Long story short, it's an attempt to justify the planetarium hypothesis as a solution to the Fermi paradox. The first half is a discussion of how it and things like it are relevant to the intended purview of the blog, and the second half is the meat of the post. You'll probably want to just eat the meat, which I think is relevant to the interests of many LessWrong folk.
The blog is Computational Theology. It's new. I'll be the primary poster, but others are sought. I'll likely introduce the blog and more completely describe it in its own discussion post when more posts are up, hopefully including a few from people besides me, and when the archive will give a more informative indication of what to expect from the blog. Despite theism's suspect reputation here at LessWrong I suspect many of the future posts will be of interest to this audience anyway, especially for those of you who take interest in discussion of the singularity. The blog will even occasionally touch on rationality proper. So you might want to store the fact of the blog's existence somewhere deep in the back of your head. A link to the blog's main page can be found on my LessWrong user page if you forget the url.
I'd appreciate it if comments about the substance of the post were made on the blog post itself, but if you want to discuss the content here on LessWrong then that's okay too. Any meta-level comments about presentation, typos, or the post's relevance to LessWrong, should probably be put as comments on this discussion post. Thanks all!
Perhaps I should also note that I disagree with your analysis on various points.
I'm schizotypal I suppose, but not schizophrenic given the standard definition. I don't think I have any trouble interpreting mundane coincidences as mundane.
Not especially so, actually.
No, I honestly prefer something like Thomism to tricky hoaxes.
At Computational Theology I haven't even really gotten into theology yet, and I certainly haven't claimed that any supposed paranormal influences are or aren't related to God.
I'm not sure what "this" is that you're referring to. Theological language? I don't think schizophrenics commonly try to "justify" their delusions by couching them in terms of theological language. What would the point be? I don't get it. Note that talking about the abstract nature of God and so on is completely unrelated to common schizophrenic symptoms like thinking one is God or that one is somehow an ontologically privileged person.
No, I don't represent LessWrong as a thing in that way. Some on LessWrong are very interesting, some aren't. I try to only talk to the interesting folk, even if they have serious disagreements with me. I certainly don't think I'm "superior" to sundry people who participate on LessWrong.
I rarely troll—few of my LessWrong comments are downvoted. Is trolling relevant to the post? I don't think the writing style and content of the post smacks of superiority, and I don't think it's trolling. It seems to me to be an argument made in good faith in the hopes of calling attention to a hypothesis that is rightly or wrongly seen as neglected.
Which approach? I don't think I'm trolling, or condescend-ing. Regarding pleasantness, is there something else wrong with my writing style? Regarding fruitfulness, is it that you're not interested in the things I discuss for whatever reason, or, more likely, is it that I generally don't come up with ideas that catalyze further fruit-bearing insights for you? If the latter, I agree this is a problem, which is why I've created Computational Theology to have some place to plant seeds in the process of conceptual gardening. Hopefully having my own blog will allow me to share various interesting and significant ideas that I've had for a long time but that I've never had a chance to share on LessWrong. Hanging out at SingInst for a few years led me to have a lot of cool thoughts that ideally should be shared with the greater LessWrong community.
What are you referring to? Few of my comments here are downvoted, and many are heavily upvoted. Also, I've put forth many original ideas that have been upvoted by the LessWrong community. Presumably those comments would not be "available elsewhere".
Fair enough!
(Empirical data: According to a karma histogram program someone posted some months ago (I saved a copy locally, but regrettably have forgotten the author's identity), 294 of 2190 of your recent comments (about 13.4%) have negative karma as of around 1735 PDT today.)
[Edited to add: However, as Will points out in the child, it might be misleading to simply count downvoted comments, because it is believed that some users mass-downvote the comments of certain others rather than judging each comment i... (read more)