There's a difference between optimizing for truth and optimizing for interestingness.
Oh yes. For example, Physical Review Letters is mostly interested in the former, while HuffPo -- in the latter.
the more hypotheses you have, the better your odds of stumbling on the correct hypothesis
That's not true because you must also evaluate all these hypotheses and that's costly. For a trivial example, given a question X, would you find it easier to identify a correct hypothesis if I presented you with five candidates or with five million candidates?
I suspect "having ideas" is a skill you can develop
Yes, subject to native ability. I suspect it's more like music than like clay pots: some people find it effortless, most can improve with training, and some won't do well regardless of how much time they spend practicing.
That's the sort of thing academics and journalists are already paid to do.
Kinda. On the one hand, pop-sci continues to be popular. On the other hand, journalists are very very bad at it.
the already-scary process of sharing new ideas
I would like to suggest attaching less self-worth and less status to ideas you throw out. Accept that it's fine that most of them will be shot down.
I don't like the kindergarten alternative: Oh, little Johnny said something stupid, like he usually does! He is such a creative child! Here is a gold star!
I recommend recording ideas in a private notebook.
I concur. Note that LW is not that private notebook.
OK, so I told you the other day that I find you a difficult person to have discussions with. I think I might find your comments less frustrating if you made an effort to think of things I would say in response to your points, and then wrote in anticipation of those things. If you're interested in trying this, I converted all my responses using rot13 so you can try to guess what they will be before reading them.
Oh yes. For example, Physical Review Letters is mostly interested in the former, while HuffPo -- in the latter.
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A bit about our last few months:
We care a lot about AI Safety efforts in particular, and about otherwise increasing the odds that humanity reaches the stars.
Also, we[1] believe such efforts are bottlenecked more by our collective epistemology, than by the number of people who verbally endorse or act on "AI Safety", or any other "spreadable viewpoint" disconnected from its derivation.
Our aim is therefore to find ways of improving both individual thinking skill, and the modes of thinking and social fabric that allow people to think together. And to do this among the relatively small sets of people tackling existential risk.
Existential wins and AI safety
Who we’re focusing on, why
Brier-boosting, not Signal-boosting