I explain what I've learned from creating and judging thousands of predictions on personal and real-world matters: the challenges of maintenance, the limitations of prediction markets, the interesting applications to my other essays, skepticism about pundits and unreflective persons' opinions, my own biases like optimism & planning fallacy, 3 very useful heuristics/approaches, and the costs of these activities in general.
Plus an extremely geeky parody of Fate/Stay Night.
This essay exists as a large section of my page on predictions markets on gwern.net
: http://www.gwern.net/Prediction%20markets#1001-predictionbook-nights
Many of the links in the OP that are supposed to go to gwern.net instead go to non-existent pages on lesswrong.com.
Yeah; I didn't realize Pandoc was generating relative links. That should be fixed.