Comment author: TheOverseer 06 April 2015 10:39:20PM 2 points [-]

Hmm, this project might be of interest http://cci.mit.edu/deliberatoriumresearchpage.html Wad'ya think of it?

Comment author: Terdragon 08 April 2015 04:44:10AM 1 point [-]

Huh, the screenshot reminds me of this thing that /r/hpmor ended up developing.

Comment author: Gunnar_Zarncke 05 April 2015 12:06:50PM 6 points [-]

Tangential: I like the idea of having mnemonics for biases but that they can't be shared bugs me. I mean they could by publishing 'standard' mnemoncs but then they don't naturally fit in anybodys memory palace - at least not without additional mnemonic work.

So the idea is: Couldn't we have 'standardized memory palaces'? At least a few rooms which everybody shares. Kind of like a standard floorplan where everybody knows that the entrance (zero) with the stone floor (appeal to the stone) leads into the kitchen (1) with the sun-bathed flowers (halo effect) - or whatever. A memory palace everybody learns in kindergarten could be a great aid for communication and learning for everybody.

What do you think?

Comment author: Terdragon 05 April 2015 06:11:20PM *  2 points [-]

Woah, I like this idea.

I made a memory palace once; it contains a grand entrance hall, and within that entrance hall is a filing cabinet, and within that filling cabinet is a piece of paper with pictures about what I did on the day I made the memory palace. It's got remarkable fidelity, but it's useless unless I put something in it other than, well, that filing cabinet.

What would be a good way for us, as a group, to start creating a standardized memory palace? It would be cool to do this collaboratively somehow.

Cognitive Bias Mnemonics

5 Terdragon 05 April 2015 03:27AM

How many cognitive biases can you name, off the top of your head?

Try it, before moving on.

Give yourself sixty seconds.

Make a list.

Write them down.

I know that I've read about a number of biases by now, but they don't come to mind very easily. If I wish to become wary enough to spot cognitive biases in my own thought, then I might appreciate being able to quickly summon many examples of cognitive biases to mind. This would also make it easier to share examples of cognitive biases with others.

I plan to create a set of mnemonics for important biases, to make it easier for myself to remember them (and, as a consequence, to make it easier to spot them and eliminate them). I'll imagine each bias as an item; by visualizing the collection of items, I can remember the biases. If I really want to make sure that I don't forget any, they could be placed along a path in a mind palace.

Example mnemonic: Hindsight bias is an old leather boot. It's an old leather boot because that reminds me of the past, which clues the name of the bias. And anyways, psshh, why is everyone so excited about the idea of footwear? Anyone could have come up with that! It's just like clothes, but for feet! I could have invented it myself, it's so obvious! Hindsight bias: it could happen to you.

Using various lists of cognitive biases, I'm going to be performing this exercise myself and making mnemonics to remember them by. I might post these at some point, but if you're interested in the outcome, I recommend trying to make mnemonics for yourself first -- the associations will be more meaningful to you, personally, that way.

But beware that conceptualizing a bias as a mnemonic might not be perfect, just like conceptualizing biases as named ideas might not be perfect -- more on that here.

For the comments: What witty mnemonics can you come up with?

Comment author: enfascination 28 March 2015 09:37:17AM 1 point [-]

Maybe this says more about me than about the world, but if this was StackOverflow, this comment would get the star. Thanks.

Comment author: Terdragon 30 March 2015 05:56:53AM 0 points [-]

Thanks!

Comment author: Terdragon 23 March 2015 04:07:25PM 0 points [-]

Discussing "humility" and "arrogance" is difficult without careful definitions. I was thinking about this recently; this is how I would like to define them.

Whenever I end up feeling like I have been arrogant, it is because I underestimated someone else's abilities, and I ended up surprised by what they were capable of. If humility is the opposite of arrogance, then humility is the ability to accept, as your prior, that somebody you meet just might end up being more wise or more accomplished than you. To be arrogant is to fail to realize that you might have something to learn from other people.

(These definitions of arrogance and humility thus only relate to mental habits, not to social behaviors.)

Note how this makes humility valuable -- if you expect everyone around you to be dumb and inferior and not worth learning from, if you don't give others the chance to prove you otherwise, you're going to miss out on everything that you could be learning from them. I wouldn't expect your putative arrogant academic to have very many fruitful collaborations.

So yes, I would say that arrogance is bad intellectual hygiene -- it's having the wrong priors about the people around you.

Note also that it's also possible to be unfair to oneself in this way. Impostor syndrome should not be confused for humility. High self-esteem should not be confused for arrogance.

... I realize only after writing all of this that there's also intellectual arrogance and intellectual humility; it seems that they can be modeled the same way, but with ideas instead of people.

Comment author: Terdragon 22 March 2015 07:57:11PM 8 points [-]

But, above all, there is the conviction that the pursuit of truth, whether in the minute structure of the atom or in the vast system of the stars, is a bond transcending human differences.

-- Arthur Eddington, "The Future of International Science", as quoted in An Expedition to Heal the Wounds of War: the 1919 Eclipse Expedition and Eddington as Quaker Adventurer

Comment author: Terdragon 23 December 2014 11:29:50PM 3 points [-]

I couldn't attend this year, but I loved the album and I'm really looking forward to it next year!

Comment author: blashimov 01 December 2013 04:35:52PM 2 points [-]

My understanding, you might believe in some continued life after death, something about human souls, any sort of supernatural things, but not believe in a personified interacting deity who gave humans orders like worship me, do this/that etc., nor be a deist who thinks there is such a being but doesn't give orders for some reason.

Comment author: Terdragon 01 December 2013 09:27:45PM 1 point [-]

Okay. Good thing I submitted "Atheist and not spiritual", then!

I guess that makes sense. When I hear "Atheist but spiritual" my first response tends to be "Sure, I would appreciate songs and rituals about the wonders of science and the awe-inspiring nature of the universe. That's spirituality, right?" -- and my first response tends not to be "Oh, right, I guess there technically could be people who believe in supernatural stuff that's not gods." Perhaps because I tend to forget such beliefs exist...

Comment author: Terdragon 01 December 2013 06:10:03AM 1 point [-]

Is there anywhere I can read an explanation of (or anyone who can explain) the distinction between "Atheist but spiritual" and "Atheist and not spiritual"?

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