Comment author: TwistingFingers 07 November 2011 05:27:37AM 14 points [-]

Does/How does the SIAI plan to promote more frequent HP:MoR updates by research fellow Eliezer Yudkowsky?

Practicing what you preach

2 TwistingFingers 23 October 2011 06:12PM

LessWrongers as a group are often accused of talking about rationality without putting it into practice (for an elaborated discussion of this see Self-Improvement or Shiny Distraction: Why Less Wrong is anti-Instrumental Rationality). This behavior is particularly insidious because it is self-reinforcing: it will attract more armchair rationalists to LessWrong who will in turn reinforce the trend in an affective death spiral until LessWrong is a community of utilitarian apologists akin to the internet communities of anorexics who congratulate each other on their weight loss. It will be a community where instead of discussing practical ways to "overcome bias" (the original intent of the sequences) we discuss arcane decision theories, who gets to be in our CEV, and the most rational birthday presents (sound familiar?).

A recent attempt to counter this trend or at least make us feel better about it was a series of discussions on "leveling up": accomplishing a set of practical well-defined goals to increment your rationalist "level". It's hard to see how these goals fit into a long-term plan to achieve anything besides self-improvement for its own sake. Indeed, the article begins by priming us with a renaissance-man inspired quote and stands in stark contrast to articles emphasizing practical altruism such as "efficient charity"

So what's the solution? I don't know. However I can tell you a few things about the solution, whatever it may be:

  • It wont feel like the right thing to do; your moral intuitions (being designed to operate in a small community of hunter gatherers) are unlikely to suggest to you anything near the optimal task.
  • It will be something you can start working on right now, immediately.
  • It will disregard arbitrary self-limitations like abstaining from politics or keeping yourself aligned with a community of family and friends.
  • Speaking about it would undermine your reputation through signaling. A true rationalist has no need for humility, sentimental empathy, or the absurdity heuristic.

Whatever you may decide to do, be sure it follows these principles. If none of your plans align with these guidelines then construct a new one, on the spot, immediately. Just do something: every moment you sit hundreds of thousands are dying and billions are suffering. Under your judgement your plan can self-modify in the future to overcome its flaws. Become an optimization process; shut up and calculate.

I declare Crocker's rules on the writing style of this post.

LessWrong gaming community

-1 TwistingFingers 26 September 2011 02:19AM

Many of us enjoy expressing ourselves through electronic games. As such, I feel that this aspect of our lives should be shared among our fellow gamers in the LessWrong community.

Video games are a great way to reduce compartmentalization and learn real-world rationality skills. Indeed, what brings us together at LessWrong can often be our love of games; someone in the LessWrong community without this advantage might find learning rationality difficult. In this light, outreach into the transhumanist/rationalist community to promote gaming is low-hanging fruit for serving the future of humanity.

Please consider this post a unique opportunity to begin discussion of this important issue and facilitate further debate in the near future.

In response to comment by jimrandomh on Fix My Head
Comment author: Alicorn 17 September 2011 05:06:28AM 1 point [-]
  • I take an iron pill and a vitamin D pill every day except when I forget. I had blood tests to check up on my iron a few months ago; they were fine.

  • The tremors turned out to be a side effect of an antibiotic. It went away when I adjusted the dose.

  • My limbs fall asleep when I spend too long in a weird position but not at arbitrary times. I don't get numbness.

  • I don't remember my exact blood pressure but it's been taken many times in the last year and never alarmed anyone.

  • I don't think I've had a glucose test.

  • Palpitations yes; sore throat only occasionally; bloodshot eyes not really; mouth ulcers maybe depends what you mean but they're not a big deal; dry skin not especially; itching after exposure to warm water not really.

I would be more open to switching to a low carb diet if anyone could name something that crunches the way toast does.

In response to comment by Alicorn on Fix My Head
Comment author: TwistingFingers 17 September 2011 01:08:27PM 1 point [-]

I would be more open to switching to a low carb diet if anyone could name something that crunches the way toast does.

Celery?

Comment author: TwistingFingers 17 September 2011 05:09:00AM 32 points [-]

There are probably much more important concerns when choosing a country than the ones you have listed. You haven't even discussed immigration policies. Some of the concerns you have listed (such as intervening in a crisis, burglars) are unlikely to even effect you and seem entirely ideological.

I suggest you rethink this and come up with a list of requirements based on practical concerns rather than ideology.

In response to Fix My Head
Comment author: TwistingFingers 17 September 2011 04:38:29AM 3 points [-]

Are you only listing one of the meals you ate or is this complete? You are often only eating one meal a day?

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