Inferential gap problem. Or, as others have put it more metaphorically, "Two people separated by a common language".
It sounds to me like what Adams is saying with his "Trying to try" is that he sets himself in a position where all that's 'necessary' is to take the first step.
Yudkowsky's version however concerns itself with the establishment of plans rather than the carrying them out. These are two very different things. There seems to be some sagacity in Adam's version; after all, once you've begun to do something, people tend to carry them out if for no other reason than what I'll call "cognitive inertia" -- it takes more effort to change one's mind about a thing than it does to simply not think about it and follow it through. So if you can get yourself to carry out that first step, the rest is just child's play. This would seem to be a motivational hack for the lazy.
I'll have to consider it for my own uses, in fact.
EDIT: Also, would someone else please upvote him for me? I just can't bring myself, it seems, to upvote a username of "MileyCyrus". A weakness, I know.
Also, would someone else please upvote him for me?
What makes you assume the user is a male? I was secretly hoping that the user was, in fact, Destiny Hope Cyrus.
Scott Adams, author of Dilbert, believes that trying to try is more effective than trying:
Regular Less Wrong readers will remember Eliezer Yudkowsky's warning about trying to try:
Adams says the danger of trying is that you will fail in trying, which will bruise your self-esteem and cripple your motivation to try again. Yudkowsky says the danger of trying to try is that you will succeed in trying to try, leaving you too easily satisfied and unmotivated to actually do the thing you were trying to try to do.
Have any readers had success in trying to try?