Epistemic status: Personal experience. This is an Eisenhower matrix, named after President Dwight Eisenhower. Eisenhower matrices have a very useful, very specific role in my life these days. I usually bust one out on paper when I'm feeling overwhelmed by my own anxiety, and use it to focus my attention...
Related post: Everyday belief in diminishing returns is subject to diminishing returns Growing up as a first-generation American, and generally considered the "smart" one of the family, I started drinking instant coffee when I was 12 to keep awake during homeroom. My usual sleep window now is between 11 pm...
(This article will be revised, as I add more to it. This is a living document.) I recently read gwern's excellent "Why Correlation Usually ≠ Causation" notes, and, like any good reading, felt a profound sense of existential terror that caused me to write up a few half-formed thoughts on...
Let's stow our QM caps and pretend Democritus was right: Atoms turn out to be the fundamental, indivisible units of physical reality after all. Let's further pretend that some flavor of hard determininism is in play: There is nothing apart from the motions and interactions of the atoms that governs...
I'm a little ashamed to admit I only read "Why Correlation Usually ≠ Causation" yesterday. It's very, very good, and you should read it too. My essential takeaway from it is this: You can find nonzero correlations between almost anything you care to measure. However, it seems unlikely that the...
In answering Teach's question "Learning Abstract Math from First Principles?", I wrote > I find that anyone who says they "learned it from first principles" is usually putting on airs. It's an odd intellectual purity norm that I think is unfortunately very common among the mathematically- and philosophically-minded. This does...