Studying and Part-time work/supplementary income

1 Goobahman 22 January 2014 02:22AM

Hi Less Wrong,

 

I'd like to draw on you for some advice.

 

I'm about to undertake studies, but will need some supplementary income to attain my desired standard of living while doing so.

Part-time work could be attained quite easily, but is likely to take the form of something fairly boring e.g. data entry/bar work.

 

I was thinking that there might be ways out there for me to learn a particular skill set that would enable me to work from home and at more flexible hours for a source of income, as well as providing me the opportunity to learn something new, given that so many people on here seem to do such things quite successfully. 

 

Given my circumstances below what would you recommend:

 

I'm fairly intelligent, enjoying learning, and have strong social skills

I live in Sydney Australia

I have musical talents

I have a car

I lack softward development/programming skills

I have decent office application skills.

I'm willing to put the hours in to level up a new ability.

 

Any suggestions/Tips/criticisms are welcome.

Comment author: Goobahman 17 October 2013 03:09:36AM 0 points [-]

There's certainly a lot of webcomics produced nowadays that explain concepts in an amusing and simple manner.

Comment author: Goobahman 14 October 2013 05:05:17AM 3 points [-]

Has anyone had any experience with http://sundayassembly.com ?

I'd love to hear some first hand accounts. It sounds like all the things I enjoyed about going to church when I was a Christian, with the Christianity part.

Brain Training to maximize returns

4 Goobahman 11 October 2013 01:23AM

Hi Everyone,

Australia's ABC has recently broadcast a new series called 'Redesign my Brain' with Todd Sampson.

The series seeks to explore how much the brain can be improved in areas like memory and recognition. After just one month of training Todd found himself performing considerably better on tests then he had prior.
He also competed in the World Memorization Championships, and watched a bloke in Germany play 12 games of chess simultaneously without seeing any of the boards.
So other than being a fun show to watch, it got me thinking about the advantages of brain training. 
I've had a look at some stuff like dual-n-back, luminosity, and other brain training programs, but I've failed to really explore how much utility such training has.

One of the memory champions was able to remember the order of 25 decks of cards in one hour. But it didn't seem like his ability didn't do much to improve his life beyond providing a fun and enjoyable hobby.

So I'd like to ask:

Which areas of cognitive training do you think would have the best returns in terms of life optimization?

And what do you think would be the best way to go about that training?

Would love to hear some success stories.

In response to Sydney meetup?
Comment author: luminosity 03 August 2013 12:23:51AM 0 points [-]

Just moved to Sydney myself in the last few weeks. I'd also love to have a Sydney meetup to attend -- did you hear back from anyone about a meetup, or will one of us need to organise one?

In response to comment by luminosity on Sydney meetup?
Comment author: Goobahman 16 August 2013 02:06:47AM 0 points [-]

thanks for the reply/message.

it looks like Sydney lacks a regular meetup at the moment.

Sydney meetup?

2 Goobahman 11 June 2013 06:57AM

sorry to add clutter, but I've recently returned to living in sydney and was wondering if there is a regular meetup in the area? I'd love to attend.

Advice for an isolated Rationalist?

12 Goobahman 03 April 2012 04:40AM

Hello fellow readers.

I've been enjoying LW for a while now, and I can confidently say that many of the ideas on in this community have done much to better my life.

However, I live in some isolation from like-minded individuals. I lack social groups that aspire to the same values of rationality that I have come to treasure. My nearest meet-up is Melbourne, but that takes approximately a hour and a half to get to, and would require more time and money than I can reasonably afford at the moment.
I find it difficult to immerse myself and live out many of these ideas when I do not have the social support to back me.

Anyone have any tips for managing rationalist isolation?

Comment author: BrandonReinhart 30 March 2012 01:07:38AM *  29 points [-]

I attended the 2011 minicamp.

It's been almost a year since I attended. The minicamp has greatly improved me along several dimensions.

  1. I now dress better and have used techniques provided at minicamp to become more relaxed in social situations. I'm more aware of how I'm expressing my body language. It's not perfect control and I've not magically become an extrovert, but I'm better able to interact in random social situations successfully. Concretely: I'm able to sit and stand around people I don't know and feel and present myself as relaxed. I dress better and people have noticed and I've received multiple comments to that effect. I've chosen particular ways to present myself and now I get comments like 'you must play the guitar' (this has happened five times since minicamp haha). This is good since it loads the initial assumptions I want the person to load.

  2. I've intentionally hacked my affectation towards various things to better reach my goals. For years I never wanted to have children. My wife said (earlier this year, after minicamp) that she wanted to have kids. I was surprised and realized that given various beliefs (love for wife, more kids good for society, etc) I needed to bring my emotions and affectations in line with those goals. I did this by maximizing positive exposure to kids and focusing on the good experiences...and it worked. I'm sure nature helped, but I came to a change of emotional reaction that feels very stable. TMI: I had my vasectomy reversed and am actively working on building kid version 1.0

  3. Minicamp helped me develop a better mental language for reasoning around rationalist principles. I've got tools for establishing mental breakpoints (recognizing states of surprise, rationalization, etc) and a sense for how to improve on weak areas in my reasoning. I have a LOT of things I still need to improve. Many of my actions still don't match my beliefs. The up side is that I'm aware of many of the gaps and can make progress toward solving them. There seems to be only so much I can change at once, so I've been prioritizing everything out.

  4. I've used the more concise, direct reasoning around rationality at my job at Valve Software. I use it to help make better decisions, concretely: when making decisions around features to add to DOTA 2 I've worked particularly hard at quickly relinquishing failed ideas that I generated. I have developed litanies like 'my ideas are a product, not a component of my identity.' Before I enter into interactions I pause and think 'what is my goal for this interaction? The reasoning tools from minicamp have helped me better teach and interpret the values of my company (which are very similar). I helped write a new employee guide that captures Valve values, but uses tools such as Anna Salamon's "Litany for Simplified Bayes" to cut straight to the core concepts. "If X is true, what would the world look like?" "If X is not true, what would the world look like?" "What does the world look like?" I've been influential in instituting predictions meetings before we launch new features.

  5. I've been better able to manage my time, because I'm more aware of the biases and pitfalls that lie before me. I think more about what 'BrandonReinhart2020' wants than what the current me wants. (Or at least, my best guess as to what I think he would want...like not being dead, and being a bad ass guitar shredder, etc). This has manifested itself concretely in my self-education around the guitar. When I went to minicamp I had only just started learning guitar. Since then I've practiced 415 hours (I work full time, so this is all in my spare time) and have developed entirely new skills. I can improv, write songs, etc. Minicamp provided some inspiration, yes, but there were also real tools that I've employed. A big one was coming home and doing research on human learning and practice. This helped me realize that my goals were achievable. Luke gave sessions on how to do efficient research. Critch gave a session on hacking your affectations. I used this to make practice something I really, really like doing (I listened to music I liked before practicing, I would put objects like role-playing books or miniatures that I liked around my practice area -- nerdy yes, but it worked for me -- and I would drink a frosty beer after practicing three hours in a row. Okay so that last one shows that my health beliefs and goals may not be entirely in line, but it served an objective here). Now I can easily practice for 3 hours and enjoy every moment of it. (This is important, before I would use that time for World of Warcraft and other pursuits that just wasted time and didn't improve me.)

I've been in the Less Wrong orbit for a long time and have had the goal of improving my rationality for a long time. I've read Yudkowsky's writing since the old SL4 days. I followed Overcoming Bias from the beginning. I can't say that I had a really good grasp on which concepts were the most important until after minicamp. There's huge value in being able to ask questions, debate a point, and just clarify your confusion quickly.

I have also been an SIAI skeptic. Both myself and John Salvatier thought that SIAI might be a little religion-like. Our mistake. The minicamp was a meeting of really smart people who wanted to help each other win more. The minicamp was genuinely about mental and social development and the mastery of concepts that seem to lead to a better ability to navigate complex decision trees toward desired outcomes.

While we did talk about existential risk, the SIAI never went deep into high shock level concepts that might alienate attendees. It wasn't an SIAI funding press. It wasn't a AGI press. In fact, I thought they almost went too light on this subject (but I came to modern rationality from trans/posthumanism and most people in the future will probably get to trans/posthumanism from modern rationality, so discussions about AGI and such feels normal to me). Point being if you have concerns about this you'll feel a lot better as you attend.

I would say the thing that most discomforted me during the event was the attitude toward meditation. I realized, though, that this was an indicator about my preconceptions about meditation and not necessarily due to facts about meditation. After talking to several people about meditation, I learned that there wasn't any funky mysticism inherent to meditation, just closely associated to meditation. Some people are trying to figure out if it can be used as a tool and are trying to figure out ways to experiment around it, etc. I updated away from 'meditation is a scary religious thing' toward 'meditation might be another trick to the bag.' I decided to let other people bear the burden/risk of doing the research there, though. :)

Some other belief shifts related to minicamp: I have greatly updated toward the Less Wrong style rationality process as being legitimate tools for making better decisions. I have updated a great deal toward the SIAI being a net good for humanity. I have updated a great deal toward the SIAI being led by the right group of people (after personal interactions with Luke, Anna, and Eliezer).

Comparing minicamp to a religious retreat seems odd to me. There is something exciting about spending time with a bunch of very smart people, but it's more like the kind of experience you'd have at a domain-specific research summit. The experience isn't to manipulate through repeated and intense appeals to emotion, guilt, etc (I was a Wesleyan Christian when I was younger and went to retreats like Emaeus and I still remember them pressing a nail sharply into my palm as I went to the altar to pray for forgiveness). It's more accurate to think of minicamp as a rationality summit, with the instructors presenting findings, sharing techniques for the replication of those findings, and there being an ongoing open discussion of the findings and the process used to generate findings. And like any good Summit there are parties.

If you're still in doubt, go anyway. I put the probability of self-damage due to attending minicamp at extremely low, compared to self-damage from attending your standard college level economics lecture or a managerial business skills improvement workshop. It doesn't even blip on a radar calibrated to the kind of self-damage you could do speculatively attending religious retreats.

If you're a game developer, you would probably improve your ability to make good decisions around products more by attending SIAI Minicamp than you would by attending GDC (of course, GDC is still valuable for building a social network within the industry).

Comment author: Goobahman 02 April 2012 02:11:19PM 0 points [-]

Thanks for that. It's fascinating to get a glimpse of what rationality looks like in the real world rather than just online interchanges.

Note aside, I'm a big fan of your work. Reassures me to know rationalists are on the team for dota 2

Comment author: Goobahman 03 March 2012 04:26:06PM 0 points [-]

bah I really want to get in on these, but I'd have to train it in from Ballarat!

Is it worth the effort? Who will attest?

Comment author: Wei_Dai 03 March 2012 08:54:56AM 6 points [-]

Luke, I'm confused by your occasional links to academic papers. There are a lot of papers out there related to topics we discuss. (I once collected and skimmed or read every paper I could find on the Sleep Beauty and Absent-Minded Driver problems, and there were something like 50 at that time.) How are you deciding which papers to link to? (Also, I'm surprised you have the time to look at papers like these, now that you're the Executive Director and no longer a researcher.)

Comment author: Goobahman 03 March 2012 04:03:07PM 0 points [-]

I'm guessing this is one of Luke's ways of bringing some focus to the research of Rationality in the Academic world, and its significance to the LW community.

I hypothesize that he see's a gap there that needs more bridging.

(just my humble estimation)

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