Ever since Eliezer, Yvain, and myself stopped posting regularly, LW's front page has mostly been populated by meta posts. (The Discussion section is still abuzz with interesting content, though, including original research.)
Luckily, many LWers are posting potentially front-page-worthy content to their own blogs.
Below are some recent-ish highlights outside Less Wrong, for your reading enjoyment. I've added an * to my personal favorites.
Overcoming Bias (Robin Hanson, Rob Wiblin, Katja Grace, Carl Shulman)
- Hanson, Beware Far Values
- Wiblin, Is US Gun Control an Important Issue?
- Wiblin, Morality As Though It Really Mattered
- Grace, Can a Tiny Bit of Noise Destroy Communication?
- Shulman, Nuclear winter and human extinction: Q&A with Luke Oman
- Wiblin, Does complexity bias biotechnology towards doing damage?
- Kurzweil's Law of Accelerating Returns *
- The Great Stagnation
- Epistemic Learned Helplessness *
- The Biodeterminist's Guide to Parenting
- Spreading happiness to the stars seems little harder than just spreading
- Rawls' original position, potential people, and Pascal's Mugging
- Philosophers vs economists on discounting
- Utilitarianism, contractualism, and self-sacrifice
- Are pain and pleasure equally energy-efficient? *
I'm afraid once you take even that ideal to the extreme you will get something horrific. An effective way to minimize suffering and death is to minimize things that can experience suffering and death. ie. Taking this ideal to the extreme kills everyone!
Watching what happens when a demigod of "Misguided Good" alignment actually implements this ideal forms the basis of the plot for Summer Knight, where Harry Dresden goes head to head against a powerful Fey who is just too damn sensitive and proactively altruistic for the world's good.
Um if you didn't happen to notice, killing everyone qualifies as "death" and is therefore out of bounds for reaching that particular ideal.