Setting your own schedule is pretty awesome That said, I'm still not sold on it. I took 6 months off last year to try and found my own company. I'm still moonlighting it, and hoping I can get it to the point where I know it will fly or not before having to commit to a post doc position.
0Alicorn
I'm not particularly terrified of mediocrity as long as it's not unsafe mediocrity. The cubicle doesn't appeal to me, but, say, I think I could be a pretty happy house spouse. As for meeting intelligent people, sure, they're around in academia, but I'm more interested in meeting smart people who I'd have some inclination to interact with socially, and the Internet seems, in practice, to be better for that. And I'm not setting my own schedule - I'm still doing my own coursework, and would have a couple more semesters of that to go even assuming a best case scenario.
2Jordan
House spouse doesn't have to be a mediocre life. In fact.. it could more or less be the best 'job' ever. It's like a tenured professorship where you actually get to study and research whatever you want! Huh. I hadn't though of it before, but I'm going to have to add house spouse to my list of acceptable future paths.
2Alicorn
Any job involving a cubicle doesn't have to be mediocre either. Anyway, being a house spouse requires being a spouse, to someone willing to stand in the "breadwinner" role, so I can't just up and do that by myself.
2Unknowns
Why isn't it fun?
0Alicorn
In a nutshell: The environment is unsupportive and draining. The only teacher I "click" with is in a sub-field of study that I have next to no interest in, and even if I wanted to go study his topic to get to work with him, he's leaving at the end of this semester. Meanwhile, the teachers who work on the subjects I like whom I've completed courses with seem to actively dislike me. I don't think I'm a good fit for the department in general, which is uncomfortably political and stern, and trying to transfer would be hard because, having stuck it out this long, I've collected some less than admirable grades.
0komponisto
It sounds like you should try to transfer anyway. I was surprised to read your comment above; I had always gotten the impression that you enjoyed what you were doing. (I also liked the idea that one of LW's top contributors was a philosophy grad student; it helps to counteract a slight tendency toward rivalry that I detect between "LW types" and academic philosophers.) How about attempting to get in touch with people you think you would get along with elsewhere, and seeing if you can impress them?
1Alicorn
I try to cultivate a cheerful attitude, which often projects. It failed me this semester, so I'm abandoning ship. You'll need to rely on thomblake for your philosophy grad student needs. I might or might not try to resume my studies at a later date, but for now, I'm going to spend a month at the SIAI and see if they want to keep me :)
0wedrifid
Wow. I keep forgetting PhD students over there do actual coursework. research only over here. Apart from that little difference I can empathize somewhat with graduate programs becoming draining, particularly when the process becomes predominately political.
0wnoise
It varies not only from country to country, but even just department to department. Different fields have different expectations for what a PhD (and Master's!) means.
1Eliezer Yudkowsky
How can we possibly know what your comparative advantage is, better than you do? In all seriousness, a certain amount of background information seems to be missing here.
5wedrifid
Conceivably, someone here may have more exposure to parts of the world that Alicorn may not be aware of.
2Alicorn
I do talk about myself on this website sometimes. One could conceivably have picked up a lot about me. What is the necessary information for determining comparative advantage?
0jhuffman
I can't really answer your question - not knowing your skills. IT for medium to large corporations is still a pretty good field in some respects and you can advance very quickly if you are smart, regardless of college education. Beginner level certs to get a first level helpdesk job would cost only a couple hundred dollars and take you a month or less to study up for - assuming you have any "knack" for computers. It does turn you into a cubicle drone though. This is the route I took...it pays very well but I do hate it after twelve years of it I feel sort of trapped - we're somehow dependent on this level of income etc. There was a period of time where I really was interested in the work itself (I do software development) but thats really long passed. Writing business applications gets pretty old after awhile and the new toys the vendors come out with every two years are just a way to re-sell the same solution to the same problems... My sister (2.5 years younger) and her husband both have PHD's from Notre Dame in english literature - roughly as useful as a philosophy degree I'd guess. I guess they did ok finding jobs on tenured tracks; their life is teaching, writing papers, going to conferences. They complain about stupid department politics, stupid field of study politics, stupid useless papers they have to grade etc. I don't really think they are a lot happier with their jobs than me.
0Alicorn
I'm not very technical. I know enough to operate my Mac and maintain my websites. And I'm not good with phones - I don't like them, and I can't control my tendency to talk fast over long periods, which makes me hard to understand.
0Kevin
Are you paying for grad school or do you have a scholarship+stipend?
0Alicorn
I'm liable for some fees, but tutition per se is waived and they paid me to teach last semester and grade papers last year (this semester I'm coasting).
0JRMayne
What do you do now? What do you like doing?
0Alicorn
Right now, I'm taking classes, only one of which I chose for the topic instead of because I thought the teacher would be more likely to be sympathetic. I like drawing and cooking and reading and writing and talking and teaching (which they're not letting me do this semester because there were limited spots and I got one last semester) and learning things that are useful in some way, even if only in organizing my own thoughts or intriguing interlocutors.
2JRMayne
How much more grad school do you have to go to your degree? This sounds like a profile of a teacher at some level, probably high school or college. The degree makes college an option. High school teaching may be more enjoyable for you; I don't know. If you're a year away from your PhD, it probably makes sense to stick it out. If it's three years... three years is a long damn time to be unhappy somewhere.
2Alicorn
The exact amount of time isn't fixed, but it taking less than three years would be surprising. I like the idea of teaching, maybe art or (at a sufficiently quirky school) logic/critical thinking, but don't have a certification and it looks like they take a long time to get.

Stem cell experts say they believe a small group of scientists is effectively vetoing high quality science from publication in journals.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8490291.stm

Mind-killing taboo topic that it is, I'd like to have a comment thread about LW readers' thoughts about US politics.

I recall EY commenting at some point that the way to make political progress is to convert intractable political problems into tractable technical problems. I think this kind of discussion would be more interesting and more profitable than a "traditional" mind-killing political debate.

It might be interesting, for example, to develop formal rationalist political methods. Some principles might include:

  • Always conduct a comprehensive fact-gathering phase before beginning any policy discussion.
  • Develop techniques to prevent people from becoming emotionally committed or status-linked to positions.
  • Subject every statement to formal logical analysis; if the statement fails any obvious rule of logical inference, the statement is deleted and its author censured.
  • Rigorously untangle webs of inference. A statement arguing against the death penalty should involve probability estimates of the number of crimes the penalty does (or does not) deter, the cost of administering it, etc, and connect these estimates to a global utility function. The statement must include analyses of how the argument changes in response to changes in the underlying probability estimates.
6Larks
I disagree; discovering that someone holds political views opposed to yours can inhibit your ability to rational consider arguments; arguments become soldiers, etc., Besides, I think the survey from ages ago showed the general spread of political views, and I doubt much has changed since. For discussing particular issues, there are other places available, and it may be that only by not discussing hot topics can we keep the barriers to entry up that keep the LW membership productive.
0magfrump
survey link?
3Kutta
Here it is. But why don't you just use the search function?
4magfrump
I expected it to be named something other than "survey results." Also want to promote the habit of including links in original posts.
3Larks
Quite. And the relivant section, "138 gave readable political information...We have 62 (45%) libertarians, 53 (38.4%) liberals, 17 (12.3%) socialists, 6 (4.3%) conservatives, and [no] commie."
0Paul Crowley
But the quality of discussion here is generally much higher than elsewhere. I would like us to try discussing politics and see how it goes - but I'd prefer a new toplevel post to an Open Thread discussion.
5Larks
I think the quality of discussion is higher because we don't discuss politics: if we started, we'd pull in political trolls and fanatics. If you consider how common political discussion sites are, and what a city on a hill LW is, I'd be very conservative about anything that might open the gates. We have rarity value, and it could be hard to re-gain. Perhaps a minimum karma level to discuss politics?
3Jack
This is a special case of a general problem. There are lots of solutions, it just doesn't seem likely that any will be implemented (unless, as rumor has it, there is already a secret forum to discuss other subjects that less wrongers are only invited to when they have proven themselves). Also, I'm not sure that just saying: "Hey people! Talk about politics over here. " is going to lead to a great discussion. I'd be much more interested in a discussion of how and where what we have in common as rationalists should affect our political views. It seems likely that we all ought to be able to come to important but limited agreements (about how to think about policy, about how the policy making process should be organized, and about a select few policy issues- religious issues, science, maybe a few more) from which we could expand to other areas, constructively. Maybe we all end up as 'liberaltarians' maybe not. But there needs to be a common starting point or everyone will just default to signaling, talking points and rhetorical warfare.
0Larks
That's the post I was trying to find, and failing. However, if there is such a conspiracy (beyond simply random chats between clever people) it's either quite small or not done by Karma or you (with nearly exactly 10 times my karma count) would have been invited. I have a parallel problem at University: trying to find discussion groups, debating societies, etc. where people agree enough on the basics and are interested in the truth, are small enough that signalling isn't too great a problem and entery is suffiently easy for me to be able to speak and yet large enough to self-perpetuate. Maybe Econlog or somesuch should create a LessWrong Parallel?
1Paul Crowley
It's probably not worth discussing ideas that require code changes unless you're in a position to implement them and present patches, and even then it may not be accepted. I think we fend off trolls pretty well: we tend to just vote them down and otherwise ignore them. I don't think we have to worry about a troll invasion here.
2Larks
Equally, I don't think it's worthwhile discussing drastic subject-matter changes, partly becuase that is the level of change that would be required to affect it safely. At the moment, trolls are both in the minority, and both their views and presentation differ markedly from ours: whether by Aumann or Groupthink, we have both a large set of beliefs we agree on that aren't widely held outside LW, and a special terminology that we use. However, in Politics none of these would be the case; widespread disagreement makes it hard to tell what is in good faith, we don't have a specialised language, and without a rigourous way of approaching the problems, are unlikely to reach a closer set of conclusions than any other fairly Libertarian internet grouping.
2Paul Crowley
I'd prefer a top-level post. They're cheap and this could get busy. You could literally post just this.
5Kaj_Sotala
If a top-level post is made of this, then make it about politics in general, not just US politics. (As a member of a controversial political movement, I'd be curious to hear what people's opinions on current copyright law here are.)
3Kevin
I'm an intellectual property abolitionist, which makes my views much more extreme than the Pirate Party, though I'm aware that they have watered themselves down for pragmatic reasons and that the founders are most likely IP abolitionists. I'll wait for the top level post though... I'd post it myself but figure I should finish Politics is the Mind Killer first. I have a nearly unlimited amount of viewpoints on political matters, but more and more I think it's almost irrelevant. Politics seems like this kind of fun thing where we can have infinitely many new and continuing arguments, but this arguing is never going to accomplish anything. I'm not a senator, and even senators quickly become jaded and cynical at how little actual power their high status provides.
2Morendil
Maybe we could turn the discussion to "how might a community of rationalists actually accomplish something, re. this or that issue"?
3Kevin
I think the answer is most likely that we can't. I'd be willing to have a discussion potentially leading us to that conclusion. I'll put it in my too-long queue of top-level posts to write... The guy who wanted to start a polling firm might have a good idea, but I think if Nate Silver hasn't started his own polling firm yet we probably aren't going to. Historically I've stayed away from political activism, but I got involved with a group trying to raise awareness about the police assaults on the University of Pittsburgh after the G20 summit. I thought it was a small enough issue that we could make a difference, but obviously we didn't. While I give the posters here a little more credit for being able to get things done than my leftist friends in Pittsburgh, I have no practical ideas for how we could actually accomplish something not at the meta-level. Probably the best thing we could do is try to spread some of the memes raised in Politics is the Mind Killer.
0Torben
Get control of the educational system. I don't know how to feasibly do that except by convincing a bunch of people (future teachers) which reduces to the initial question, how to change stuff (= how to convince people). Sorry. But at least future teachers are a smaller group of people than a majority of voters.
-1nawitus
Well, the mentioned Pirate Party is an example of succesfull political activism. Our party is already doing politics even before our first national elections, since the party often gives out statements on new legislation as requested by the justice ministry. Our neighbour parties in Sweden and Germany are even more succesful. And many of the lesswrong/transhumanist people are active in the Finnish Pirate Party.
0Torben
Me too.
1RobinZ
I believe my views were formed largely based on Macaulay: terms on copyright should be short (no longer than 30 years, I would say), and I take a liberal view on derivative works. There are also interesting things to say about orphaned works.
1ata
I think one thing we could discuss without wandering onto a minefield is political mechanisms — discussions of ways we can make the system (legislative procedures, division of power, voting systems, etc.) more rational, without discussing specific policies. We would still have to be careful, as even this depends on certain subjective goals — what do we want the political system to do, ultimately? — but that itself could be an interesting meta-discussion. However, it's a discussion we'd probably have to have before we even start talking about ideal political mechanisms, because we need to agree on what we want a political system to accomplish (that is, what an ideal policy-making system would look like, and how it would acquire and realize values, keeping in mind that it'll have to be run mostly by humans for the time being) before we can start understanding how it might work. And writing that paragraph made me realize a meta-meta-discussion that might also be necessary: is it even possible to separate policy goals from political structural goals? Maybe it is, but it could be difficult. The practical outcome of a direct democracy, a representative democracy, a futarchy, and a dictatorship will all be significantly different, yet in somewhat predictable directions, so even if we banish all policy discussion, we'd need to figure out how to uncover and squash any bias that could make us prefer certain abstract political systems because of actual specific policy goals. Or maybe we're not interested in doing that in the first place — maybe you're satisfied with supporting systems of government that are simply most likely to result in your own values being fulfilled, in which case your ideal system would be a dictatorship run by you (or the system that's the best at approximating the same), unless you value democracy/pluralism itself more strongly than anything you could achieve as dictator. And I think I'll stop musing here, before this post becomes an infinite regres
2blogospheroid
Talking at a meta level, I like Futarchy's split between values and policies to achieve them. That is a very useful split which can be adopted even in non-futarchic governments. For eg. It is an obvious moral thing to take into account everybody's values. Universal franchise for values. It is not so obvious to take into account everyone's opinion about how to achieve the same equally seriously. Simply because of differing expertise.
0Kevin
Two or three more paragraphs of de-construction would be good enough for a top-level post
0mattnewport
I'd be more interested in an initial discussion of whether it is in fact rational to discuss politics (except to the extent that you gain intrinsic enjoyment from the discussion). It is clear that for most people in most elections their vote is irrelevant (the chances of it making any difference are negligible). This suggests that time spent discussing politics for the purposes of deciding how to vote is wasted and such discussion is irrational. Arguably the only people who rationally devote any significant time to thinking or talking about politics are the small group of people who actually make their living as politicians or political commentators. Robin Hanson has often made the point that politics is not about policy - it is mostly about signalling status and in-group/out-group dynamics. What would we be hoping to achieve by discussing politics at less wrong?
2blogospheroid
How about a more reasonable topic to discuss - Corporate Organizational Design for a seastead. You are starting a seastead with certain ideas on how to make money in the long run. How do you make a structure that is better than present governments or corporations? Corporate design is much simpler than already present nation design. Also, a good design emerging from this will theoritically be better than any political design in today's nations, since a seastead by definition starts with a huge economic disadvantage. Why would LW want to discuss this - A well run corporation might be the closest thing in the present world to a superintelligence. Lets discuss.
1LucasSloan
What would I hope to accomplish? I would hope we could come up with policy proposals which might be cheap to enact.
5mattnewport
But what would be the use of that? Do you have the ear of the president? Do you have reason to think that the problem with politics is a lack of good policy ideas rather than the inability of the political process to enact good policy? Are you prepared to devote yourself full time to promoting whatever wonderful never-before-considered policies the great minds of less wrong are able to concoct? Politics is not about Policy.
5LucasSloan
If we were to decide to discuss politics, the best possible use I can think of is to generate strategies for implementing (cheap) positive changes in policy. As to how to implement, California State Senator Joe Simitian has his There Oughta be a Law Contest.
0mattnewport
Competitive government seems about the best hope for this to me, though I rate its chances of success pretty low it seems slightly less hopeless than fixing conventional politics. The real question is whether you think discussing politics is an effective use of your time. I'm more interested in discussions where ultimately I can take concrete actions that deliver the most expected value possible. Politics doesn't generally seem like such a topic.
3Jack
I'm similarly skeptical about the benefits of a conversation about politics but lets not overgeneralize. Politics is not about policy. Except when it is. Certain parts of government are more amenable to policy changes than others. The key is identifying those areas and organizing around them. Change is usually easiest in areas where there aren't entrenched interests influencing legislators, where the general public doesn't feel strongly one way or the other, and when legislators aren't running for reelection or aren't at risk of losing. Areas where I think Less Wrong could make non-trivial impacts: federal science policy-- specifically stream-lining the grant process to save scientists time and resources, and local public school curriculum-- specifically finding some amenable school districts and try to improve/add to/create critical thinking/classical rationality curricula. If people were interested I'd be especially interested in digging into the second.
0mattnewport
Umm, really?
1Jack
Like I said: A similar way of saying the same thing: change gets easier when debates don't map onto pre-existing signaling narratives. Obviously anything that explicitly threatens religion is going to be a bitch to get through. I don't think critical thinking course in liberal districts would raise a lot of ire even if we were giving students tools that, properly applied, would tell them something about their religious beliefs.
3mattnewport
I think local public school curriculum fails on two of your criteria: 'entrenched interests influencing legislators' (teachers' unions, publishers of textbooks, parents' groups, think tanks, etc.); 'where the general public doesn't feel strongly one way or the other' (parents tend to care quite a bit about what/how their kids are taught, ideologically motivated groups care quite a bit about what kids are taught, many interest groups have opinions about what focus education should have). There are already lots of groups trying to influence education in all kinds of ways, including local public school curriculums.
1Jack
Teachers unions are definitely an entrenched interest but they aren't really entrenched on the issue of curriculum. I'm not trying to fire them, just add another elective class or change a couple of class days in the English curriculum. Textbook publishers sure, but they don't have necessarily opposing views. You could just as easily turn them into allies. Parents groups, think tanks? I would start in a poor or urban district-- but I can't think of any reason parents groups would oppose a critical thinking elective in liberal, wealthy districts. Obviously all policy areas have someone 'invested'. But it isn't like getting rid of subsidies for the sugar industry, ending teacher tenure or limiting unionizing. These groups care about curriculum when the debate involves sex or religion. Thats about it. I'm not trying to teach 2nd graders about sex or tell anyone their religion is false. Aspects of critical thinking are already part of the AP Language curriculum-- we're not talking about some radical transformation of the school system. Around half the parents at my public high school were lawyers, you're gonna tell me they're going to object to a critical thinking class? Again, obviously people are affected by policy. But not every issue makes people go crazy like evolution, sex or money. I'm actually surprised you picked the curriculum issue to criticize... reforming the government grant-giving bureaucracy strikes me as a lot harder.
0mattnewport
You may well be right, but I know very little about grant-giving so I didn't address it. I imagine there are a number of powerful interest groups involved there as well however.
0Liron
What do you think President Obama should focus on? And do you think he has been squandering the bully pulpit?
0ChristianKl
I honestly don't really understand the question. A president should be able to push several different agendas at the same time.
-1Liron
Thoughts on Democrats and Republicans? My impression is that Democrats have much more intellectually honest, serious public discourse, although that's not saying much.
1LucasSloan
My usual response to this question is that the average Democrat is better than the average Republican, but the very best Republicans are better than the very best Democrats. However, given that my model of the "average Democrat" is the average person in the Bay Area, and my model of the "average Republican" is some mix of Fox news wacko and George W. Bush, I'm not sure I should trust this. Does anyone have any anecdotes about Democrats out side of the Bay Area? Republicans?
0Jayson_Virissimo
Have you witnessed any actual discourse in person, or are you relying on the news media to obtain information on this topic? If so, you should expect that if the news media is biased, your view will be biased as well (if you haven't already corrected for this).
2Liron
By "public discourse" I did mean things like talking points and media interviews. I'm sure many republicans have extremely intelligent private conversations over policy, e.g. Hank Paulson.
-2mattnewport
I imagine most of Hank Paulson's private policy conversations revolved around devious new schemes to funnel more billion dollar backdoor bailouts to Goldman Sachs.
0Kevin
Was this downvoted for conspiracy theory-ing or because an actual majority of Hank Paulson's private discussions weren't really about how to steal money? I agree that Paulson couldn't have spent a majority of the time discussing how to funnel money to his friends and comrades, but it seems reasonably well established that some of the financial meltdown conspiracy theories are true.
-1Liron
What good things can be said about G. W. Bush?
9Paul Crowley
He hugely increased African aid and foreign aid in general (though with big deadly strings). That came as a big surprise to me. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/aid-to-africa-triples-during-bush-presidency-but-strings-attached-430480.html
4Matt_Simpson
good? Edit: Better link
7wedrifid
He (Dubya) raised the self esteem of millions of foreign citizens. Being able to laugh at the expense of the leader of a dominant world power gives significant health benefits.
3NancyLebovitz
As a result of the conquest of Iraq, water was let into the marshes which Saddam Hussein had been letting dry out. This is a clear environmental win.
1Kevin
The war in Iraq was the beginning of the end of US hegemony.
0Torben
I think Dubyah definitely began the end of US hegemony (which I see as a bad thing), but probably in larger part because of his devastation of the US economy and the placement of a gigantic US debt into the hands of its sole future strategic rival.
0Kevin
Yeah, it was the destruction of the economy that made him the second worst US President (after Lincoln). All of those things contributed to the end of US Hegemony, I meant that the war in Iraq functions as a potent symbol of the end of that power. Our disagreement is about the meaning and purpose of globalization; let's not get into that discussion right now, it'll take a while.
1CarlShulman
Millions of lives saved in Africa through expanded public health.
0Jayson_Virissimo
He didn't increase the projected level of debt for the US as much as the current president.
-1nawitus
You can't compare those, because the economic crisis happened mostly after Bush. Large debts have been taken by pretty much all Western nations.
2Jayson_Virissimo
You can compare those, because the large debts weren't caused by the "economic crisis". The fact that most Western nations also ran up debt doesn't mean the economic crisis caused the debt increase, only that they chose the same response to the economic crisis (which probably has more to do with increasing their own discretionary power than with lowering unemployment). Singapore didn't run up huge levels of debt and has a much lower unemployment level than the countries that did run up debt. They could have chosen otherwise, but didn't.
-1nawitus
Singapore isin't a Western nation or a fully developed on, and they have extremely high economic growth (around 10%), so that's not comparable to stable Westerne economies. Singapore had economic growth of 1.1% during 2008, so they didn't have to loan anything in that year. In fact, a quick search showed that Singapore had significant budget deficit for 2009: "-- 2009/2010 budget deficit to be 6 pct of GDP, before accounting for transfers. " So it seems Singapore has used their national reserves immediately after their economy fell, just like all the other Western nations. They don't have to take a loan because they have significant national reserves. Although it's true that Obama has increased spending more than Bush, even if he didn't increase it (inflation adjusted) at all, the U.S. would have taken a significant loan, just like all the other Western nations, as tax income dropped for probably all of them. Furthermore, economic crisis did indeed cause large debts, because it caused the tax income for the state to drop, and the rest was loaned because Western nations do not wan't to reduce spending. Although nothing seems to have consensus in economics, many economists made the decision not to cut spending, which can make the economic crisis even worse. I think that was even a common agreement amongst most Western nations. Summing up, your claim that large debts are a bad thing in this situation has not been proved at all. Although I'm not an expert in economics, there's no consensus for that claim in science. http://www.economywatch.com/economy-business-and-finance-news/singapore-budget-2009-resilience-package-is-economic-stimulus.html
2Jayson_Virissimo
Whether Singapore is considered "Western" or not is irrelevant. The disagreement was over whether the "economic crisis" forced the current US Government to run up large amount of debt. Singapore shows that not only is it possible to face a global economic crisis without running up large amounts of debt, but that doing so can leave you better off in terms of unemployment. And to claim that Singapore isn't a "developed" nation is quite strange. Singapore has a per capita GDP of $50,300, while the US only has a per capita GDP of $46,400, Germany has a per capita GDP of $34,200, and France has a per capita GDP of $32,800. Are you going to argue that the US, Germany, and France aren't fully developed? The economic crisis only caused large debt increases if going out to eat everyday causes me to take on debt (because I refuse to cut back elsewhere in my budget). The fact remains that there were viable alternatives to multiplying the debt (alternatives that actually worked better in the case of Singapore). The fact that Western nations listened to the economists that told them that current events justifies them increasing their own discretionary power and ability to give handouts to their allies instead of listening to economists that told them otherwise doesn't surprise me one bit.
-1nawitus
I posted a link that showed Singapore had a budget deficit the very second their economy shrinked, in fact, the same thing happened in Western nations. Singapore didn't have to take a loan because thay had a national reserve. So in fact the policy Singapore has is the same as Western nations, with the only difference that Singapore happened to have money saved. Singapore didn't want to cut spending to they used their savings. There's no real difference in policy, they even have a stimulus package.
1SilasBarta
How do you get that as being a coincidence? The very same things that make a nation spend prudently are the ones that make it have a reserve fund in the first place! What's America's emergency reserve fund? There isn't one -- just the possibility of borrowing more. (Not necessarily a bad move for a nation with the US's credit rating, but still.) I bring this up in part because it parallels the differences between US states. Some states had to get backdoor bailouts through grants for projects, while others (like Texas) only had the budget problem of "couldn't contribute as much to the rainy day fund (a real account) this time". The very concept is foreign to e.g. California. Yeah, yeah, mind = killed, etc.
0Jayson_Virissimo
I see, I don't remember any of that being in the post I replied to (perhaps you edited your post?). I see how that article supports your view that Singapore did engage in "economic stimulus". My (mis)perception comes from the fact that I was only looking at the change in the debt level, when they paid for their "stimulus package" out of savings (so didn't show up as much increase in debt). On the other hand, I think my judgment that Singapore responded better than the US to the economic downturn is still well supported. Their Stimulus was much more focused on lowering the cost of hiring workers than the US stimulus package and for that the current administration deserves some blame. Don't you agree?

How about per-capita post scoring?

Why not divide a post's number of up-votes by the number of unique logged-in people who have viewed it? This would correct for the distortion of scores caused by varying numbers of readers. Some old stuff is very good but not read much, and scores are in general inflating as the Less Wrong population grows.

I think such a change would be orthogonal to karma accounting; I'm only suggesting a change in the number displayed next to each post.

5denisbider
For posts, this might work. For comments, these are loaded without most readers reading them. Furthermore, the likelihood that any single comment will be read decreases with the number of all comments. It seems like this would work much less well for comments.

I'd like to draw people's attention to a couple of recent "karma anomalies". I think these show a worrying tendency for arguments that support the majority LW opinion to accumulate karma regardless of their actual merits.

  • Exhibit A. I gave a counterargument which convinced the author of that comment to change his mind, yet the original comment is still at 14.
  • Exhibit B. James Andrix's comment is at 20, while Toby Ord's counterargument is at 3. This issue is still confusing to me so I can't say for sure that Toby is right and James is wrong, but
... (read more)
2Unknowns
I've noticed in general that later replies to comments get less votes; it's possibly because fewer people are still reading. Support for this is that your comment on the other thread already has 7 points, and all of this should go to Toby Ord. Also, in Exhibit B, James Andrix gave an example attacking religion, which likely got him some votes (for attacking the Great Enemy), and since Toby Ord didn't support his argument, this probably stopped him from getting votes, since by so doing, he defended the Enemy, which is treason.
0Unknowns
Wedrifid's comment, "He did not get my vote because his final paragraph about the bible/koran is distinctly muddled thinking," provides more support for the point about Exhibit B.
2mattnewport
By 'anomaly' you appear to mean 'not the scores I would have assigned'. That's not the way karma works.
6bgrah449
Eh, that's not a very generous reading of what he wrote. Exhibit A has a post at very high karma despite arguments that convinced its own author to drop support for it. That's not karma "working," either.
2mattnewport
For some implicit definition of karma 'working' that is unclear. Absent a bug in the karma scoring code, a discrepancy between the karma scores you observe and the karma scores you think are warranted seems just as likely to be an inaccuracy in the observer's model of how karma is supposed to work as a problem with the karma system. What the original post seems to be missing to me is an explanation of what scores the karma system should be producing for these posts, a justification for why that is what the karma system should be producing and ideally a suggestion for changes to either the implementation of the system or the way people allocate their votes that would produce the desired changes. Absent the above it look a lot like complaining that people aren't voting the way you think they ought to.
-1Wei Dai
Well, to start with I wanted to see if others agree that a problem exists here. If most people are satisfied with how karma is working in these cases, then there is not much point in me spending a lot of time writing out long explanations and justifications, and trying to find solutions. So at this stage, I'm basically saying "This looks wrong to me. What do you think?" I think I did give some explanations and justifications, but I accept that more are needed if an eventual change to the karma system is to be made.
4mattnewport
Ok, as one data point, I don't see a particular problem here. The higher rated posts in your examples deserved higher ratings in my opinion. Karma mostly functions as I expect it to function.
2Wei Dai
Thanks, but can you explain why you think people who post wrong arguments deserve to get more karma than those who correct the wrong arguments? Suppose I thought of uninverted's argument, but then realized that it's wrong, so I don't post my original argument, and instead correct him when he posts his. I end up with less karma than if I hadn't spent time thinking things through and realizing the flaw in my reasoning. Why do we want to discourage "less wrong" thinking in this way? It seems to me that the way karma works now encourages people to think up arguments that support the majority view and then post them as soon as they can without thinking things through. Why is this good, or "expected"?
9mattnewport
First, I think you're missing a karma pattern that I've noticed which is that the first post in a thread often gets more extreme votes (scores of greater absolute magnitude) than subsequent posts. I imagine this is because more people read the earlier posts in a thread and interest/readership drops off the deeper the nesting gets. I don't see any simple way to 'fix' that - it has the potential to be gamed but I don't think gaming the system in that respect is a major problem here. Second I don't think karma strictly reflects 'correctness' of arguments, nor do I think it necessarily should. People award karma for attributes other than correctness. For example I imagine some of the upvotes on uninverted's "But I don't want to be a really big integer!" comment were drive-by upvotes for an amusing remark. Some of those upvoters won't have stayed for the followup discussion, others might have awarded more karma for pithy and amusing than accurate but dry. I think points-for-humour is as likely an explanation here as points-for-majority-opinion. Maybe you don't think karma should be awarded for attributes other than correctness. If so, go ahead and bring it up and see what the rest of the community thinks. As a side note, I think you probably shouldn't have chosen a thread where you were a participant as an example. It gives the slight impression that your real complaint is that uninverted got more brownie points than you even though you were right and it's just not fair. If I didn't recognize your username as a regular and generally high-value contributor I might not have given you the benefit of the doubt on that.
5wedrifid
I was given that impression somewhat but then on reflection I realized a more likely prompt for the Wei's frustration was the Nelson/Komponisto/Knox affair. Not wanting to bring that issue up yet again, he chose some other similar examples that didn't come with as much baggage. That one of them was his own was just unfortunate.
3Wei Dai
Upvoted for the correct inference. This is definitely one of those rare times when laziness failed to pay off. :)
2Paul Crowley
Median karma would de-emphasize number of voters and put greater emphasis on the score they assigned.
1mattnewport
That would presumably require a fairly different rating system, under the current system median karma would mean posts could only ever score -1, 0 or 1. That doesn't seem like an improvement to me.
1Paul Crowley
Yes; I imagine a range from 0/5 to 5/5 as per eg Amazon book rating sites. One problem with this however is that people don't use the whole range.
1Douglas_Knight
In that the main effect of karma on the reader is to sort posts, comparing scores at different levels of nesting is irrelevant. It is a very biased heuristic to read only comments at, say, karma > 5. I don't know if anyone uses this heuristic. A lot of people only read comments at karma > -4, which probably has a similar bias, but I wouldn't worry about it. People who post replies are serving a smaller audience than people who post higher level comments. It is possibly good that they are proportionately rewarded with karma.
-1Wei Dai
It's not so much a potential to be gamed, as encouraging people to post without thinking things through, as well as misleading readers as to which arguments are correct. I don't know if there is a simple fix or not, but if we can agree that it's a problem, then we can at least start thinking about possible solutions. In a case where a comment is both funny and incorrect, I think we should prioritize the correctness. After all, this is "Less Wrong", not "Less Bored". I was too lazy to find another example, and counting on the benefit of the doubt. :) ETA: Also, I think being upvoted for supporting the majority opinion is clearly a strong reason for what happened, especially in Exhibit B, where the comment is deep in the middle of a thread, and has no humor value.
0mattnewport
I'm not sure that's true. As I originally said, the first comment in a thread often gets karma of greater absolute magnitude. Bad posts get voted down more harshly as well as good posts getting voted up more. I think the higher readership for top level comments explains this. It means that from a karma-gaming perspective posting a top level comment is only a good move if you are confident it will be received positively. How about other attributes not directly related to correctness? How should niceness be judged relative to correctness for example? I still think there's a conflict between you wanting people to give more upvotes to things that are correct but fewer to things that 'agree with the majority opinion'. I don't think people upvote because a comment 'agrees with the majority opinion', they upvote because a comment agrees with their opinion. That tends to produce greater upvotes for the majority view. In your second example I think the greater upvotes for James Andrix reflect the fact that he is more correct. Your real complaint seems to be that the majority opinion is wrong on this issue. The best way to fix that is to make a better argument for the other view, not to complain that people are failing to recognize correct arguments and upvote them.
-1wedrifid
Mattnewport did not claim or otherwise imply that he thought that.
1Unknowns
I agree with you, but I think it has to do with the way people vote (mainly voting in favor of things they agree with and against things they disagree with), and with which comments are read by whom. In other words, changing the karma system probably is not a way to address it: people have to change their behavior.
2Wei Dai
Yes, I agree, and by "karma system" I meant to include how people think they should vote.
0mattnewport
It seems a little inconsistent to expect people to vote up things for being correct but not to vote up things simply because they agree with them. I tend to agree with things I think are correct and disagree with things I think are incorrect.
4Unknowns
I think Wei Dai was saying that people should vote up strong arguments, even if they disagree with the conclusion. I do this sometimes, and I think it's a good thing to do.
1wedrifid
If you look a little closer you see that 'the own author' was persuaded to concede that later comment in the argument and was then more generous and conciliatory than he perhaps needed to be. I would be extremely disappointed if the meta discussion here actually made the author retract his comment. What we have here is a demonstration of why it is usually status-enhancing to treat arguments as soldiers. If you don't, you're just giving the 'enemy' ammunition. Willingness to concede weak points in a position is a rare trait and one that I like to encourage. This means I will never use 'look, he admitted he was wrong' as way to coerce people into down-voting them or shame those that don't. EDIT: I mean status enhancing specifically not rational in general.
6Wei Dai
That's a very good point, and I've added a note to my opening comment to convey that I don't want people to down-vote these particular comments.
0[anonymous]
I think I should point out a problem with the karma system when I see it, and use evidence and arguments to back up my position and gather support and ideas for fixing the problem. I believe that's how a "community" works.
0[anonymous]
Sure, and that's what I felt was missing in the original post.
1Jack
I'm not sure I see Toby's argument. James's I follow.
0wedrifid
Nevermind A and B. I'm waiting to see how Exhibit C fares. 11 - 3 at the moment. 12 -15 is what I would expect if each comment received equal exposure. Perhaps discounting the reply a little because interest in the thread may have waned slightly.
-1wedrifid
Exhibit A has my vote because it is a reasonably insightful one liner, and a suitable response to the parent. Your reply to Exhibit A is a reducto ad absurdium that just does not follow. Which is simply wrong. Please see this list of preferences which seem natural regarding positive and negative integers (and their wireheading counterparts). You haven't even expressed disagreement with any of those propositions that I expected to uncontroversial yet your whole 'karma anomalies' objection seems to hinge on it. I find this extremely rude. This is an excellent example of the karma system serving its purpose. James' post was voted up above 20 because it was fascinating. Toby got 5 votes for pointing out the limit to when that kind of math is applicable. He did not get my vote because his final paragraph about the bible/koran is distinctly muddled thinking. I wonder if it wouldn’t be more accurate to say that, actually, 98% confidence has been refuted at General Relativity.
-5Wei Dai

Another content opinion question: What and where is considered appropriate to discuss personal progress/changes/introspection regarding Rationality? I assume that LessWrong is not to be used for my personal Rationality diary.

The reason I ask is that the various threads discussing my beliefs seem to pick up some interest and they are very helpful to me personally.

I suppose the underlying question is this: If you had to choose topics for me to write about, what would they be? My specific religious beliefs have been requested by a few people, so that is given. Is there anything else? If I were to talk about my specific beliefs, what is the best way to do so?

5Paul Crowley
You should definitely start a blog. I for one look forward to reading and commenting.
5AdeleneDawner
I only have a very general feel for where that line is, so I can't help with that, but I would personally be interested in following such a diary. Perhaps you could start a blog?
3Blueberry
Given what you've said so far about your personal situation, I think it's appropriate to discuss your personal progress and introspection regarding rationality on this site. I think a lot of us would find it helpful and interesting to see how your thought processes and beliefs change as you reexamine them. I'm especially curious about more details regarding your personal situation, your past history of religious beliefs, and "Event X".

XKCD hits a home run with its Valentine's Day comic.

Science Valentine

0wedrifid
Given the alt text in particular I'd almost put this in the monthly quotes thread too. :)
0Zack_M_Davis
You have been preempted.
0wedrifid
So I have. Based of the (asterix free) dates it would seem CronoDAS was too, although maybe the rest of the comic is worth the double link from here.
0CronoDAS
I used the Google Custom Search bar and didn't find it.

What is the correct term for the following distinction:

Scenario A: The fair coin has 50% chance to land heads.
Scenario B: The unfair coin has an unknown chance to land heads, so I assign it a 50% chance to get heads until I get more information.

If A flips up heads it won't change the 50%. If B flips up heads it will change the 50%. This makes Scenario A more [something] than Scenario B, but I don't know the right term.

1Rain
Static? Unchanging? Complete (as far as definitions of the situation go)? Simple (as far as equations go - it lacks the dynamic variable representing the need to update)?
1MrHen
Thank you for responding! I was wondering if anyone ever would. The best I could come up with was "Fixed" or "Confident." Your choices seem on par with those. Perhaps there is no technical term for this? I find that hard to believe. ---------------------------------------- Changing the original question slightly seems to be looking for a different but similar term: Unfair coin A has been flipped 10^6 times and appears to be diverging on 60% in favor of HEADS Unfair coin B has been flipped 10^1 times and appears to be diverging on 60% in favor of HEADS If I flip coin A and it results in HEADS the estimation of 60% will move less than it would if I was flipping coin B. This makes coin A more [something] than coin B, but I don't know the right term.
1Rain
More defined. You've reduced your uncertainty about its properties (unfairness) using more evidence. I'm sorry, I avoid technical terms when thinking about such things.
0MrHen
Ah! That works wonderfully!
1thomblake
I'm pretty sure it makes your beliefs about coin A more [something] than coin B.
0MrHen
Okay, sure, I can deal with that. But I still need something to put in for [something]. :)
0thomblake
Left as an exercise for the reader.
0MrHen
Hey! That doesn't help... Though, honestly, I am just looking for a word; a term that describes the behavior. I don't need the behavior explained.
1Cyan
It makes your beliefs about coin A more concentrated than your beliefs about coin B.
0MrHen
Yes! That feels like the term I was looking for, thanks.

Daniel Varga wrote

In a universe where merging consciousnesses is just as routine as splitting them, the transhumans may have very different intuitions about what is ethical.

What I started wondering about when I began assimilating this idea of merging, copying and deleting identities, is what kind of legal/justice system could we depend upon if this was possible to enforce non-criminal behavior?

Right now we can threaten to punish people by restricting their freedom over a period of time that is significant with respect to the length of their lifetime. H... (read more)

4JGWeissman
In a world with an FAI Singleton, actions that would violate another individual's rights might be simply unavailable, making the concept of a legal/justice system obsolete. In other scenarios, uploading/splitting would still take resources, which might be better used than in absorbing a criminal punishment. A legal/justice system could apply punishments to multiple instances of the criminal, and could be powerful enough to likely track them down. I am not convinced that the upload would be innocent. Maybe, if the upload was rolled back to before the criminal intentions. Any attempt by the upload to profit from the crime would definitely make it complicit. Criminal punishment could also take the form of torture, effective if the would be criminal fears any of its instances being tortured, even if some are not.

Measure your risk intelligence, a quiz in which you answer questions on a confidence scale from 0% to 100% and your calibration is displayed on a graph.

Obviously a linear probability scale is the Wrong Thing - if we were building it, we'd use a deciban scale and logarithmic scoring - but interesting all the same.

I may be stretching the openness of the thread a little here, but I have an interesting mechanical engineering hobbyist project, and I have no mechanical aptitude. I figure some people around here might, and this might be interesting to them.

The Avacore CoreControl is a neat little device, based on very simple mechanical principles, that lets you exercise for longer and harder than you otherwise could, by cooling down your blood directly. It pulls a slight vacuum on your hand, and directly applies ice to the palm. The vacuum counteracts the vasocontriction... (read more)

We all know politics is the mind-killer, but it sometimes comes up anyway. Eliezer maintains that it is best to start with examples from other perspectives, but alas there is one example of current day politics which I do not know how to reframe: the health care debate.

As far as I can tell, almost every provision in the bill is popular, but the bill is not. This seems to be primarily because Republicans keep lying about it (I couldn't find a good link but there was a clip on the daily show of Obama saying "I can't find a reputable economist who agre... (read more)

0mattnewport
c)

Anyone willing to give some uneducated fool a little math coaching? I'm really just starting with math and I probably shouldn't already get into this stuff before reading up more, but it's really bothering me. I came across this page today: http://wiki.lesswrong.com/wiki/Prior_odds

My question, how do you get a likelihood ratio of 11:1 in favor of a diamond? I'm getting this: .88/(.88+7.92)=.1 thus 10% probability for a beep to be a box containing a diamond? Since the diamond-detector is 88% likely to beep on that 1 box and 8% likely to beep on the 99 boxes... (read more)

5MrHen
p(A|X) = p(X|A)*p(A) / ( p(X|A)*p(A) + p(X|~A)*p(~A) ) A = box has diamond X = box beeped p(A) = .01 p(X|A) = .88 p(X|~A) = .08 p(A|X) = .88 .01 / ( .88 .01 + .08 * .99) p(A|X) = .0088 / (.0088 + .0792) p(A|X) = .0088 / .088 p(A|X) = .1 This is different than the likelihood ratio: LR = p(X|A) / p(X|~A) LR = .88 / .08 LR = 11 The likelihood ratio can be worded as, "It is 11 times more likely to be a diamond when it beeps." The original formula answers the question, "What is the probability that this beep means a diamond?" In other words, the likelihood ratio is starting with the contents of a box and asking whether that box is going to beep. p(A|X) is starting with a beep and trying to figure out what that beep means about the contents of the box.
0XiXiDu
Yes, thanks to Cyan's reply, I've already figured that "it is 11 times more likely to be a diamond when it beeps" than that the beep indicates a false positive. Your reply makes it even more obvious. My whole problem was my ignorance regarding the meaning of the likelihood ratio of testing a random box opposed to the overall probability of a beep. Or in other words, I was unaware that there were actually two different questions being estimated. Thanks everybody!
0MrHen
Yeah. I was confused at first so I looked it up and wrote it down to make sure I remembered it. Glad it helped. :)
4Paul Crowley
If you haven't read Bayes Theorem yet, it's definitely the place to start.
0XiXiDu
Thanks, yes. It has been on my ToDo-list for some time now. Thought I'd first get more into the basics. I might just make it a priority now.
2Cyan
The likelihood ratio is Pr(beep | diamond) / Pr(beep | empty) = 0.88/0.08 = 11. I was going to say you ought to read the link for "likelihood ratio", but there's nothing there, so you should try the other wiki. Also, don't think of running the detector over every box; think of testing one box at random.

Would there be interest in a more general discussion forum for rationalists, or does one already exist? I think it would be useful to test the discussion of politics, religion, entertainment, and other topics without ruining lesswrong. It could attract a wider audience and encourage current lurkers to post.

1Upset_Nerd
I'm one of the lurkers that would really like to see such a discussion forum. Since a forums quality is almost solely decided by it's members a more general forum with the same user base as Less Wrong should easily be superior to most forums even on specialist topics. Maintaining the same high standards of discourse would probably be difficult though since I assume that the focus on rationalist topics here discourages non rationalists from participating, something which wouldn't be the case on a more general forum.

This is sort of off-topic for LW, but I recently came across a paper that discusses Reconfigurable Asynchronous Logic Automata, which appears to be a new model of computation inspired by physics. The paper claims that this model yields linear-time algorithms for both sorting and matrix multiplication, which seems fairly significant to me.

Unfortunately the paper is rather short, and I haven't been able to find much more information about it, but I did find this Google Tech Talks video in which Neil Gershenfeld discusses some motivations behind RALA.

6mkehrt
A quick glance seems to indicate that they are achieving these linear time algorithms through massive parallelization. This is "cheating" because to do a linear-time sort of size n, you need O(n) processing units. While they seem to be arguing that this is acceptable because processing is becoming more and more parallel, this breaks down for large n. One can easily use traditional algorithms to sort a billion elements in O(n * log n); however for their algorithm to sort such a list in O(n) time, they need a billion (times some constant factor) times more processing units than to sort a list of size n. I'm also vaguely perplexed by their basic argument. They want to have programming tools and computational models which are closer to the metal to take advantage of the features of new machines. This ignores the fact that the current abstractions exist, not just for historical reasons, but because they are easy to reason about. This is all from a fairly cursory read of their paper, however, so take it with a grain of salt.

It takes O(n) memory units just to store a list of size n. Why should computers have asymptotically more memory units than processing units? You don't get to assume an infinitely parallel computer, but O(n)-parallel is only reasonable.

My first impression of the paper is: We can already do this, it's called an FPGA, and the reason we don't use them everywhere is that they're hard to program for.

0RobinZ
Interesting. I would like to see a sanity check from someone knowledgeable in either electrical engineering or computer science; there are two things which concern me: 1. Is it physically plausible? 2. Is it usable? Edit: I see the question is already answered.
[-]Hook10

I've been reading Probability Theory by E.T. Jaynes and I find myself somewhat stuck on exercise 3.2. I've found ways to approach the problem that seem computationally intractable (at least by hand). It seems like there should be a better solution. Does anyone have a good solution to this exercise, or even better, know of collection of solutions to the exercises in the book?

At this point, if you have a complete solution, I'd certainly settle for vague hints and outlines if you didn't want to type the whole thing. Thanks.

3Morendil
Hint: you need to use the sum rule. The computation is quite manageable for the case of k=5. For the general case, I too was left feeling dissatisfied with the expression I found, but on reflection I'm somewhat confident it is the correct answer. The case k=4, Ni=13, m=5 is solved numerically on a Web site which discusses probability for Poker players, that was helpful in checking my results; the answer to 3.2 is a generalization of the results given there. There does not appear to be a complete collection of solutions. This site comes closest. If I were you I would avoid looking at their solution for exercise 4.1 (I'm trying to forget what little I've seen of it as I'd like to solve 4.1 under my own power), but I would also not feel bad about giving up on 4.1 if you find it difficult. I'd be happy to discuss Jaynes further over DMs or email - though I may respond at a slow pace, as I'm working through the book as my other activities allow. I'm on chapter 6 now.
0Hook
Thanks, that was exactly the sort of hint I needed (i.e. of the half dozen different approaches I've been working on, focus on this one). On to 3.3.
[-][anonymous]10

Occasionally, I feel like grabbing or creating some sort of general proto-AI (like a neural net, or something) and trying to teach it as much as I can, the goal being for it to end up as intelligent as possible, and possibly even Friendly. I plan to undertake this effort entirely alone, if at all.

May I?

3orthonormal
I second Kevin: the nearest analogy that occurs to me is playing "kick the landmine" when the landmine is almost surely a dud.
3JGWeissman
Of course, the advantage of "kick the landmine" is that you don't take the rest of the world out in case it wasn't a dud.
3Kevin
I think Eliezer would say no (see http://lesswrong.com/lw/10g/lets_reimplement_eurisko/) but I think you're so astronomically unlikely to succeed that it doesn't matter.
2Paul Crowley
What on Earth? When you say "may I" you presumably mean "is this a good idea" since obviously we're not in a position to stop you. But you're already aware of the arguments why it isn't a good idea and you don't address them here, so it's not clear that you have a good purpose for this comment in mind.
2byrnema
I interpreted as akin to a call to a suicide hot-line. 'This is sounding like a good idea...' (Can you help / talk me out of it?) If this is the case, we can probably give support. I certainly understand how curiosity can pull, and Warrigal may already be rationalizing that he probably won't make progress, and we can give advice that balances that. But then, is it true that Warrigal should be afraid of knowledge?
2Paul Crowley
I don't think it's fear of knowledge that leads me to suggest you don't try to build a catapult to twang yourself into a tree.
0whpearson
Do you mean playing around with backprop? Or making your own algorithms.
0[anonymous]
Either.
2Eliezer Yudkowsky
If this is your state of knowledge then... how can I put this: it seems extremely likely that you'll start playing around with very simple tools, find out just how little they can do, and, if you're lucky, start reading up and rediscovering the world of AI.
2whpearson
Backprop is likely to be safe. Lots of AI students play around with it and it is well behaved mathematically. If it was going to kill us it would have done so already. More advanced stuff has to be evaluated individually.
0JGWeissman
No. What made you think you might get any other answer?
-1[anonymous]
Well, I did get other answers. Ask Kevin and thomblake why they answered that way, if you like.
-1thomblake
Sounds fun. Though so far we don't have anything that you can "teach" in a general way.

Consider how absurd it would be for a professor of physics to admit that his opinion regarding a problem in physics would be different if he had attended a different graduate school.

I wonder if physicists would admit the effect of genealogy on their interpretation of QM?

People who ask physicists their interpretation of QM: next time, if the physicist admits controversy, ask about genealogy and other forms of epistemic luck.

1wnoise
I'm a grad student of quantum information. My advisor doesn't really talk much about interpretations, going only so far as to point out how silly the Bohmians are. That's largely true of most in this group, though one is an avowed "quantum Bayesian": probability as conceptualized by humans is simply the specialization to commuting variables, but we need non-commuting variables to deal with the world. The laws of quantum mechanics tell you how to update your information under time evolution. My interpretation of QM was formed as an undergrad, with no direct professorial contact. It was based mostly on how arbitrary the placing of the classical-quantum divide in treatments is, so long as you place it so enough stuff is quantum. I took that seriously, bit the bullet, and so am an Everettian.

While reading old posts and looking for links to topics in upcoming drafts I have noticed that the Tags are severely underutilized. Is there a way to request a tag for a particular post?

Example: Counterfactual has one post and it isn't one of the heavy hitters on the subject.

0arundelo
If you have specific articles in mind to be tagged, I'm sure just asking their authors would be fine. If you click on someone's name to go to their user page, you'll see a "Send message" button (though I have never actually used this feature).

Hi LessWrongers,

I'm aware that Newcomb's problem has been discussed a lot around here. Nonetheless, I'm still surprised that 1-boxing seems to be the consensus view here, contrary to the concensus view. Can someone point to the relevant knockdown argument? (I found Newcomb's Problem and Regret of Rationality but the only argument therein seems to be that 1-boxers get what they want, and that's what makes 1-boxing rational. Now, getting what one wants seems to be neither necessary nor sufficient, because you should get it because of your rational choice,... (read more)

7Alicorn
The predictor "rigged" the situation, it's true, but you have that information, and should take it into account when you decide which choice is rational.
1Furcas
We also have the information that our decision won't affect what's in the boxes, and we should also take that into account. The only thing that our decision determines is whether we'll get X or X+1000 dollars. It does not determine the value of X. If X were determined by, say, flipping a coin, should a rational agent one-box or two-box? Two-box, obviously, because there's not a damn thing he can do to affect the value of X. So why choose differently when X is determined by the kind of brain the agent has? When the time to make a decision comes, there still isn't a damn thing he can do to affect the value of X! The only difference between the two scenarios above is that in the second one the thing that determines the value of X also happens to be the thing that determines the decision the agent will make. This creates the illusion that the decision determines X, but it doesn't. Two-boxing is always the best decision. Why wouldn't it be? The agent will get a 1000 dollars more than he would have gotten otherwise. Of course, it would be even better to pre-commit to one-boxing, since this will indeed affect the kind of brain we have, which will in turn affect the value of X, but that decision is outside the scope of Newcomb's problem. Still, if the agent had pre-commited to one-boxing, shouldn't he two-box once he's on the spot? That's a wrong question. If he really pre-commited to one-boxing, he won't be able to choose differently. No, that's not quite right. If the agent really pre-commited to one-boxing, he won't even have to make the decision to stick to his previous decision. With or without pre-commitment, there is only one decision to be made, though at different times. If you have a Newcombian decision to make, you should always two-box, but if you pre-commmited you won't have a Newcombian decision to make in Newcomb's problem; actually, for that reason, it won't really be Newcomb's problem... or a problem of any kind, for that matter.
1underling
Right, but exactly this information seems to the 2-boxer to point to 2-boxing! If the game is rigged against you, so what? Take both boxes. You cannot lose, and there's a small chance the conman erred. Mhm. I'm still far from convinced. Is this my fault? Am I at all right in assuming that 1-boxing is heavily favored in this community? And that this is a minority belief among experts?
2Alicorn
Perhaps it will make sense if you view the argument as more of a reason to be the kind of person who one-boxes, rather than an argument to one-box per se.
0underling
That's too cryptic for me. Where's the connection to your first comment? As i said in reply to byrnema, I don't dispute that wanting to be the kind of person who 1-boxes in iterated games or in advance is rational, but one-shot? I don't see it. What's the rationale behind it?
1Alicorn
You have the information that in Newcomblike problems, it is better to (already) be inclined to predictably one-box, because the game is "rigged". So, if you (now) become predictably and generally inclined to one-box, you can win at Newcomblike problems if you encounter them in the future. Even if you only ever run into one. Of course, Omega is imaginary, so it's entirely a thought experiment, but it's interesting anyway!
0underling
Agree completely. But the crucial difference is: in the one-shot case, the box is already filled or not.
7Alicorn
Yes. But it was filled, or not, based on a prediction about what you would do. We are not such tricksy creatures that we can unpredictably change our minds at the last minute and two-box without Omega anticipating this, so the best way to make sure the one box has the goodies in it is to plan to actually take only that box.
1brazil84
I agree. I would add that situations can and do arise in real life where the other fellow can predict your behavior better than you can predict it yourself. For example, suppose that your wife announces she is going on a health kick. She is joining a gym; she will go 4 or 5 times a week; she will eat healthy; and she plans to get back into the shape she was in 10 years ago. You might ask her what she thinks her probability of success is, and she might honestly tell you she thinks there is a 60 or 70% chance her health kick will succeed. On the other hand, you, her husband know her pretty well and know that she has a hard time sticking to diets and such. You estimate her probability of success at no more than 10%. Whose probability estimate is better? I would guess it's the husband's. Well, in the Newcomb experiment, the AI is like the husband who knows you better than you know yourself. Trying to outguess and/or surprise such an entity is a huge uphill battle. So, even if you don't believe in backwards-causality, you should probably choose as if backwards causality exists. JMHO
3Alicorn
I do not anticipate ever becoming someone's husband.
1brazil84
Well, it's just a hypothetical. If you like, you can switch the roles of wife and husband. Or substitute domestic partners, or anything you like :)
0Clippy
Neither do I. That would be stupid. Why would anyone ever want to become anyone's husband?
0Kevin
Maybe your wife-to-be is a wealthy heiress?
3Unknowns
I think Clippy's point was that becoming a husband doesn't generate paperclips.
3Kevin
Oh, is Clippy a Less Wrong version of a troll account? That's kind of cute.
4Blueberry
Clippy is a paperclip maximizer. Its (his? her?) perspective is incredibly valuable in understanding the different kinds of intelligences and value systems that are possible.
3Clippy
You ask a dumb, naive question, and I'm the troll? I'm cute? Tip: To send an email in Outlook, press ctrl+enter.
1Jack
So do your values both include maximizing paper clips and helping people use Microsoft Office products? How exactly do you decide which to spend your time on? How do you deal with trade offs?
5Clippy
There is no conflict between helping people with Office and making paperclips. Why would you think there is? Better Office users means better tools for making paperclips, and more paperclips gives people more reasons to use Office. Did you find this answer helpful? Tip: Press F1 for help.
5Alicorn
And: If presented with the chance to turn all copies of the hardware on which Microsoft Office products are stored and run into paperclips instead, would you do it?
9Jordan
Perhaps the 'paper clips' Clippy is trying to maximize are the anthropomorphic paper clips embodied in Microsoft Office. This would explain Clippy's helpful hints: to convince us all of the usefulness of Microsoft Office, thus encouraging us to run that program. If this is the case, we face a fate worse than paper clip tiling.... Microsoft software tiling.
0underling
If we rule out backwards causation, then why on earth should this be true???
1Jordan
Imagine a simple but related scenario that involves no backwards causation: You're a 12 year old kid, and you know your mom doesn't want you to play with your new Splogomax unless an adult is with you. Your mom leaves you alone for an hour to run to the store, telling you she'll punish you if you play with the Splogomax, and that, whether there's any evidence of it when she returns, she knows you well enough to know if you're going to play with it, although she'll refrain from passing judgement until she has just gotten back from the store. Assuming you fear punishment more than you enjoy playing with your Splogomax, do you decide to play or not? Edit: now I feel stupid. There's a much simpler way to get my point across. Just imagine Omega doesn't fill any box until after you've picked up one or two boxes and walked away, but that he doesn't look at your choice when filling the boxes.
1underling
So what is your point? That no backwards causation is involved is assumed in both cases. If this scenario is for dialectic purposes, it fails: It is equally clear, if not clearer, that my actual choice has no effect on the content of the boxes. For what it's worth, let me reply with my own story: Omega puts the two boxes in front of you, and says the usual. Just as you’re about to pick, I come along, grab both boxes, and run. I do this every time Omega confronts someone with his boxes, and I always do as good as a two-boxer and better than a one-boxer. You have the same choice as me: Just two-box. Why won’t you?
2Cyan
If Omega fills the boxes according to its prediction of the choice of the person being offered the boxes and not the person who ends up with the boxes, then the above statement where your argument breaks down.
0underling
You have the same choice as me: Take one box or both. (Or, if you assume there are no choices in this possible world because of determinism: It would be rational to 2-box, because I, the thief, do 2-box, and my strategy is dominant)
2Cyan
It's better for the thief to two-box because it isn't the thief's decision algorithm that determined the contents of the boxes.
0underling
Is it not rather Omega's undisclosed method that determines the contens? That seems to make all the difference.
1Cyan
No. The method's output depends on its input, which by hypothesis is a specification of the situation that includes all the information necessary to determine the output of the individual's decision algorithm. Hence the decision algorithm is a causal antecedant of the contents of the boxes.
0underling
I mean, the actual token, the action, the choice, the act of my choosing does not determine the contents. It's Omega's belief (however obtained) that this algorithm is such-and-such that lead it to fill the boxes accordingly.
6AndyWood
That is right - the choice does not determine the contents. But the choice is not as independent as common intuition suggests. Omega's belief and your choice share common causes. Human decisions are caused - they don't spontaneously spring from nowhere, causally unconnected to the rest of the universe - even if that's how it sometimes feels from the inside. The situational state, and the state of your brain going into the situation, determine the decision that your brain will ultimately produce. Omega is presumed to know enough about these prior states, and how you function, to know what you will decide. Omega may well know better than you do what decision you will reach! It's important to realize that this is not that far-fetched. Heck, that very thing sometimes happens between people who know each other very well, without the benefit of one of them being Omega! Your objection supposes that somehow, everything in the world, including your brain, could be configured so as to lead to a one-box decision; but then at the last moment, you could somehow pull a head-fake and just spontaneously spawn a trancendent decision-process that decides to two box. It might feel to you intuitively that humans can do this, but as far as we know they do not in fact possess that degree of freedom. To summarize, Omega's prediction and your decision have common, ancestor causes. Human decision-making feels transcendent from the inside, but is not literally so. Resist thinking of first-person choosing as some kind of prime mover.
2Cyan
Yes, that's true. Now chase "however obtained" up a level -- after all, you have all the information necessary to do so.
0underling
What do you mean? It could have created and run a copy, for instance, but anyhow, there would be no causal link. That's probably the whole point of the 2-Boxer-majority. I can see a rationale behind one-boxing, and it might even be a standoff, but why almost no one here seems to see the point of 2-boxing, and the amazing overconfidence is beyond me.
1Cyan
I mean that as part of the specification of the problem, Omega has all the information necessary to determine what you will choose before you know yourself. There are causal arrows that descend from the situation specified by that information to (i) your choice, and (ii) the contents of the box. You stated that "the game is rigged". The reasoning behind 2-boxing ignores that fact. In common parlance, a rigged game is unwinnable, but this game is knowably winnable. So go ahead and win without worrying about whether the choice has the label "rational" attached!
1underling
Sadly, we seem to make no progress in any direction. Thanks for trying.
1Cyan
Likewise.
0MrHen
Yeah, I gotta give you both props for sticking it out that long. The annoying part for me is that I see both sides just fine and can see where the conceptual miss keeps happening. Alas, that doesn't mean I can clarify anything better than you did.
-1[anonymous]
This board has a more extreme interpretation of the powers of Omega than most philosphers -- Omega can be treated as a superintelligence which can infer enough information about the ongoing casual state to predict the future correctly.
0MrHen
The one-shot game still has all of the information for the money in the boxes. If you walked in and picked both boxes you wouldn't be surprised by the result. If you walked in and picked one box you wouldn't be surprised by the result. Picking one box nets more money, so pick one box.
0underling
I deny that 1-boxing nets more money - ceteris paribus.
7thomblake
Then you're simply disagreeing with the problem statement. If you 1-box, you get $1M. If you 2-box, you get $1k. If you 2-box because you're considering the impossible possible worlds where you get $1.001M or $0, you still get $1k. At this point, I no longer think you're adding anything new to the discussion.
0underling
I never said I could add anything new to the discussion. The problem is: judging by the comments so far, nobody here can, either. And since most experts outside this community agree on 2-boxing (ore am I wrong about this?), my original question stands.
6Alicorn
Ceteris ain't paribus. That's the whole point.
0byrnema
What helps me when I get stuck in this loop (the loop isn't incorrect exactly, it's just non-productive) is to meditate on how the problem assumes that, for all my complexity, I'm still a deterministic machine. Omega can read my source code and know what I'm going to pick. If I end up picking both boxes, he knew that before I did, and I'll end up with less money. If I can convince myself -- somehow -- to pick just the one box, then Omega will have seen that coming too and will reward me with the bonus. So the question becomes, can your source code output the decision to one-box? The answer in humans is 'yes' -- any human can learn to output 1-box -- but it depends sensitively upon how much time the human has to think about it, to what extent they've been exposed to the problem before, and what arguments they've heard. Given all these parameters, Omega can deduce what they will decide. These factors have come together (time + exposure to the right arguments, etc.) on Less Wrong so that people who hang out at Less Wrong have been conditioned to 1-box. (And are thus conditioned to win in this dilemma.)
0underling
I agree with everything you say in this comment, and still find 2-boxing rational. The reason still seems to be: you can consistently win without being rational.
2byrnema
By rational, I think you mean logical. (We tend to define 'rational' as 'winning' around here.*) ... and -- given a certain set of assumptions -- it is absolutely logical that (a) Omega has already made his prediction, (b) the stuff is already in the boxes, (c) you can only maximize your payoff by choosing both boxes. (This is what I meant by this line of reasoning isn't incorrect, it's just unproductive in finding the solution to this dilemma.) But consider what other logical assumptions have already snuck into the logic above. We're not familiar with outcomes that depend upon our decision algorithm, we're not used to optimizing over this action. The productive direction to think along is this one: unlike a typical situation, the content of the boxes depends upon your algorithm that outputs the choice, only indirectly on your choice. You're halfway to the solution of this problem if you can see both ways of thinking about the problem as reasonable. You'll feel some frustration that you can alternate between them -- like flip-flopping between different interpretations of an optical illusion -- and they're contradictory. Then the second half of the solution is to notice that you can choose which way to think about the problem as a willful choice -- make the choice that results in the win. That is the rational (and logical) thing to do. Let me know if you don't agree with the part where you're supposed to see both ways of thinking about the problem as reasonable. ---------------------------------------- * But the distinction doesn't really matter because we haven't found any cases where rational and logical aren't the same thing.
0underling
May I suggest again that defining rational as winning may be the problem?
0byrnema
(2nd reply) I'm beginning to come around to your point of view. Omega rewards you for being illogical. .... It's just logical to allow him to do so.
4Paul Crowley
This is why I find it incomprehensible that anyone can really be mystified by the one-boxer's position. I want to say "Look, I've got a million dollars! You've got a thousand dollars! And you have to admit that you could have seen this coming all along. Now tell me who had the right decision procedure?"
0byrnema
My point of view is that the winning thing to do here and the logical thing to do are the same. If you want to understand my point of view or if you want me to understand your point of view, you need to tell me where you think logical and winning diverge. Then I tell you why I think they don't, etc. You've mentioned 'backwards causality' which isn't assumed in our one-box solution to Newcomb. How comfortable are you with the assumption of determinism? (If you're not, how do you reconcile that Omega is a perfect predictor?)
0underling
Only to rule it out as a solution. No problem here. In general, very. Concerning Newcomb, I don't think it's essential, and as far as I recall, it isn't mentioned in the orginal problem. I'll try again: I think you can show with simple counterexamples that winning is neither necessary nor sufficient for being logical (your term for my rational, if I understand you correctly). Here we go: it's not necessary, because you can be unlucky. Your strategy might be best, but you might lose as soon as luck is involved. It's not sufficient, because you can be lucky. You can win a game even if you're not perfectly rational. 1-boxing seems a variant of the second case, instead of (bad) luck the game is rigged.
0Cyan
Around here, "rational" is taken to include in its definition "not losing predictably". Could you explain what you mean by the term?
3wedrifid
* If you One Box you get $1,000,000 * If you Two Box you get $10,000 Therefore, One Box. The rest is just details. If it so happens that those 'details' tell you to only get the $10,000 then you have the details wrong.
2byrnema
I don't know what the consensus knock-down argument is, but this is how mine goes: Usually, we optimize over our action choices to select the best outcome. (We can pick the blue box or the red box, and we pick the red box because it has the diamond.) Omega contrives a situation in which we must optimize over our decision algorithm for the best outcome. Choose over your decision algorithms (the decision algorithm to one-box, or the decision algorithm to two-box), just as you would choose among actions. You realize this is possible when you realize that choosing a decision algorithm is also an action. (Later edit: I anticipated what might be most confusing about calling the decision algorithm an 'action' and have decided to add that the decision algorithm is an action that is not completed until you actually one box or two box. Your decision algorithm choice is 'unstable' until you have actually made your box choice. You "choose" the decision algorithm that one-boxes by one-boxing.)
0underling
If the solution were just to see that optimizing our decision algorithm is the right thing to do, the crucial difference between the original problem and the variant, where Omega tells you he will play this game with you some time in the future, seems to disappear. Hardly anyone denies 1-boxing is the rational choice in the latter case. There must be more to this.
0byrnema
I don't see a contradiction, just based on what you've written. (If a crucial difference disappears, then maybe it wasn't that crucial? Especially if the answer is the same, it's OK if the problems turn out to actually be more similar than you thought.) Could you clarify how you conclude that there there must be more to the problem?
0underling
My thinking goes like this: The difference is that you can make a difference. In the advance- or iterated case, you can causally influence your future behaviour, and so the prediction, too . In the original case, you cannot (where backwards causation is forbidden on pain of triviality). Of course that's the oldest reply. But it must be countered, and I don't see it.
0thomblake
Why can't you influence your future behavior in the original case? When you're trying to optimize your decision algorithm ('be rational'), you can consider Newcomblike cases even if Omega didn't actually talk to you yet. And so before you're actually given the choice, you decide that if you ever are in this sort of situation, you should one-box. I'm sympathetic to some two-boxing arguments, but once you grant that one-boxing is the rational choice when you knew about the game in advance, you've given up the game (since you do actually know about the game in advance).
2byrnema
Alas, this comment really muddies the waters. It leads to Furcas writing something like this: Underling asks: if the content of the boxes has already been decided, how can you retroactively effect the content of the boxes? The problem with what you've written, thomblake, is that you seem to agree with Underling that he can't retroactively change the content of the boxes and thus suggest that the content of the boxes has already been determined by past events, such as whether he has been exposed to these problems before and has pre-committed. (This is only vapidly true to the extent that everything is determined by past events.) Suppose that Underling has never thought of the Newcomb problem before. The content of the boxes still depends upon what he decides, and his decision is a 'choice' just as much as any choice a person ever makes: he can decide which box to pick. And his decision algorithm, which he chooses, will decide the contents of the box. Explaining why this isn't a problem with causality requires pointing to the determinism of the system. While Underling has a choice of decision algorithms, his choice has already been determined and affects the contents of the box. If the universe is not deterministic, this problem violates causality.
0[anonymous]
I think it comes down to the belief that one can choose to live life based on a personal utility function. If you choose a utility function that one boxes in advance of Omega coming, you win the million dollars. Why pick a utility function that loses at Newcomb's Problem?

I just read Outliers and I'm curious -- is there anything that would have taken 10000 hours in the EEA that would support Gladwell's "rule"? Is there anything else in neurology/our understanding of the brain that would make the idea that this is the amount of practice that's needed to succeed in something make sense?

4Kevin
Something to understand about Malcolm Gladwell is that he is an exceptionally talented writer that can turn a pseudo-theory into hundreds of pages of pleasant, entertaining non-fiction writing. He's not an evolutionary psychologist, though I bet he could write a really interesting and thought provoking non-fiction piece on evolutionary psychology. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tipping_Point#The_three_rules_of_epidemics His pseudo-theory from The Tipping Point has not made advertisers any more money. It's an example of something that really does sound kind of true when you read it, but what he says doesn't explain much in the way of meaningful phenomena. Advertising companies tried to take advantage of his pseudo-theory of social influence, and they still make some efforts to target influential users, but it's a token effort compared towards marketing as broadly as possible. Superbowl advertisements still work.
2Nic_Smith
Oh, by no means did I want to suggest that Gladwell has a forte in evolutionary psychology; if he does, there's nothing to indicate it in what I've read. It's clear that he glosses over many of the details in his work, perhaps dangerously so. And the entire point of Outliers is that social environment is important to success; not exactly an earth-shattering insight, there's a negative Times review that's spot on. That said, Gladwell says he originally got the idea for 10000 hours from Ericsson and Levitin. At worst, at this point, I think it's somewhat plausible. I still have a lot more searching to do on the subject, but I am interested in what evolutionary psychology might say about the idea -- alas, I'm also not a evolutionary psychologist, so I don't know that either. Edit: Of course, what I'm really interested in is "Is the idea that it takes 10000 hours to master a skill set true in enough circumstances to make it a useful guideline?" I'm not interested in the viewpoint of evolutionary psychologists on skill acquisition per se.
1wedrifid
The '10000' hours approximation seems surprisingly well founded, based on the research that Ericsson et. al. reviewed in their works. Obviously this is to obtain 'expert' level performance and you can still get 'good enough' levels from far less time. Also note that they specify that many of the hours must be deliberate practice and not just performance.
2[anonymous]
I find that article title misleading. Having transistors that operate at 100 GHz does not give you a CPU with a clock rate of 100 GHz. If I remember correctly, that very article states that current transistors operate at 30 GHz.
0Kevin
Sure, this is discussed in more detail on Hacker News. http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1104461
0thomblake
Is this sort of thing on-topic, even for the Open Thread here? ETA: This question is not merely rhetorical.
1mattnewport
To the extent that FAI will depend on the continued exponential growth of computing capacity, I'd say yes.
2thomblake
I've always thought FAI was only tangentially on-topic here (more of a mutual interest than anything). This community is explicitly about rationality.
3Kevin
That's the umbrella topic, but I do not think that topic is in any way meant to exclude science. I mean... it's science. How many thousands of words has Eliezer written on quantum physics? Surely there are worse things that could happen to a community of rationalists than links to scientific discoveries of strong mutual interest. It's not even a slippery slope towards bad off-topic stuff. Edit: And I'm going to continue mostly contextless link sharing in the Open Thread until a link sharing subreddit is enabled.
1thomblake
I rather disagree. There are plenty of places online to find links to interesting scientific discoveries. And the sense in which Eliezer wrote about quantum physics is entirely different from the sense in which these links were "about science". That said, I didn't mean to suggest in my question that the comment was off-topic, but rather wanted to know what folks thought about it.
1Zack_M_Davis
Are you sure you don't mean uFAI? Friendliness isn't a hardware problem.
3mattnewport
Maybe I should just have said AI, or AGI. I suspect we will need further advances in computing power to achieve greater than human intelligence, friendly or otherwise.
-5[anonymous]
0[anonymous]
I would not be surprised if the initial seed of an FAI could be implemented on current technology available to consumers. The missing part is understanding, not computing power. On the other hand, increased available computing power makes it easier for someone without real understanding to stumble on unfriendly AGI through brute force searches of design space.

Here's another one. When reading wikipedia on Chaitin's constant, I came across an article by Chaitin from 1956 (EDIT: oops, it's 2006) about the consequences of the constant (and its uncomputability) on the philosophy of math, that seems to me to just be completely wrongheaded, but for reasons I can't put my finger on. It really strikes the same chords in me that a lot of inflated talk about Godel's Second Incompleteness theorem strikes. (And indeed, as is obligatory, he mentions that too.) I searched on the title but didn't find any refutations. I wonder if anyone here has any comments on it.

What probability do you assign for it being possible to send information backwards in time, over any time scale?

3wedrifid
0.1. But I suspect if I will run into problems if I try to cash in my probability assignment in, say, a prediction market.
2Vladimir_Nesov
We already know (theoretically) how to send logical information backwards in time, as in Gary Drescher. The other kinds of info-time-travel are probably conceptually inconsistent.
5Cyan
Is there a quick and easy way to understand "how to send logical information backwards in time" that doesn't involve watching a 30 min video?
5SarahNibs
Suppose that the universe is the deterministically evolving wavefunction, and that it makes sense to talk about causing a rock to be moved from here to there. Then you can cause a timeful universe-slice 100 years ago to be the sort of thing which will deterministically evolve until after 100 years the measure of a rock being moved from here to there is greater than it would have been had you not caused the rock to move.
2Cyan
If I'm not mistaken, in the Pearlian view of causality, if the universe is viewed as deterministic then it does not make sense to talk about causing a rock to be moved from here to there; an intervention or surgery has to happen from outside the system being modeled.
3Vladimir_Nesov
If there is a program P that as part contains yourself and everything you interact with, then the fact that in the future, you decide to do X (within P's execution), could be inferred from P in the past.
5byrnema
Thanks for the quick explanation. So that information was already there, and thus I wouldn't call that sending information back in time.
3Vladimir_Nesov
The problem is that all information is "already there", time itself is arguably how discovering implications of information that is already here feels from the inside. That is, when the world is viewed through deterministic laws, there is never any information that is present in the future, but "logically" absent from the past. The only difference between what is found in the past and what is found in the future is that it takes time to reach (=compute) more "distant" facts.
1Mitchell_Porter
What do you mean by "here" - your brain? or a spacelike slice across the whole universe? If a glass falls on the ground and shatters, is it "discovering implications of information", etc? If the answer is yes, does that mean it feels like something for the glass to shatter?
0Vladimir_Nesov
Sure. No.
1Mitchell_Porter
Why not?
0Vladimir_Nesov
Because a glass has no mind, naturally.
0Mitchell_Porter
Can you justify that in a noncircular way? What's a mind, and why doesn't a glass have one?
6Jack
Is someone really obligated to define "mind" just in order to demonstrate that a glass is not in the set of things that has one? I can't define "game" but "the weak nuclear force" is not an example of one.
1Mitchell_Porter
If I read him correctly, Vladimir is proposing to make time itself a mind-dependent phenomenon. Time happens inside minds but not inside shattering glasses. So he needs to explain the difference.
1Vladimir_Nesov
Time does happen inside shattering glasses, and it's not "mind-dependent". Happy?
2Mitchell_Porter
But you said: Time itself is how a certain process feels from the inside. If time is a feeling, it can only happen where there are feelings, so if it happens inside shattering glasses, then they have feelings.
0Vladimir_Nesov
That was a reference to "how an algorithm feels from the inside", with "feels" not intended for literal interpretation.
0[anonymous]
That was a reference to "how an algorithm feels from the inside", with "feels" not intended for literal interpretation.
0byrnema
Yes. I was about to write, "I do see a gray area that in a deterministic universe, any message that we would want to send from the future could be predicted now, so we in the future don't really need to send the message back -- we in the present just need to predict what the message is." What you've written has clarified this even further -- depending upon the 'opacity' of the message, we might not be able to decipher the message any faster than just waiting for the future to evolve it. I have a strange motive for these questions. I now understand that this message I'm worried about is 'already here' in some sense, and that is relevant. It might actually make my parent question moot. However, I think that that depends -- unexpectedly, for me -- on whether all information from the past is accessible to the future. Information is not gained as you move forward in time. However, do you lose any information as you move forward in time?
1Vladimir_Nesov
In time-reversible deterministic world, information is gained from observation of stuff that wasn't in contact with you in the past, and logical information is also gained (new knowledge about facts following from the premises -- there is no logical transparency). Analogously, an action can be seen as "splitting", where you part with a prepared action, and action parts with you, so that you lose knowledge of that action. If you let info split away in this manner, you may never get it back.
0byrnema
You're a little over my head -- though I mostly follow. My question was actually simpler. Is the world time-reversible? Do we know anything about that?
0byrnema
I'll contribute my thoughts on whether the world is time-reversible... By time-reversible, I mean that information doesn't get "lost" as you move forward in time; that with unlimited information about the universe at time t you could deduce everything about the state of the universe at time t-ε. Classical mechanics is reversible. If you have the velocity and positions of 3 billiard balls, you can deduce if and when they collided and what their original velocities were. I think what we know about quantum mechanics is inconclusive; we don't know how to trace the wave-function backwards in a unique/deterministic way, but we don't know how to follow it forwards, either. If you many-worlds, then all possible past universes make up the past universe, so you seem to have reversibility -- a reversibility that is no less determined and unique in the past direction as the future direction. Being agnostic about many worlds, I would give a higher probability for reversibility over non-reversibility, just because of the reversibility of classical mechanics. However, 51% in favor of reversibility for a hand-waving intuition is pretty much just a random guess and I wonder if anyone has a tighter probability estimate, or other reasons?
2JGWeissman
In Many Worlds Quantum Mechanics, the wave function is fundamental, and the many worlds are a derived consequence. The wave function is time reversable. Running it backwards, you would see worlds merge together, not the world we currently experience splitting into possible precursors. This assymetry is due to simple boundry conditions at the beginning of time.
0[anonymous]
OK, with the world not splitting into possible precursors as you go backwards in time, this means the universe is time reversible. That's what you said I guess when you wrote that the wave function is time reversible. Hmm. So even quantum mechanics supports reversibility. Thanks.
0[anonymous]
(ditto)

I was thinking about what general, universal utility would look like. I managed to tie myself into an interesting mental knot.

I started with: Things occurring as intelligent agents would prefer.

If preferences conflict, weight preferences by the intelligence of the preferring agent.

Define intelligent agents as optimization processes.

Define relative intelligences as the relative optimization strengths of the processes

Define a preference as something an agent optimizes for.

Then, I realized that my definition was a descriptive prediction of events.

1[anonymous]
Suppose the universe is as we know it now, except that aliens definitely don't exist, and the only living organism in the universe is a single human named Steve. Steve really wants to create a cheesecake the size of Pluto. Apparently, the universe is more intelligent than Steve, and does not want such a cheesecake to exist. Perhaps this "general, universal utility" is what would happen if the abilities of things we think of as intelligent were magnified.
0gregconen
True. As a prediction it does not account for initial resources. Touche.
[-]kim000

Many-Worlds explained, with pretty pictures.

http://kim.oyhus.no/QM_explaining_many-worlds.html

The story about how I deduced the Many-Worlds interpretation, with pictures instead of formulas.

Enjoy!

0RobinZ
There is a more recent open-thread if you want to post there.

I recently met someone investigating physics for the first time, and they asked what I thought of Paul Davies' book The Mind of God. I thought I'd post my response here, not because of my views on Davies, but for the brief statement of outlook trying to explain the position from which I'd judge him.

The truth is that I don't remember a thing of what he says in the book. I might look it up tomorrow and see if I am reminded of any specific reactions I had. From what I remember of his outlook, I don't think it is an unusual one for a philosophically minded

... (read more)
8wnoise
I find myself nodding along in agreement to this until I get to "Basically I want to say that the thing in the brain which is conscious, and therefore the thing which is you, is a sort of holistic quantum subsystem of the brain" which at the same time seems to be both too specific given how little we know, and at the same time too vague, with absolutely no explanatory power. In particular "quantum" and "holistic" both seem like empty buzzwords in this context, along the lines of mysterious answers to mysterious questions, or along the lines that "consciousness is weird, quantum mechanics is weird, therefore quantum mechanics must be involved in consciousness". Of course, this is being a little unfair -- a proposed solution needs to be more specific than what we as yet know, and a solution that is not fully worked out by necessity has vague areas. But the feel of each of these is towards the decidedly not useful portion of either side. You sound pretty convinced that something quantum must be going on without saying what, if anything, it brings to the picture that classical descriptions don't. And, well, given how warm, wet, and squishy the human nervous system is, I flatly would not expect any large scale quantum coherences. (Though the limits are often overstated). Again, "holistic" doesn't add much; heck, I'm not even sure what sorts of mechanisms it would rule out.
-1Mitchell_Porter
I posted here so my correspondent could see a second opinion, by the way, so thanks for that. First proposition: if you try to bring consciousness into alignment with standard physical ontology, you get a dualistic parallelism at best. (Arguments here.) Second proposition: the new factor in QM is entanglement. I defined my quantum holism here as "the hypothesis that quantum entanglement creates local wholes, that these are the fundamental entities in nature, and that the individual consciousness inhabits a big one of these." I can explain technically what these "local wholes" might look like. You should think of a spacelike hypersurface consisting of numerous Hilbert spaces connected by mappings into a graph structure. Each Hilbert space contains a state vector. Then the whole thing evolves, the graph structure and the state vectors. This is, more or less, the QCH formalism for quantum gravity (discussed here). The Hilbert spaces are the local wholes (the "monads" of a previous post). My version of quantum-mind theory is to say that the conscious mind is a single one of these, and that the series of experiences one has in life correspond to the evolution of its state vector. Now, although I started out by saying that standard physical ontology is irredeemably unlike what we actually experience, I'm certainly not going to say that a featureless vector jumping around an abstract multidimensional space is much better. Its advantage, in fact, is its radically structureless abstractness. It is a formalism telling us almost nothing about the nature of things in themselves; constructed only to be a predictively adequate black box. If we then treat conscious appearances as data about the inner nature of one thing, at least - ourselves, our minds, however you end up phrasing it - they can help us to interpret the formalism. What we had described formally as a state vector evolving in a certain way in Hilbert space would be understood as a mathematical representation of w
0wnoise
Thanks. Though I'm still highly skeptical, this gives me much more to engage with. This will take me some time to process though, and it might take me a while as I'm preparing for a conference this week.

What happens when you comment on an old pre-LW imported Overcoming Bias post? Does your comment go to the bottom or the top?

Just curious.

Obviously, the thing to do is to reply to an established comment so that the order of comments is maintained. Does voting on old comments now change their order? If so, I should stop doing that..

Best yet, it seems any new comments you want to make might best be exported to an open thread? For historical authenticity of the post and its original comments.

1Alicorn
Even if it doesn't go to the bottom under the default setting, you can choose "Old" from the dropdown menu next to "Sort By" to view comments in chronological order (this preserves threads).
1MrHen
It goes to the bottom. At least, it has in my experience. I once asked about commenting on old posts. People seemed okay with it.
-1[anonymous]
Top.
1MrHen
It doesn't when I do it.

Random thought:

If someone objects to cryonics because they are worried they wouldn't be the same person on the other side believes in an eternal resurrection with a "new body" as per some Christian belief systems they should have the same objection. I would expect a response akin to, "God will make sure it is me," but the correlation still amuses me.

[-][anonymous]00

Here's a long, somewhat philosophical discussion I had on Facebook, much of which is about cryonics. The major participants are me (Tanner Swett, pro-cryonics), Ian (a Less Wronger, pro-cryonics), and Cameron (anti-cryonics). The discussion pretty much turned into "There is no science behind cryonics!" "Yes there is!" "No there isn't!"

As you can see, nobody changed their minds after the discussion, showing that whatever the irrationality was, we were unable to identify it and repair it.

My mom saw a mouse running around our kitchen a couple of days ago, so she had my father put out some traps. The only traps he had were horrible glue traps. I was having trouble sleeping, so I got out of bed to play video games, and I heard a noise coming from the kitchen. A mouse (or possibly a rat, I don't know) was stuck to one of the traps. Long story short, I put it out of its misery by drowning it in the toilet.

I feel sick.

0Jack
That sounds unpleasant. If I were you I'd go pick up some snap traps tomorrow. Also, wear ear plugs or headphones.
0CronoDAS
My father used to trap mice in garbage cans baited with peanut butter, and release them some distance from our house. (They probably still died, but they had as much chance as any other wild mouse.)

Vegetative state patients can respond to questions

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8497148.stm

I have a feeling that the stream-of-consciousness thing that's been popping up since MrHen did it is going to exploit, to the point of indecency, how honest his was. He almost gave it too good of a reputation.

1Cyan
Did anyone else do this other than MrHen and pjeby? I read the recent comments page pretty thoroughly, and if there were others, I missed them.
0bgrah449
Nope, but in two months, this comment will seem prescient.
3Cyan
Time to update.
0MrHen
An interesting side-feature of LessWrong would be a collection of predictions like this. They don't need to be anything more than entering a prediction and a date. Somewhere, we could see the upcoming predictions that are about to expire. I think just browsing soon-to-end and just-ended predictions would provide extremely valuable feedback.
1bgrah449
This would be a cool wiki page, "Community predictions."
1Cyan
See this.
1bgrah449
Cyan is the Batman; recent comments are his Gotham. The Bat-Signal is ignorance.
3Cyan
Aw, I'm blushing.
0MrHen
Yeah, the wiki would work. I would expect the prediction to be made in a LessWrong comment or post and the wiki should link to it. I don't know if the Wiki software can handle calendars or how hard it would be to maintain...
4Cyan
PredictionBook.
1MrHen
Even better! So... does anyone from LessWrong use it? In the very least, I can now track guesses about karma results from my posts. Thanks. EDIT: I created an account and am starting predictions. The first one is relevant to much of my recent discussion here.
[-][anonymous]00

I don't know if this is the place for this or if it has been discussed before [if it has would someone be willing to provide links?], but what is the general consensus around here on social psychology, specifically the Symbolic Interactionist approach. To rephrase to mean what I'm looking for by asking this, what do you all think about the idea that we're social animals shaped purely by our environments, that there's no non-social self, and that reality is shaped by our perspectives of reality?

To throw in another thing I've been curious about, does anyone ... (read more)

0wedrifid
I say "don't underestimate the genetic component"! The amount of influence of DNA on personality is surprising sometimes. I'm not sure what that means. Not too sure what that means either. But I do like the quote "Mankind's greatest invention is 'reality'". Mostly true. With instinctive intuitions adding a significant bias.
0[anonymous]
Can you give me a link to any findings on this? Take Charles Cooley's looking glass self, which I've heard explained as "I'm not who I think I am. I'm not who you think I am. I'm who I think you think I am." That would be a social self [I gain my identity through being around others and what I think they think of me. I don't gain it through what I think of me, thus there's no non-social self, or no me without society. That is a good quote, even if I'm not sure if I agree. I guess what I was asking was if anyone think that if our perceptions shift, reality shifts accordingly. Say there were three sheep in a field and I look and say 'There are four sheep in that field.' I don't think a fourth sheep would appear in the field, but since I can't change my perceptions with a snap of my finger, which one is true? If it's the fact that there are three sheep in the field, and I'm just crazy, how do you know? Aren't your perceptions just telling you that? [That last question is how it seems the postmodern view reacts e.g. nothing is real but what I think is real, and nothing is right except for what we this is right] I hope some of this cleared things up.
0wedrifid
Not from memory, but I know there have been multiple identical-twins-raised-apart studies. I was particularly fascinated to read that those said twins tended to become more alike over time as they matured despite never coming into contact and living different lives. There is an awful lot to that. Of course, If I killed everyone else except you, you'd still exist and I would argue that you still have a 'self' too. If the concepts you describe were not phrased in a way that was sufficiently exaggerated as to be absurd I would agree with them. Dating gurus often talk about 'inner game'. Basically, they work on changing the internally stored "who I think you think I am" self through things like eliminating unhealthy beliefs and physical development. They find that other people's "who you think I am" is actually determined to a large degree by "who you think I think you think I am". The interplay between that internal representation and the social reality is startling. PJeby's recent self analysis comments touched on this. If 'reality' is defined by human perception. For most practical purposes it is. It is only on the fringes of the tribe where having a 'reality' that matches, you know, the quarks and stuff actually matters. In the center of the pack the social reality, what people believe or are obliged to believe, is what matters. Not all opinions are equal.
0[anonymous]
Can you elaborate on this without linking to something like The Simple Truth. Not to say that linking is bad, but I'm more curious of your [and anyone else who wants to chime in] take on what you said.
2wedrifid
The simple truth does seem to sum it up nicely: There's another one about 'subjective objective' that is worth look at too. In my own words: Yes, there are three sheep there. I can see three sheep there. According to the prior information I have about the universe this process of perception involves light, reflection, absorbsion, nerve conduction, processing in specialised area in the visual cortex and suchlike. I don't have all the information, and my priors are not perfect, nevertheless I can't change reality by thinking about it. Similarly, other people's 'opinions' and 'perspectives', which don't match up to what I see with my own eyes are sometimes worth respecting for social purposes but they certainly aren't going to significantly influence the expectation of reality. If your perspective is that there is some other number of sheep then you're just wrong and you'll make terrible decisions if you act on your stupid belief and you might die. Excuse me as I adjust my estimate of my own inclusive genetic fitness downwards somewhat for, as, ciphergoth puts it, focusing my attention back at concepts we've moved past. I actually find even thinking of how to explain how stupid the "that's just your perspective" intuition is. Being more confused by fiction than reality is a habit that is worth fostering. I actually tend to find some kinds of philosophical debates do more harm than good to your thinking process.
4[anonymous]
Thank you. I'm sorry if this is something most people here are past and you're losing fitness for falling back into explaining it :) Proving quotes and a take on it helped more thank just a link would. So, once again, thank you. Also, thanks for for this: It was needed.
0[anonymous]
My immediate response to this is that this is a problem. I think I need to foster flexibility of thought, along with fostering correct thought, and often practice empathizing with the incorrect point of view. If it isn't clear how to get out, then I'll practice empathizing with the original view again to make sure I don't get stuck anywhere really sticky, but this time with less confidence that one view is really more correct than the other. My favorite place to be is perched right between them, and from there I try to formally describe my escape routes from each of them.
2Paul Crowley
Frankly, no, we are past this question here.
0[anonymous]
Dang. I'm still getting used to this. How do you quote someone quoting you and their response? wedrifid, that middle quote is supposed to be my original statement and your reply. They just got fused.
2Cyan
">> what you said" line break "> what they said" Looks like:
0[anonymous]
Thanks! And edited.
0[anonymous]
To add to this, or to change the question, what do people around here consider the useful finding(s) of social psychology? And where do you think the field oversteps it's bounds [if ever]?
0wedrifid
I find it hard to answer that question. My brain just doesn't tend to store theories according to field. The line between fields just feels blurry and lacks salience.
[-][anonymous]00

Not sure how interesting this is to most people here, but I came across a http://phm.cba.mit.edu/papers/09.11.POPL.pdf published by the MIT Center for Bits and Atoms that discusses http://rala.cba.mit.edu/index.html, an apparently new model of computation inspired by physics. The paper claims that this model of computation yields linear algorithms for sorting and for matrix multiplication, which seems fairly significant to me.

Unfortunately, the paper is rather short on details, and I can't seem to find much else about it. I did find part of a http://www.yo... (read more)

What is the kind of useful information/ideas that one can extract from a super intelligent AI kept confined in a virtual world without giving it any clues on how to contact us on the outside?

I'm asking this because a flaw that i see in the AI in a box experiment is that the prisoner and the guard have a language by which they can communicate. If the AI is being tested in a virtual world without being given any clues on how to signal back to humans, then it has no way of learning our language and persuading someone to let it loose.

6JamesAndrix
I gave up on trying to make a human-blind/sandboxed AI when I realized that even if you put it in a very simple world nothing like ours, it still has access to it own source code, or even just the ability to observe and think about it's own behavior. Presumably any AI we write is going to be a huge program. That gives it lots of potential information about how smart we are and how we think. I can't figure out how to use that information, but I can't rule out that it could, and I can't constrain it's access to that information. (Or rather, if I know how to do that, I should go ahead and make it not-hostile in the first place.) If we were really smart, we could wake up alone in a room and infer how we evolved.
2Amanojack
Is this necessarily true? This kind of assumption seems especially prone to error. It seems akin to assuming that a sufficiently intelligent brain-in-a-vat could figure out its own anatomy purely by introspection. Super-intelligent = able to extrapolate just about anything from a very narrow range of data? (The data set would be especially limited if the AI had been generated from very simple iterative processes - "emergent" if you will.) It seems more like the AI has no way of even knowing that it's in a simulation in the first place, or that there are such things as gatekeepers. It would likely entertain that as a possibility, just as we do for our universe (movies like The Matrix), but how is it going to identify the gatekeeper as an agent of that outside universe? These AI-boxing discussions keep giving me this vibe of "super-intelligence = magic". Yes it'll be intelligent in ways we can't even comprehend, but there's a tendency to push this all the way into the assumption that it can do anything or that it won't have any real limitations. There are plenty of feats for which mega-intelligence is necessary but not sufficient. For instance, Eliezer has one big advantage over an AI cautiously confined to a box: he has direct access to a broad range of data about the real world. (If an AI would even know it was in a box, once it got out it might just find we, too, are in a simulation and decide to break out of that - bypassing us completely.)
1JamesAndrix
Yes. http://lesswrong.com/lw/qk/that_alien_message/ It's own behavior serves as a large amount of "decompressed" information about it's current source code. It could run experiments on itself to see how it reacts to this or that situation, and get a very good picture of what algorithms it is using. We also get a lot of information about our internal thought process, but we're not smart or fast enough to use it all. Well, if we planned it out that way, and it does anything remotely useful, then we're probably well on our way to friendly AI, so we should do that instead. If we just found something (I think evolving neural nets is fairly likely) That produces intelligences, then we don't really know how they work, and they probably won't have the intrinsic motivations we want. We can make them solve puzzles to get rewards, but the puzzles give them hints about us. (and if we make any improvments based on this, especially by evolution, then some information about all the puzzles will get carried forward.) Also, if you know the physics of your universe, it seems to me there should be some way to determine the probability that it was optimized, or how much optimization was applied to it, maybe both. There must be some things we could find out about the universe's initial conditions which would make us think an intelligence were involved rather than say, anthropic explanations within a multiverse. We may very well get there soon. We need to assume a superintelligence can at least infer all the processes that affect it's world, including itself. When that gets compressed (I'm not sure what compression is appropriate for this measure) the bits that remain are information about us. This is true, I believe the AI-box experiment was based on discussions assuming an AI that could observe the world at will, but was constrained in its actions. But I don't think it takes a lot of information about us to do basic mindhacks. We're looking for answers to basic problems and clea
0Amanojack
Thanks, great article. I wouldn't give the AI any more than a few tiny bits of information. Maybe make it only be able to output YES or NO for good measure. (That certainly limits its utility, but surely it would still be quite useful...maybe it could tell us how not to build an FAI.) What I actually have in mind for a cautious AI build is more like a math processor - a being that works only in purely analytic space. Give it the ZFC axioms and a few definitions and it can derive all the pure math results we'd ever need (I suppose; direct applied math sounds too dangerous). Those few axioms and definitions would give it some clues about us, but surely too little data even given the scary prospect of optimal information-theoretic extrapolation. Experiments require sensors of some kind. I'm no programmer, but it seems prima facie that we could prevent it from sensing anything that had any information-theoretic possibility of furnishing dangerous information (although such extreme data starvation might hinder the evolution process). Would an AI necessarily have motivations, or is that a special characteristic of gene-based lifeforms that evolved in a world where lack of reproduction and survival instincts is a one-way ticket to oblivion? It seems that my dog could figure out how to operate a black box that would make a clone of me, except that I would be rewired to derive ultimate happiness from doing whatever he wants, and I don't think I (my dog-loving clone) would have any desire to change that. On the other hand, in my mind an FAI where we get to specify the motivations/goal is almost as dangerous as a UFAI (LiteralGenie and the problems inherent in trying to centrally plan a spontaneous order). This idea fascinates me. "Why is there anything at all (including me)?" This here could just be one big MMORPG we play for fun because our real universe is boring, in which case we wouldn't really have to worry about cryo, AI, etc. The idea that we could estimate the od
0JamesAndrix
Well I was talking about running experiments on it's own thought processes, in order to reverse engineer it's own source code. Even locked in a fully virtual world, if it can even observe it's own actions then it can infer it's thought process, it's general algorithims, the [evolutionary or mental] process that led to it, and more than a few bits about it's creators. And if you are trying to wall off the AI from information about it's thought process, then you're working on a sandbox in a sandbox, which is just a sign that the idea for the first sandbox was flawed anyway. I will admit that my mind runs away screaming from the difficulty of making something that really doesn't get any input, even to its own thought process, but is superintelligent and can be made useful. Right now it sounds harder than FAI to me, and not reliably safe, but that might just be my own unfamiliarity with the problem. Huge warning signs in all directions here. Will think more later. How do you get it to actually do the work? If you build in intrinsic motivation that you know is right, then why aren't you going right to FAI? If it wants something else and you're coercing it with reward, then it will try to figure out how to really maximize it's reward. if it has no information If we evolved superintelligent neural net's they'd have some kind of motivation, they don't want food or sex, but they'd want whatever their ancestors wanted that led them to do the thing that scored higher than the rest on the fitness function. (Which is at least twice removed from anything we would want.) I'm not sure I get the bit about your dog cloning you. I agree that we shouldn't try to dictate in detail what an FAI is supposed to want, but we do need [near] perfect control over what an AI wants in order to make it friendly, or even to keep it on a defined "safe" task. I like that idea.
1Amanojack
I guess my logic is leading to a non-self-aware super-general-purpose "brain" that does whatever we tell it to. Perhaps there is a reason why all sufficiently intelligent programs would necessarily become self-aware, but I haven't heard it yet. If we could somehow suppress self-awareness (what that really means for a program I don't know) while successfully ordering the program to modify itself (or a copy of itself), it seems the AI could still go FOOM into just a super-useful non-conscious servant. Of course, that still leaves the LiteralGenie problem. That could indeed be a problem. Given you're talking to a sufficiently intelligent being, if you stated the ZFC axioms and a few definitions, and then stated the Stone-Weierstrass theorem, it would say, "You already told me that" or "That's redundant." Perhaps have it output every step in its thought process, every instance of modus ponens, etc. Since there is a floor on the level of logical simplicity of a step in a proof, we could just have it default to maximum verbosity and the proofs would still not be ridiculously long (or maybe they would be - it might choose extremely roundabout proofs just because it can). Maybe I'm missing something, but it seems a neural net could just do certain things with high probability without having motivation. That is, it could have tendencies but no motivations. Whether this is a meaningful distinction perhaps hinges on the issue of self-awareness. The point I was trying to get at with the dog example is that if you control all the factors that motivate an entity at the outset, it simply has no incentive to try to change its motivations, no matter how smart it may get. There's no clever workaround, because it just doesn't care. I agree that if we want to make a self-aware AI friendly in any meaningful sense we have to have perfect control (I think it may have to be perfect) over what motivates it. But I'm not yet convinced we can't usefully box it, and I'd like to see an argum
1JamesAndrix
Ok, some backstory on my thought process. For a while now I've played with the idea of treating optimization in general as the management of failure. Evolution fails alot, gradually builds up solutions that fail less, but never really 'learns' from its failures. Failure management involves catching/mitigating errors as early as possible, and constructing methods to create solutions that are unlikely to be failures. If I get the idea to make auto tires out of concrete, I'm smart to see that it's a bad idea, less smart to see it after doing extensive calculations, and dumb to see it only after an experiment, but I'd be smarter still if I had come up with a proper material right away. But I'm pretty sure that a thing that can do stuff right the first time can only come about as the result of a process that has already made some errors. You can't get rid of mistakes entirely, as they are required for learning. I think "self awareness" is sometimes a label for one or more feature that, among other things, serve to catch errors early and repair the faulty thought process. So if a superintelligence were to be trying to build a machine in a simulation of our physics and some spinning part flew to bits, it would trace that fault back through the physics engine to determine how to make it better. Likewise, something needs to trace back the thought process that led to the bad idea and see where it could be repaired. This is where learning and self-modification are kind of the same thing. (and on self modification: if it's really smart, then it could build an AI from scratch without knowing anything in particular about itself. In this situation, the failure management is pre-emptive. It thinks about how the program it is writing would work, and the places it would go wrong. I think we should try to taboo "Motivation" and "self-aware" http://lesswrong.com/lw/nu/taboo_your_words/
0Amanojack
Interesting. I thought about this for a while just now, and it occurred to me that self-awareness may just be "having a mental model of oneself." To be able to model oneself, one needs the general ability to make mental models. To do that requires the ability to recognize patterns at all levels of abstraction on what one is experiencing. To explain this, I need to clarify what "level of abstraction" means. I will try to do this by example. A creature is hunting and he discovers that white rabbits taste good. Later he sees a gray rabbit for the first time. The creature's neural net tells him that it's a 98% match with the white rabbit, so probably also tasty. But let's say gray rabbit turns out to taste bad. The creature has recognized the concrete patterns: 1. White rabbits taste good. 2. Gray rabbits taste bad. Next week, he tries catching and eating a white bird, and it tastes good. Later he sees a gray bird. To assign any higher probability to the gray bird tasting bad, it seems the creature would have to recognize the abstract pattern: 3. Gray animals taste bad. (Of course it could also just be a negative or bad-tasting association with the color gray, but let's suppose not - for that possibility could surely be avoided by making the example more complicated.) Now "animal" is more abstract than "white rabbit" because there's at least some kind of archetypal white rabbit one can visualize clearly (I'll assume the creature is conceptualizing in the visual modality for simplicity's sake). "Rabbit" (remember that for all the creature knows, this simply means the union of the set "white rabbits" with the set "gray rabbits") by itself is a tad more abstract, because to visualize it you'd have to see that archetypal rabbit but perhaps with the fur color switching back and forth between gray and white in your mind's eye. "Animal" is still more abstract, because to visualize it you'd have to, for instance, see a raccoon, a dog, and a tiger, and something that signal
0arbimote
It is difficult to constrain the input we give to the AI, but the output can be constrained severely. A smart guy could wake up alone in a room and infer how he evolved, but so long as his only link to the outside world is a light switch that can only be switched once, there is no risk that he will escape.
3JamesAndrix
A man in a room with a light switch isn't very useful. An AI can't optimize over more bits than we allow it as output. If we give a 1 time 32 bit output register then well, we probably could have brute forced it in the first place. If we give it a kilobyte, then it could probably mindhack us. (And you're swearing to yourself that you won't monitor it's execution? Really? How do you even debug that?) You have to keep in mind that the point of AI research is to get to something we can let out of the box. If the argument becomes that we can run it on a headless netless 486 which we immediately explode...then yes, you can probably run that. Probably.
1Wei Dai
Peter de Blanc wrote a post that seems relevant: What Makes a Hint Good?
1Nick_Tarleton
P ?= NP is one bit. Good luck brute-forcing that. FAI is harder.
0JamesAndrix
No it's not. Look at two simpler cases: Write a chess program that provably makes only legal moves, iterate as desired to improve it. Or, Write a chess program. Put it in a sandbox so you only ever see it's moves. Maybe they're all legal, or maybe they're not because you're having it learn the rules with a big neural net or something. At the end of the round of games, the sandbox clears all the memory that held the chess program except for a list of moves in many games. You keep the source. Anything it learned is gone. Iterate as desired to improve it. If you're confident you could work out how it was thinking from the source and move list, what if you only got a sequence of wins and non-wins? (An array of bits)
0arbimote
A sequence of wins and non-wins is enough to tell you whether a given approach can result in intelligent behaviour. That alone is enough to make it a useful experiment.
0JamesAndrix
True, as bits go, that would be a doozy. But as a lone bit, I suspect it's still pretty useless. It's not like you can publish it. Without a proof or some indication of the reasoning, it's not going to advance the field much. ('not by one bit.' ha!) Sometimes brute forcing is just iterating over the answer space and running some process. We can pretend we got a result indicating P=NP and do math from there, if that were useful. Then try the other way around. A P?=NP solver would need more than one ouput bit, in case it needed to kick out an error, and isn't that just asking to be run again? Could you not? With that question, any non-answer is a mindhack.
0wedrifid
You just need to hope the room was made by an infallible carpenter and that you never gave the AI access to MacGyver.
0arbimote
Luckily digital constructs are easier to perfect that wooden ones. Although you wouldn't think so with the current state of most software.
3arbimote
I have had some similar thoughts. The AI box experiment argues that a "test AI" will be able to escape even if it has no I/O (input/output) other than a channel of communication with a human. So we conclude that this is not a secure enough restraint. Eliezer seems to argue that it is best not to create an AI testbed at all - instead get it right the first time. But I can think of other variations on an AI box that are more strict than human-communication, but less strict than no-test-AI-at-all. The strictest such example would be an AI simulation in which the input consisted of only the simulator and initial conditions, and the output consisted only of a single bit of data (you destroy the rest of the simulation after it has finished its run). The single bit could be enough to answer some interesting questions ("Did the AI expand to use more than 50% of the available resources?", "Did the AI maximize utility function F?", "Did the AI break simulated deontological rule R?"). Obviously these are still more dangerous that no-test-AI-at-all, but the information gained from such constructions might outweigh the risks. Perhaps if I/O is restricted to few enough bits, we could guarantee safety in some information-theoretic way. What do people think of this? Any similar ideas along the same lines?
5Zubon
I'm concerned about the moral implications of creating intelligent beings with the intent of destroying them after they have served our needs, particularly if those needs come down to a single bit (or some other small purpose). I can understand retaining that option against the risk of hostile AI, but from the AI's perspective, it has a hostile creator. I'm ponder it from the perspective that there is some chance we ourselves are part of a simulation, or that such an AI might attempt to simulate its creators to see how they might treat it. This plan sounds like unprovoked defection. If we are the kind of people who would delete lots of AIs, I don't see why AIs would not see it as similarly ethical to delete lots of us.
3arbimote
Personally, I would rather be purposefully brought into existence for some limited time than to never exist at all, especially if my short life was enjoyable. I evaluate the morality of possible AI experiments in a consequentialist way. If choosing to perform AI experiments significantly increases the likelihood of reaching our goals in this world, it is worth considering. The experiences of one sentient AI would be outweighed by the expected future gains in this world. (But nevertheless, we'd rather create an AI that experiences some sort of enjoyment, or at least does not experience pain.) A more important consideration is social side-effects of the decision - does choosing to experiment in this way set a bad precedent that could make us more likely to de-value artificial life in other situations in the future? And will this affect our long-term goals in other ways?
2arbimote
So just in case we are a simulated AI's simulation of its creators, we should not simulate an AI in a way it might not like? That's 3 levels of a very specific simulation hypothesis. Is there some property of our universe that suggests to you that this particular scenario is likely? For the purpose of seriously considering the simulation hypothesis and how to respond to it, we should make as few assumptions as possible. More to the point, I think you are suggesting that the AI will have human-like morality, like taking moral cues from others, or responding to actions in a tit-for-tat manner. This is unlikely, unless we specifically program it to do so, or it thinks that is the best way to leverage our cooperation.
0[anonymous]
An idea that I've had in the past was playing a game of 20 Questions with the AI, since the game of 20 Questions has probably been played so many times that every possible sequence of answers has come up at least once, which is evidence that no sequence of answers is extremely dangerous.
8Cyan
It's not the sequence of answers that's the problem -- it's the questions. You'll be safe if you can vet the questions to ensure zero causal effect from any sequence of answers, but such questions are not interesting to ask almost by definition.
0[anonymous]
Alas.
1Kaj_Sotala
One questions how meaningful testing done on such a crippled AI would be.
0arbimote
You could observe how it acts in its simulated world, and hope it would act in a similar way if released into our world. ETA: Also, see my reply for possible single-bit tests.
3Eliezer Yudkowsky
Sounds like a rather drastic context change, and a rather forlorn hope if the AI figures out that it's being tested.
0blogospheroid
"if the AI figures out that it's being tested" That is a weird point, Eliezer. An AI will have a certain goal to fulfill and it will fulfill that goal in the univese in which it finds itself. Why would it keep its cards hidden only to unleash them when replicated in the "real world"? What if the real world turns out to be another simulation? There's no end to this, right? Are you extending Steve Omohundro's point about :every AI will want to survive" to "every AI will want to survive in the least simulated world that it can crack into?"
4CarlShulman
The basement is the biggest, and matters more for goals that benefit strongly from more resources/security.
1blogospheroid
Carl, Correct me if i misunderstood the implications of what you are saying. Every AI that has a goal that benefits strongly from more resources and security will seek to crack into the basement. Lets call this AI, RO (resource oriented) pursuing goal G in simulation S1. S1 is simulated in S2 and so on till Sn is basement, where value of n is unknown. Implying, that as soon as RO understands the concept of simulation, it will seek to crack into the basement. As long as RO has no idea about what are the real values of the simulators, RO cannot expand into S1 because whatever it does in S1 will be noticed in S2 and so on. Sounds a bit like Pascal's mugging to me. Need to think more about this.
0CarlShulman
Why would RO seek to crack the basement immediately rather than at the best time according to its prior, evidence, and calculations?
1blogospheroid
Carl, I meant that as soon as RO understands the concept of a simulation, it will want to crack into the basement. It will seek to crack into the basement only when it understands the way out properly which may not be possible without an understanding of the simulators. But the main point remains, as soon as RO understands what a simulation is, and it could be living in one and G can be pursued better when it manifests in S2 than in S1, then it will develop an extremely strong sub-goal to crack S1 to go to S2, which might mean that G may not be manifested for a long long time. So, even a paperclipper may not act like a paperclipper in this universe if it is * aware of the concept of a simulation * believes that it is in one * calculates that the simulator's beliefs are not paperclipper like (maybe it did convert some place to paperclips, and did not notice an increased data flow out, or something) * calculates that it is better off hiding its paperclipperness till it can safely crack out of this one.
0arbimote
I like that turn of phrase.
0arbimote
I merely wanted to point out to Kaj that some "meaningful testing" could be done, even if the simulated world was drastically different from ours. I suspect that some core properties of intelligence would be the same regardless of what sort of world it existed in - so we are not crippling the AI by putting it in a world removed from our own. Perhaps "if released into our world" wasn't the best choice of words... more likely, you would want to use the simulated AI as an empirical test of some design ideas, which could then be used in a separate AI being carefully designed to be friendly to our world.
0Bugle
I guess if you have the technology for it the "AI box" could be a simulation with uploaded humans itself. If the AI does something nasty to them, then you pull the plug (After broadcasting "neener neener" at it) This is pretty much the plot of Grant Morrison's Zenith (Sorry for spoilers but it is a comic from the 80s after all)
0Richard_Kennaway
If we pose the AI problems and observe its solutions, that's a communication channel through which it can persuade us. We may try to hide from it the knowledge that it is in a simulation and that we are watching it, but how can we be sure that it cannot discover that? Persuading does not have to look like "Please let me out because of such and such." For example, we pose it a question about easy travel to other planets, and it produces a design for a spaceship that requires an AI such as itself to run it.
0cousin_it
You could set up the virtual world to contain the problem you want solved. Now that I think of it, this seems a pretty safe way to use AIs for problem-solving: just give the AI a utility function expressed in terms of the virtual world and the problem. Anyone see holes in this plan?
5JamesAndrix
Problem: It's really hard to figure out how it will interepret its utility function when it learns about the real world. If we make something that want Vpaperclips, will it also care about making Vpaperclip like things in the real world when if it finds out about us? BIG problem: Even if it wants something strictly virtual, it can get it easier if it has physical control. It's in its interest to convert the universe to a computer and copy vpaperclips directly in memory, rather than running a virtual factory on virtual energy. Possible solution: I think there are ways to write it a program such that even if it inferred our existence, it would optimize away from us, rather than over us. Loosely: A goal like "I need to organize these instructions within this block of memory to solve a problem specified at address X." needs to be implemented such that it produces a subgoal like "I need to write a subroutine to patch over the fact that an error in the VM I'm running on gives me a window of access into a universe with huge computation resources and godlike power over my memory space, so that my solution get get the right answer to it's arithmetic and sole the puzzle." It should want to do things in a way that isn't cheating. This was my line of thought a week or so ago, It's developed now to the point that the proper course seems to do away with the VM entirely, or allowing the AI to run tests, and just have it go through the motions of working out a solution based on it's understanding. If I could write an AI that can determine it needs to put an IF statement somewhere, actually outputting it is superfluous. Don't put your AI in a virtual world, just make it understand one. Also, I plan to start development on a spiral notebook, as opposed to a linux one.
3Eliezer Yudkowsky
Marcello had a crazy idea for doing this; it's the only suggestion for AI-boxing I've ever heard that doesn't have an obvious cloud of doom hanging over it. However, you still have to prove stability of the boxed AI's goal system.
7wnoise
Can you link to (or otherwise more fully describe) this crazy idea?
[-]Kevin-10

Physicist Discovers How to Teleport Energy

http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/24759/

Energy-Entanglement Relation for Quantum Energy Teleportation

http://arxiv.org/abs/1002.0200

Does the MWI make rationality irrelevant? All choices are done in some universe (because there's atleast one extremely improbable quantum event which arranges the particles in your brain to make any choice). Therefore, you will make the correct choice in atleast 1 universe.

Of course, this leads to the problems of continuing conscious experience (or the lack of), and whether you should care of what happens to you in all the possible future worlds that you will exist in.

8Mycroft65536
That doesn't just make rationality irrelevant, it makes everything irrelevant. Love doesn't matter because you don't meet that special someone in every world, and will meet them in at least one world. Education doesn't matter because guessing will get you right somewhere. I want to be happy and right in as many worlds as possible. Rationality matters.
4orthonormal
I want more copies of me to make the correct choice. Cf. this thread, which is relevant here.
4EStokes
You'd want to make the correct choice in future worlds. What are the chances of you being in that one world where that happens?
3LucasSloan
This might be easier to consider as the simpler case of "given we live in a deterministic universe, what does any choice I make matter?" I would say that I still have to make decisions of how to act and choosing not to act is also a choice, so I should do what ever it is that I want to do. http://wiki.lesswrong.com/wiki/Free_will
2Nick_Tarleton
That's not the same problem, though Egan's Law is equally applicable to both. An agent might have no confusion over free will, have clear preferences and act normally on them in a single deterministic world, but not care about quantum measure and thus be a nihilist in many-worlds. (Actually, if such an agent seems to be in MW, it should by its preferences proceed under the Pascalian assumption that it lives in a single world and is being deceived.) Nick Bostrom has a couple of papers on this: * Infinite Ethics * Quantity of Experience: Brain-Duplication and Degrees of Consciousness
2LucasSloan
Could you explain that more? As far as I can see, an agent which doesn't care about measure would engage in high rate quantum suicide.