Here's a little example of prisoner's dilemma that I just thought up, which shows how mass media might contribute to modern loneliness:
Let's assume that everyone has a fixed budget of attention and empathy. Empathizing with imaginary Harry Potter gives you 1 point of utility. Empathizing with your neighbor gives them 10 points of utility, but doesn't give you anything, because your neighbor isn't as interesting as Harry Potter. So everyone empathizes with Harry Potter instead of their neighbor, and everyone is lonely.
Does that sound right? What can society do to get out of that trap?
"Scientists Announce HGP-Write, Project to Synthesize the Human Genome":
...The publication occurred on Thursday by the journal Science.
The authors of the proposal said that the ability to fabricate huge stretches of DNA would allow for numerous scientific and medical advances. It might be possible to make organisms resistant to all viruses, for instance, or make pig organs suitable for transplant into people.
The project, which will be run by a new nonprofit organization called the Center of Excellence for Engineering Biology, will seek to raise $1
It's almost three months since a mysterious benefactor offered to donate to MIRI but insisted on doing it through other LW members contacted via private messsages.
So, I'm curious... Did anyone cooperate? Is there a story to share?
Yes; I hear that he's the second largest donor to MIRI this year, and I've been working with him successfully on esports betting (with half of the proceeds earmarked for MIRI). I don't know if anyone has taken him up on the match offer.
Something I and my local group of conversational partners noticed (I don't have a better word for it) over the weekend: Greek philosophy was a matter of law; Theseus' Ship had tax consequences, and shifting conventions in philosophy had legal ramifications. Greek philosophy was argued in court; Sophists were lawyers who were paid to argue your case, and would argue any side whatsoever, as that was what they were paid to do. Socrates had to die, not because he was annoying important people (which he was), but because he insisted on a "pure" phi...
Nope. You continue to be wrong.
You are mostly familiar with Graeco-Roman mythology and less familiar with the literature of that period. But that literature certainly existed and I don't know on which basis do you make assertions about "most of their stories".
Take Apuleius' Golden Ass -- a story about the misadventures of a man who (spoilers!) manages to turn himself into a donkey. You think most people took it as true?
In any case, which characters are fictional is irrelevant to the original issue of spending empathy. What matters is whether the ...
To fellow victims of chronic pain: do you ever despair about the future, knowing your pain might never end? If so, how do you deal with it?
I've made it a schelling point to never end it all. To leave open the possibility of suicide seems too dangerous to me, too alluring. But I'm still afraid that one day I might try. Do any of you ever feel like this?
I would like to know how others deal with this, as I'm only doing so-so.
Storytelling, in the sense of telling a story that all the participants acknowledge to be false
That's a very weird concept of a "story".
is actually remarkably recent
Like ancient Greece and Rome are "remarkably recent"?
The alleged scientific concensus of the irrationality of violent discipline against children
Could research on corporal punishment in the home be misleading due to confounding by genetic factors or other methodological issues?
While doing research on this topic I found very interesting WP: talk, sections with someone making objections, and getting the most effective diplomatic replies I have every seen. Very impressive. here it is.
Worried your worry is untreatable?
Last night I started to wonder: Did I only try SSRI’s for depression (I tried antipsychotics an...
I don't think most people understood Aesops fables to be about a real fox at the time they were written.
I remember LW discussions where a study was cited about how psychologists compare to lay people when they do counselling. Does anybody have a link?
Deep learning and machine learning resource list.
What method of testing whether one is better at remembering things from hearing or from seeing would you recommend?
Help request. I am looking for an article/posting that I once read, the topic of which was reasoning about continuums , like Less Wrong's Fallacy of Grey . I think I originally found the article through a link on Less Wrong but I have been unable to locate it. Any suggestions?
I have a question, but I try to be careful about the virtue of silence. So I'll try to ask my question as a link :
http://www.theverge.com/2016/6/2/11837874/elon-musk-says-odds-living-in-simulation
Also, these ideas are still weird enough to win against his level of status, as I think the comments here show:
Some people believe that altruism has evolved through helping your relatives or through helping others to help you in return. I was thinking about it; on the surface the idea looks good -- if you already have this system in place, it is easy to see how it benefits those involved -- but that doesn't explain how the system could have appeared in the first place. Anyone knows the standard answer?
Imagine that you are literally the first organism who by random mutation achieved a gene for "helping those who help you". How specifically does this gene i...
The alleged scientific concensus of the irrationality of violent discipline against children
Could research on corporal punishment in the home be misleading due to confounding by genetic factors or other methodological issues?
While doing research on this topic I found very interesting WP: talk, sections with someone making objections, and getting the most effective diplomatic replies I have every seen. Very impressive. here it is.
Worried your worry is untreatable?
Last night I started to wonder: Did I only try SSRI’s for depression (I tried antipsychotics and mood stabilisers too but those aren’t ‘just’ for depression)? Is that why pharmacotherapy failed? What if I try a different class like Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs)s
Treatment resistant depression is common.
Treatment-resistance is relatively common in cases of MDD. Rates of total remission following antidepressant treatment are only 50.4%. In cases of depression treated by a primary-care physician, 32% of patients partially responded to treatment and 45% did not respond at all
...
Treatment-resistant depression is associated with more instances of relapse than depression that is responsive to treatment. One study showed that as many as 80% of patients who needed more than one course of treatment relapsed within a year. Treatment-resistant depression has also been associated with lower long term quality of life
You may wonder, what do you do if treatment for an anxiety disorder fails? The group of anxiety patients that is resistant to the treatment has been shown to have very poor quality of life and have highest rate of suicidal attempts than any other disorders..
“The two biggest risk factors for treatment resistance are inadequate treatment and failure of patients to comply with treatment. The other important risk factor is having a comorbid condition, such as depression, bipolar disorder, or substance abuse,” says Bystritsky
Conversely, medications with multiple mechanisms of action or 'poly-pharmacy cocktails' seem to be most effective in the treatment-resistant population. The scientific literature does not contain any good efficacy data for polypharmacy. However, it is apparent that the use of multiple medications with different indications is a rule rather exception in the treatment-resistant anxiety patients
...
For same of the patients, this regimen could be appropriate and even life saving. For some of them it could mask an underlying problem by numbing the feeling and not addressing abnormal coping of these patients. The examples of this could be an oversedated OCD patient, who continues his compulsive behaviors or a PTSD patient where the core traumatic even has never been addressed in psychotherapy. In my opinion, the extensive polypharmacy in patients should be periodically reevaluated and a second opinion should be obtained. It is especially important when the patient is treated with a complicated regimen for more than 2 years without clear improvement. Sometimes a 'subtraction' of medications from a polypharmacy regimen could lead to an improvement.
Other strategies are discussed in the source article in molecular psychiatry
Evidence suggests the worse psychological harms from violence are closer to home than you might expect
Would you rather be a victim of domestic violence, or the victim of armed conflict (think ISIS, or Naxalites or Insurgencies in Africa)?
This conclusion – that fighting itself is often not as bad as hardship and domestic abuse and other traumas that can fill every day – is one borne out in other research on adversity.
from Mental health and conflict research from Colombia.
It’s worth saying that being ‘trauma obsessed’ is really just a American and European condition – as I’ve discussed before, Latin American psychology in particular has a strong tradition of looking at problems on the community level rather than always aiming to treat the individual victims.
Effective hedonism: sex
Students have less sex than others of the same age (except my students, who have assured me that is impossible) and married people have more....Research suggests that promiscuity is not associated with increased happiness and, in fact, that the number of sexual partners needed to maximize happiness is exactly one....Money may bring you happiness, but it won’t buy you more sex. Being homosexual doesn’t make you any happier than anyone else, but it does mean having more partners....People who cheat in marriage (10% of the married people in the sample have had sex with more than one person in the previous year) are less happy. Men who use prostitutes are also less happy. That is, promiscuous people are less happy
from less happy
I also wonder how societal attitudes towards sexual behavior affect individual happiness. If I engage in a behavior that is considered socially unacceptable and I am unhappy, is that because of the behavior or because of the social acceptability of the behavior?
Are there cross-cultural studies?
Summary of 80,000 hours research as it applies to pursuit of employment for hedonistic purposes
”A widely used definition of stressful situations is one in which the demands of the situation threaten to exceed the resources of the individual.”
One puzzle is that people with higher responsibility jobs, which you’d expect to be more stressful, have been found to have better health outcomes than those with lower responsibility jobs.
“Current evidence indicates that perceived psychosocial stress is independently associated with increased risk of stroke.”
Steve Jobs started out passionate about zen buddhism. He got into technology as a way to make some quick cash. But as he became successful, his passion grew, until he became the most famous advocate of “doing what you love”.
Some studies suggest that people in higher responsibility positions, with greater job demands, have better health outcomes and are less stressed than people in lower responsibility positions. This may be because those in higher responsibility positions also tend to have greater autonomy, control and power.
Overall, the studies actually found that higher job demands3 (and low control to a lesser extent) were associated with higher risk of heart disease and mortality:
”It is important to note that the low stress levels of leaders may both cause and result from leadership. That is, individuals with low stress levels may be particularly well-suited for leadership and as a result, may select into leadership positions. Conversely, leadership roles may confer lower stress because of the psychological resources that they afford.”
"...those who believed that stress had a large effect on their health had double the risk of suffering a heart attack...."
"”There is a simpler, less mysterious way of accounting for the results: people who experience stress but who suffer minimal ill effects from it come to believe that stress cannot hurt them, whereas people who do suffer ill effects come to believe that stress is harmful. Voilà, we now have the correlation those researchers found but with belief as an outcome rather than a cause.”"
When have you been most fulfilled in the past? What did these times have in common? Imagine you just found out you’re going to die in ten years? What would you do? Can you make any of our six factors more specific? e.g. what kinds of people do you most like to work with?
My follow up questions are:
Not quoted from 80k, but in a piece they link to:
...generally try to avoid or ignore hostile people' (Epstein's test)
Something tweetable?
#mindset:
#Reframe demands as #opportunities
#Reframe #stress as useful rather than threatening
Let me know if you tweet or share in some form or another so I can track my impact (if any!) and keep doing this
Research suggests that promiscuity is not associated with increased happiness and, in fact, that the number of sexual partners needed to maximize happiness is exactly one ... People who cheat in marriage (10% of the married people in the sample have had sex with more than one person in the previous year) are less happy. Men who use prostitutes are also less happy. That is, promiscuous people are less happy
The obvious question: Which way does the correlation go?
One possible explanation is "cheating will make you unhappy, e.g. because it will ruin yo...
If it's worth saying, but not worth its own post (even in Discussion), then it goes here.
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