Meetup : SLC Meetup: Free Will, Minicamp Braindump, and Group Goals
Discussion article for the meetup : SLC Meetup: Free Will, Minicamp Braindump, and Group Goals
810 East 3300 South, Salt Lake City, UT We'll be in the small conference room at the back.
Here's the plan breakdown: 3:00 Greetings, Introduction and Catchup 3:10 Minicamp Brain Dump (Kevin V.) 3:30 discuss 3:40 Free Will (Kip W.) 4:00 discuss 4:10 Group Goals (Mel H.) 4:30 discuss 4:40 Wrap up and Final Thoughts, Sign up for next meetup Free Discussion
Discussion article for the meetup : SLC Meetup: Free Will, Minicamp Braindump, and Group Goals
Meetup : SLC, UT: Free Will and Rationality Checklists
Discussion article for the meetup : SLC, UT: Free Will and Rationality Checklists
We'll be in the back conference room
3:00 Greetings, Introduction and Catchup
3:10 Minicamp Brain Dump (Kevin V.)
3:30 discuss
3:40 Willpower (Dan N.)
4:00 discuss
4:10 SLOT FREE
4:30 discuss
4:40 Wrap up and Final Thoughts, Sign up for next meetup
Free Discussion
I'd suggest bringing a notebook and pen.
Discussion article for the meetup : SLC, UT: Free Will and Rationality Checklists
Meetup : Salt Lake City: The Really Getting Bayes Game
Discussion article for the meetup : Salt Lake City: The Really Getting Bayes Game
This meetup will be 3pm Sunday, July 8th at Kip's house: 1558 Palo Verde Way, Cottonwood Heights (or SLC), Utah 84121 I'll be presenting a basic reintroduction to Bayes Rule, and then we can start playing The Really Getting Bayes Game! There will be a discussion afterwards, with an eye to whether or not this sort of practice is useful in training Real Life bayesian reasoning and worth repeating, and/or potential variations on the game. Please feel free to bring an interesting or unusual snack you think others might like to try. Variety is the spice of life! Info on Really Getting Bayes Game: http://math.berkeley.edu/~critch/mphd/rgb.pdf
Discussion article for the meetup : Salt Lake City: The Really Getting Bayes Game
Meetup : SLC Meetup: Social Hacking Presentation
Discussion article for the meetup : SLC Meetup: Social Hacking Presentation
Meeting in the Calvin E. Smith Library
Exactly what it says on the tin.
Discussion article for the meetup : SLC Meetup: Social Hacking Presentation
Cataloging my skills - good idea?
tl,dr: Discuss utility of writing down a portfolio of bayesian evidence for/against your skills, and keeping it for personal reference.
Last night, I applied for the Write/Design Rationality Curriculum Position. I am the sort who sincerely needs the continuous requests to err on the side of applying to actually apply, and some part of me is still gobsmacked that I went ahead and did it. I do not regret applying in the smallest amount, because raising the sanity waterline is a dear little obsession of mine. At the moment, all that drive is going in circles for lack of clear direction. Although I feel supremely unqualified rationality-wise, I think this would be a fantastic opportunity to GET qualified and improve the world at the same time. By the time I finished the application I was much more confident in my own ability to be helpful.
But judging my application a net positive doesn't mean I can't analyze the heck out it.
I woke up this morning and realized that I'd listed a lot of conclusions about myself while barely even hinting at the evidence behind *why I thought those things*. That's something one shouldn't do on a regular job application, let alone when it's going to be read by professional rationality enthusiasts.
So I'm making an informal skills reference catalog for myself, because this needs to REALLY not happen with the next opportunity I sign up for. Like a resume, except focusing on quantity and bayesian evidence influencing your belief rather than what sort of self-presentation is most likely to get you hired. It differs significantly from a resume in that it should also include -negative- evidences against having certain skills, for evenness and self-honesty's sake. I suspect caching more evidence in a readily available format will be helpful for mitigating availability heuristic errors, and writing the reasoning process down instead of (only) resolving to keep a more accurate self-image in my head is useful because thoughts are slippery. [anecdote]I notice I get a lot more useful reasoning done when I write down my thoughts approximately as my inner monologue voices them. It prevents backtracking, as I can go back to quickly and confidently determine whether or not I've already thought of a point, and makes it substantially easier to notice when I've retro-actively edited a thought, either because I've contradicted myself or because I've literally gone back a few words/sentences to edit. [/anecdote]
I very nearly posted this as a lamenting comment on that page, but this idea seemed a little more discussion worthy and too tangential for a comment. So Huzzah for learning experiences! Is there anything amiss in my reasoning? Perhaps I also need to work in a heuristic of 'sleeping on it'.
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