Sorry, I didn't mean that "LW is outside standard left vs right." I meant that "post-political" politics is categorically impossible when you can't exhaustively evaluate Solomonoff Induction. You cannot reduce an entire politics to "I rationally evaluated the evidence and updated my hypotheses", because the relevant set of propositions doesn't fit the necessary axioms. Instead, I think we have to address politics as a heuristic, limited-information, online-learning utility-maximization inference problem, one that also includes the constraint of trying to make sure malign, naively selfish, ignorant, and idiotic agents can't mess up the strategy we're trying to play while knowing that other agents view us as belonging to all those listed categories of Bad People.
So it's not just an inference problem with very limited data, it's an inference about inference problem with very limited data. You can't reduce it to some computationally simpler problem of updating a posterior distribution, you can only gather data, induce improved heuristics, and hope to God you're not in a local maximum.
I think rationality in the LW sense can to be said to be about heuristics, limited-information and an online-learning utility-maximization inference problem.
If you say that on LW. People are generally going to agree and maybe add a few qualifiers. If someone on Huffington post would say: "We should think about politics as being heuristics, limited-information and an online-learning utility-maximization inference problem.", the audience wouldn't know what you are talking about.
...the strategy we're trying to play while knowing that other agents vi
Cover title: “Power and paranoia in Silicon Valley”; article title: “Come with us if you want to live: Among the apocalyptic libertarians of Silicon Valley” (mirrors: 1, 2, 3), by Sam Frank; Harper’s Magazine, January 2015, pg26-36 (~8500 words). The beginning/ending are focused on Ethereum and Vitalik Buterin, so I'll excerpt the LW/MIRI/CFAR-focused middle:
Pointer thanks to /u/Vulture.