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At the rationality meetup today, there was a great newcomer. He's read up most of Eliezer's Yudkowsky's original Sequences up to 2010, and he's also read a handful of posts promoted on the front page. As a landing pad for the rationalist community, to me, Less Wrong seems to be about updating beyond the abstract reasoning principles of philosophy past, toward realizing that through a combination of microeconomics, probability theory, decision theory, cognitive science, social psychology, and information theory, that humans can each hack their own minds, and notice how they use heuristics, to increase their success rate at which they form functional beliefs, and achieve their goals.
Then, I think about how if someone has only been following the rationalist community of Less Wrong for the last few years, and then they come to a meetup for the first time in 2014, everyone else who's been around for a few years will be talking about things that don't seem to fit with the above model of what the rationalist community is about. Putting myself back into a newcomer/outsider perspective, here are some memes that don't seem to immediately, obviously follow from 'cultivating rationality habits':
Citing Moloch, an ancient demon, as a metaphorical source of all the problems humanity currently faces.
How a long series of essays yearning for the days of yore has led to intensely insular discussion of polarized contrarian social movements, This doesn't square with how Less Wrong has historically avoided political debates because of how they often drift to ideological bickering, name-calling, and signaling allegiance to a coalition. Such debates aren't usually conducive to everyone reaching more accurate conclusions together, but we're having them anyway.
Some of us reversing our previous opinions on what's fundamentally true, or false.
Less Wrong is also welcomes discussion of contrarian, and controversial, ideas, such as cryopreservation, and transhumanism. If this is the first thing somebody learns about Less Wrong through the grapevine, the first independent sources they may come across may be rather unflattering of the community as a whole, and disproportionately cynical about what most of us actually believe. Furthermore, controversy attracts media coverage like moths to a flame, which hasn't gone to well for Less Wrong, and which falsely paints divergent opinions as our majority beliefs.
I'm not calling for Less Wrong to write a press coverage package, or protocol. However, I want to foster a local community at which I can discuss cognitive science, and the applications of microeconomics of everyday life, without new friends getting hung up on the weird beliefs they associate me with.
Additionally, in growing the local meetup, my friends, and I, in Vancouver, have gone to other meetups, and seeded the idea that it's worth our friend's time to check out Less Wrong. We've made waves to the point that a local student newspaper may want to publish an article about what Less Wrong is about, and profile some of my friends in particular. However, this has backfired to the point where I meet new people, or talk to old friends, and they're associating me with creepy beliefs I don't follow. It sucks that I feel I might have to do damage control for my personal standing in a close-knit community. So, I'm going to try writing another post detailing all the boring, useful ideas on Less Wrong nobody else notices, such as Luke's posts about scientific self-help, or Scott's great arguments in favor or niceness, community, and having better debates by interpreting your opponent's arguments charitably, or the repositories of useful resources.
If you have links/resources about the most boring useful ideas on Less Wrong, or an introduction that highlights, e.g., all the discourse of Less Wrong which is merely the practical applications of scientific insight for everyday life, please share them below. I'll try including them in whatever guide I generate.
Please note that none of those links points to a LessWrong page. They are two personal blogs. Personal blogs don't have to follow LW policies.
I consider Moldbug almost completely irrelevant for LW. He has a few fans here, bu... (read more)