The Reductionism Sequence has been the most important for me, in terms of how I would assess its impact on my mental processes. In particular, I think it helps you see what other people are doing wrong, so that you can respond to their errors in a non-confrontational manner. Spending a lot of time essentially meditating on the concepts underlying dissolving the question has really changed how I see things and how I deal with disagreements with other people.
I'm not claiming to be some paragon of perfect rationality here, I still lose my patience sometimes, but it's a process.
An attempt to be more rational, then? Thanks, I think I need to reread that, anyway. That and a few others. It'll require some work, sure, but few things in life are easy. It's a start anyway, cheers! Think I'll do a bit better in... A few weeks, once I've mulled it over.
I don't think anyone here is perfect, though a lot here is simply brilliant logic. Though, as humans, we're automatically biased for or against something, at times for the wrong things and reasons. No bias at all isn't something we're equipped for, and to me sounds quite dull. Some things we have to believe, even as with our limited lifespan it would be very hard to learn everything.
Anyway, on to my actual point: How often do you realise you're biased for the wrong reasons, and you argue more for winning than being right? Also, what irrationality can you point out, and how to fight it? This could apply to you, or those around you, doesn't matter as no one's perfect. But as usual, we should try to at least be better.
Right now I'm trying to figure out how to best deal with unreasonable demands. A theological debate which eventually went "Well, if science can't do X, it is flawed, and we should accept that some questions are unanswerable.", and I'm working out the most efficient counter-argument (leaning towards "that's why we should try to see if it's impossible or not"). Anyway, share your thoughts on this, how to be efficiently rational, though if you try to help me, I'd like more questions instead of answers. I value the process of rationality more than straight-up answers, even though it's frustrating as it is.
Basically: Flaws you encounter and how to fight them efficiently, maybe [Bayesian Judo style](http://lesswrong.com/lw/i5/bayesian_judo/).