Perhaps a question like "At what age did you first encounter or begin to develop Rationality?"
I currently think it's very likely the thought patterns that make one a useful programmer are in place sometime in grade school. Given the overlap between rationalists and programmers, I'm curious if something similar is going on. I managed to run a small test by handing HP:MoR to a bunch of kids in one of the local library programs and the ones who were already growing into a geeky/intellectual cluster took to it pretty well.
If we want to do outreach, knowing whether we're convincing people with different kinds of minds to think rationally or just finding people who already sort of think like this sounds useful. Knowing the age at which say, HP:MoR or the sequences could be understood means we have more data whether introducing college students, high school students, or grade school students to them is going to be interesting or boring to them. I don't think we can necessarily get that answer from just asking what age people started developing this mindset, nor do I think their answers will be without error bars since we may be talking about childhood memories. Also, I'm genuinely curious- are the stories of developing this strain of thought in the single digit ages weird exceptions or the typical origin story of a rationalist?
Apologies if that kind of question has already been explored.
I don't think there's one main rationality mindset.
I for example believed in the awful concepts of natural talents the whole time I was in high school. It was the mindset that my teachers and parents had, so I didn't know any better. I think if my teachers would have had the opposite belief, I would also have gotten that mindset at an early age.
When it comes to caring about understanding reality, I think I always did.
When it comes to "it's not enough to have smart arguments, it's more important to be right" I can't say when I picked that up. I don't think I had it at an early age but I don't see why it shouldn't be possible to learn it earlier.
It's been twelve months since the last LessWrong Survey, which means we're due for a new one. But before I can put out a new survey in earnest, I feel obligated to solicit questions from community members and check in on any ideas that might be floating around for what we should ask.
The basic format of the thread isn't too complex, just pitch questions. For best chances of inclusion, however, it's best to include:
The last survey included 148 questions; some sections will not be repeated in the 2017 survey, which gives us an estimate about our question budget. I would prefer to not go over 150 questions, and if at all possible come in at many fewer than that. Removed sections are:
I also plan to do significant reform to multiple portions of the survey. I'm particularly interested in making changes to:
So for maximum chances of inclusion, it would be best to keep these proposed reforms in mind with your suggestions.
(Note: If you have suggestions on questions to eliminate, I'd be glad to hear those too.)