I recently heard about SIAI's Rationality Minicamp and thought it sounded cool, but for logistical/expense reasons I won't be going to one.
There are probably lots of people who are interested in improving their instrumental rationality, know about and like LessWrong, but haven't read the vast majority of content because there is just so much material, and the practical payoff is uncertain.
It would be cool if it was much easier for people to find the highest ROI material on LessWrong.
My rough idea for how this new instrumental rationality tool might work:
- It starts off as a simple wiki focused on instrumental rationality. People only add things to the wiki (often just links to existing LessWrong articles) if they have tried them and found them very useful for achieving their goals.
- People are encouraged to add "exercises" that help you develop the skill represented by the article, of the type that are presumably done at the Rationality Minicamps.
- Only people who have tried the specific thing in question should add comments about their experiences with it.
- Long Term Goal: Every LessWrong user can define their own private stack rank of the most important concepts/techniques/habits for instrumental rationality. These stack ranks are globally merged by some LessWrong software to create an overall stack rank of the highest ROI ideas/behaviors/techniques as judged by the LessWrong community at any given time. People looking to improve their instrumental rationality can then just visit this global stack rank and pick the highest item that they haven't tried yet to experiment with, and work backwards from there if there are any prerequisites.
Do you think others would find this useful? Anyone have suggested improvements?
Many of the techniques I've found on Less Wrong have increased my available time, money, energy, mood... if the only way I could have learned and used the technique was to have paid money for it, I would gladly. If there was a way to pay back, say, 10% of my actual gains from How to Beat Procrastination to Luke to do with as he wishes, I would press that button. Issues include not correctly estimating the counterfactual (without technique X, how well would I really have done? Surely not a complete crash-and-burn... and what were the actual consequences of not doing well? Surely not as bad as my overestimating-losses-brain estimates...), overcounting extra time that in part gets filled with things I will remove later for "extra time", sending the rewards to the proximate cause of my learning the technique rather than someone further up the origin tree, people gaming the system as soon as it involves money they can steal, and probably others that marginal consideration is too small to bring to mind.
I think it's the grey button midway down http://singularity.org/donate/