HungryTurtle comments on Rationally Irrational - Less Wrong

-11 Post author: HungryTurtle 07 March 2012 07:21PM

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Comment author: HungryTurtle 21 April 2012 02:01:21AM 0 points [-]

Ok, then the next question is that would you agree for a human skills related to emotional and social connection maximize the productivity and health of a person?

Comment author: TheOtherDave 21 April 2012 03:27:32AM 0 points [-]

No.
Though I would agree that for a human, skills related to emotional and social connection contribute significantly to their productivity and health, and can sometimes be the optimal place to invest effort in order to maximize productivity and health.

Comment author: HungryTurtle 21 April 2012 11:21:38AM 1 point [-]

Ok, so these skill sets contribute significantly to the productivity and health of a person. Then would you disagree with the following:

  1. Social and emotional skills signifcantly contribute to health and productivity.
  2. Any job, skill, hobby, or task that is human driven can benefit from an increase in the acting agents health and productivity
  3. Therefore social and emotional skills are relevant (to some degree) to all other human driven skill sets
Comment author: TheOtherDave 21 April 2012 03:18:35PM 0 points [-]

Sure, agreed.

Comment author: HungryTurtle 23 April 2012 09:00:46PM 0 points [-]

Ok, so then I would say that the soccer player in being empathetic to my objectives would be strengthening his or her emotional/ social capacity, which would benefit his or her health/ productivity, and thus benefit his or her soccer playing.

Comment author: TheOtherDave 23 April 2012 09:31:48PM 0 points [-]

I'm not sure what you mean by "being empathetic to [your] objectives," but if it involves spending time doing things, then one question becomes whether spending a given time doing those things produces more or less improvement in their soccer playing.

I would certainly agree that if spending their available time doing the thing you suggest (which, incidentally, I have completely lost track of what it is, if indeed you ever specified) produces more of an improvement in the skills they value than doing anything else they can think of, then they ought to do the thing you suggest.