- Can you extract and sort a Reddit user's post/comment history by topic? Can you edit and group a document full of LessWrong posts by topic? Can you stand reading my writing? Want some cash? Please take this or this job posted on my behalf!
- Can I have all my content deleted? Could I have all my content that doesn't have replies specifically deleted (so that the deletions don't inconvenience others) without doing so manually? Note - this is not a request - I don't want this done (at least not right now)
- If you're looking for that webapp that displays your entire LessWrong post history on a single page, the link is here
I remember that LW has an API. It should only be a matter of finding all your posts that do not have any replies and then deleting them.
I'm referring to programming of course, but I can't help you with it more specifically.
If Microsoft were in charge of PR for sex the human race would be extinct.
Wouldn't trust them with an AI.
You should look into Brene Brown's stuff. Here's a TED talk
What's wrong with simple hyperlinks to sources? The post explains ideas layed out in a book and links the book.
You have a point. I'm mostly at fault here to be honest as I'm getting slowly more and more skeptical of 'stuff on the internet' (the site being called Art of Manliness already gives me some certain ideological connotations) and seeing how many things which look appealing intuitively don't really yield much tasty fruit in real life, I'll often label things clickbait rather than actually put some time in them.
Quantified hedonism - Personal Key Performance Indicators
The phrase burn the boats comes from the VIking practice of burning boats on the shore before invading so they have to win and settle. No retreat, it's an inspiring analogy, but I heard it in the context of another Real Social Dynamics video, so the implication is to approach sets as if there is no retreat? Bizaare, those guys.....anyway that RSDPapa video suggested that personal KPI's were useful. What's measured gets improved, or so the saying goes. So which KPI's should you choose? After some though, I reckon psychological distress, a construct referring to anxiety and depression which conceptualise enduring hedonic losses, and PERMA, a construct referring to the key determinants of subject well-being, seem like appropriate KPI's.
So how do you measure them? There are validated psychological scales for each.
PERMA:
- Positive emotion
- Engagement
- Relationships
- Meaning - no known scale?
- Achievement?
Unfortunately, things get a bit tricky here with achievement. Many psychological scales are paywalled such that you need to buy them specifically (academic institution access is insufficient). If anyone can post a workaround.. :)
If you administer these scales on yourself monthly, you can start to build a picture of your hedonic progress in life, quantitatively, albeit abstractly. Too difficult for you? Try this unvalidated scale for PERMA.
Tourism isn't this esoteric, life changing right of passage experience people will tell you that it is
Or: Why I would want to move to the Cayman Islands (but I don't have retirement savings of substance or hospital or finance career capital)
I think the urge to travel just to see different countries is a kind of OCD. Unhealthy! The way tourism tends to work commodifies it. It doesn’t accrue that benefit that experience hunting usually does, hedonically. Plus, it’s super expensive and moving tends to accrue hedonic costs anyway. Even though climate does accrue hedonic benefits, it would be unsustainable and lead to negative self past comparison since you are returning to your home country. Not to mention when you travel you tend to compromise on your lifestyle - fitness, exercise, relationships, nutrition, sleep...unacceptable!
Virtual tourism. It’s my new hobby. Sure, it might be interesting to check out the Northern Lights or mecca (both literally desserts, that you are paying for!) but really any place can, by a business or government, be turned into a tourist spot with a bit of work. In real time, moment to moment, I find travellng super boring except when it’s ongoing constant novelty of like, sitting on the roof of a van in a rural area, or I’m on my computer!
I keep hearing about how great travel is. My conclusion is that no, it's not worth the cost. Or at least, the component I thought they were referring to - sight seeing, isn't. Other parts of travel are okay, but certainly not lifechanging after the first or second time of eye-openingness.
Case study: Machu Pichu. If that rock in Guatape was difficult enough, consider the downsides of Machu Pichu to get your mind off it. Then put the nail in the coffin with the danger statistics. Consolation prize? Machu pichu on Google street view.
So what is worthwhile when travelling. One, of course, is doing so with the intend of moving - when a place has better opportunities than your past residence. Let's consider a case that will be relevant to already very high standard of living Westerners - moving to the Carribean. Because really, I can find no better place one might like to move than the Cayman Islands. English is spoken, close to the US and UK, Strategic advantages in the financial industry, without a unsophisticated undiversified economy, as with the rest of the Carribean competitors honestly that tend to dependent on fish or petrol. And, you're in the Carribean, with enviable climate (a known determinant of subjective wellbeing!). It's a country that knows the importance of having a strategic advantage that doesn't mean it's just a mine, like say Australia, where pushes to develop a more sophisticated economy have failed and derived, which I think is a good sign of a country that won't thrive in the 21st century....anywho, Google Images the place, it looks way better than the rest of Central and South America and the Carribean as a whole! I'm very suprised I don't see it topping lists of expat wellbeing or quality of life indexes but I guess it gets it might get missed cause of its size. With the greater income inequality, you can probably hire a personal chef even as a minimum wage worker from the Western world to cook you Chinese food or whatever it is you want, healthy and convenient (not to mention they can belp with maintenance and such).
Alas, maybe I am just in a bad mood. I am travelling right now and have a return flight that is way too far away and I have nothing I left I want to do on this continent. It sucks when the street smells like shit, it's dusty and smoggy enough to irritate your eyes, cars are loud and dangerous, people are suspicious and don't move out of the way, and the hotel locks up early for the night, but you don't know exactly when, and after a certain time you can't buy water outside so if you don't have enough you go thirsty and non-brushed cause the water from the tap is unsafe. At least I came across this which will aid my quest to become a better blogger: This is effective copywriting and feedback giving.
Open questions
Thoughts on the King, Warrior, Magician, Lover archetypes? Useful?
Cause prioritisation - community vs institutions*
I'm interested in crowdsourcing identifying disparities between community and institutional cause prioritisation attitudes.
If you could spare a minute could you please rate from 1-10, with a _ _% rating of your estimates of the:
- (1) potential impact
- (2) prospective neglectedness
- (3) political tractability
...of individual media campaigns that would advocate for public debate, discussion and law reform without a specific agenda around each of the following areas:
- (a) labour mobility
- (b) tobacco control (incl. smoking in developing countries)
- (c) risks from artificial intelligence
- (d) research re-prioritisation and infrastructure
- (e) factory farming
- (f) biosecurity
- (g) land use reform
- (h) developing world health
- (i) nuclear security
- (j) trade reform
- (k) migration
- (l) humanitarian aid
- (m) lizardmen
Thank you.
In place of a media thread
Extraordinary series - check out 'how women judge men'
experience often doesn’t matter as much as GMA (g factor) for job performance. - parenthesis mine - GMA is an unconventional term, 'g' is more common.
precommitment smart contracts for happiness and health
I feel horrible saying this but I think I would be really upset if I had a kid (adopted or genetic) and they were born or become mentally handicapped or miserable like my biggest fear. It can happen whether you adopt (e.g. car crash) or your give birth, so I will not get myself a dependent. You can't give them away without suffering lots of hedonic and altruistic losses, anyhow! But, once you get 'clucky and partnered, things change!
Maybe I should do one of those things where I give a trusted reliable person (perhaps even a independent (commercial? automated?) service that does this so they won't pity me) information I don't want revealed (like linking all my personal and contact details of this account!) to if I have children to pre-empt doing so! I could put in a waiver for if the weight of objective evidence for having children increasing my happiness according to a tribunal of them and a selected few other intelligent, educated, good-willed people shifts.
Thoughts on the King, Warrior, Magician, Lover archetypes? Useful?
That website looks like a pretty big clickbait. Not footnotes either, which could be me overestimating people who put footnotes, but it might also be that whomever wrote that could be attempting to avoid being accused of wordplay.
Haven't people been making contracts for a pretty long time? What is this new 'smart contract' thing and how is it unique?
in a way that's already illegal.
Someone cracking a smart contract wouldn't really mind the law.
Not much lives 1000m under the surface. Also, the amount of heat that we would send is actually quite small compared to the heat capacity of the oceans. Water has 4000x higher heat capacity than air by volume.
Transferring heat from a hot place to a cold place is really easy. In principle you can just connect them with a highly conductive material like copper. In practice even copper might not have enough heat conductance, so it might be better to pump either water or air from one place to another.
Not much lives 1000m under the surface.
Under the surface (for example, below the European continent) or in the deep seas? I'm not sure about the former but I'm quite confident that the following applies to the latter:
My layman impression is that investigating lower altitudes becomes increasingly (perhaps exponentially) difficult the lower you go. Wikipedia also says that "Humans have explored less than 2% of the ocean floor" so I would disagree with your assessment of "not much lives 1000m under the surface".
I'm honestly interested in how you came to that conclusion though - If you have an interesting and reputable text that refutes me, please share. I came to mine based on reading Wikipedia too much.
Someone should create a free speech Twitter that doesn't censor anything protected by the U.S. 1st amendment.
what? No. I do them manually. As did MrMind before I realised I was in an earlier timezone for posting them...
Then yet another feature for LW 2.0: open threads published with cron. (I'm assuming that you're not familiar with wget/curl so there wasn't even a manual script written)[1]
[1] You can also use Python or some other language in a similar tier.
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I just joined the community, how can I save or mark this article so it is available for me to read at anytime?
Bookmarks in your browser. There's also the diskette icon between the two horizontal bars that separate the article and the comment section.