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A list of some posts that are pretty awesome
I recommend the major sequences to everybody, but I realize how daunting they look at first. So for purposes of immediate gratification, the following posts are particularly interesting/illuminating/provocative and don't require any previous reading:
- Your Intuitions are Not Magic
- The Apologist and the Revolutionary
- How to Convince Me that 2 + 2 = 3
- Lawful Uncertainty
- The Planning Fallacy
- Scope Insensitivity
- The Allais Paradox (with two followups)
- We Change Our Minds Less Often Than We Think
- The Least Convenient Possible World
- The Third Alternative
- The Domain of Your Utility Function
- Newcomb's Problem and Regret of Rationality
- The True Prisoner's Dilemma
- The Tragedy of Group Selectionism
- Policy Debates Should Not Appear One-Sided
- That Alien Message
More suggestions are welcome! Or just check out the top-rated posts from the history of Less Wrong. Most posts at +50 or more are well worth your time.
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To really explain what I mean by the Asymptote, I need to explain another construct which I call "the Hypermind" ( Kawoomba's commented motivated me to invest in the terminology :) ).
What is identity? What makes you today the same person like you yesterday? My conviction is that the essential relationship between the two is that the "you of today" shares the memories of "you of yesterday" and fully understands them. In a similar manner, if a hypothetical superintelligence Omega would learn all of your memories and understand them (you) on the same level you understand yourself, Omega should be deemed a continuation of you, i.e. it assimilated your identity into its own. Thus in the space of "moments of consciousness" in the universe we have a partial order where A < B means "B is a continuation of A" i.e. "B shares A's memories and understands them". The Hypermind hypothesis is that for any A and B in this space there is C s.t. C > A and C > B. This seems to me a likely hypothesis if you take into account that the Omega in the example above doesn't have to exist in your physical vicinity but may exist anywhere in the (multi/)universe and have a simulation of you running on its laptop.
The Asymptote is then a formal limit of the Hypermind. That is, the semantics of "The Asymptote has property P" is "For any A there is B > A s.t. for any C > B, C has property P". It is then an interesting problem to find non-trivial properties of the Asymptote. In particular, I suspect (without strong evidence yet) that the opposite of the Orthogonality Thesis is true, namely that the Asymptote has a well-defined preference / utility function
This seems like a rather simplistic view, see counter-examples below.
"conviction" might not be a great term, maybe what you mean is a careful conclusion based on something.
except that we forget most of them, and that our memories of the same event change in time, and often are completely fictional.
Not sure what you mean by understanding here, feel free to d... (read more)