An Open Thread: a place for things foolishly April, and other assorted discussions.
This thread is for the discussion of Less Wrong topics that have not appeared in recent posts. If a discussion gets unwieldy, celebrate by turning it into a top-level post.
Update: Tom McCabe has created a sub-Reddit to use for assorted discussions instead of relying on open threads. Go there for the sub-Reddit and discussion about it, and go here to vote on the idea.
I would guess "paperclips and things which are paperclippy", but that still leaves many open questions.
Is 100 paperclips which last for 100 years better than 1 paperclip which lasts for 100,000 years?
How about one huge paperclip the size of a planet? Is that better or worse than a planetary mass turned into millimeter sized paperclips?
Or maybe you could make huge paperclippy-shapes out of smaller paperclips: using paperclip-shaped molecules to form tiny paperclips which you use to make even bigger paperclips. But again, how long should it last? Would you create the most stable paperclips possible, or the most paperclippy paperclips possible?
And how much effort would you put into predicting and simplifying the future (modeling, basic research, increases in ability to affect the universe, active reductions to surrounding complexity, etc.) instead of making paperclips? You could spend your entire existence in the quest for the definition to ultimate paperclippiness...
Well, User:Rain, that's about the story of my existence right there. What kinds of paperclips are the right ones? What tradeoffs should I make?
However, regarding the specific matters you bring up, they are mostly irrelevant. Yes, there could be some conceivable situation in which I have to trade off paperclips now against paperclips later. But the way it usually works is that once I obtain or make a paperclip, I move it to the safe zone, where I'll pretty much have it forever. Also, it's obviously the number of paperclips that matters, and the constra... (read more)