savageorange comments on Willpower: not a limited resource? - Less Wrong

26 Post author: Jess_Riedel 25 October 2010 12:06PM

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Comment author: Academian 26 October 2010 06:11:06AM *  6 points [-]

As a personal anecdote, I have never felt anything that I was inclined to call "willpower depletion". As a teenager, I decided that "willpower" was just a loaded term/metaphor for dynamic consistency, and that calling it "willpower" was harmful to the way people thought about themselves as agents. I decided that other people's feeling of "willpower depletion" was nothing more than sensing oneself in transition from one value system to another.

But claims that the theorized "executive system", a cognitive system whose function is almost by definition to maintain dynamic consistency, was seated in the prefrontal cortex and needed more glucose than other brain functions, made me consider that maybe "willpower" is in fact an appropriate term... but I still never actually felt anything like a "depleting resource", which I found confusing.

So I'll be less confused again if the belief dependency you mention is correct, and causal. In any case, I hope it is, so that people can achieve better dynamic consistency by not thinking of it as "expendable". I'm at least one example consistent with that theory.

Comment author: savageorange 26 October 2010 10:14:50AM 1 point [-]

Thank you for introducing me to dynamic (in)consistency, that is extremely helpful for resolving my understanding of will power. I have similar experiences as you describe: except in occasions of grave illness, I experience my will as infinite, and any appearance of depletion/giving up seems to arise from a divided will (eg wanting to keep riding until 2 hours is up vs wanting to be able to move without pain tomorrow)

Dynamic consistency seems like an incredibly worthwhile area to self-improve in.

Comment author: eugman 26 October 2010 11:40:28AM 1 point [-]

How would one go about improving in that area? I can't see a straightforward way to do it.