All of gryffinp's Comments + Replies

Colbert: So I can live forever, but later. So I just need to live long enough for later to become now.

That's the plan Stephen. That's the plan.

Here's the Comedy Central video, but if it's blocked in your country, here's a somewhat crappy youtube recording of same.

I find it repugnant that some beings created a universe where quintillions of sentient creatures have been suffering and dying for half a billion years on this planet alone.

Isn't that an inevitable conclusion of the basic "the universe is a simulation" premise?

Ah. This one, I've read.

Thank you by the way, I had actually remembered about that as I was typing this up (In a sort of "Speaking of Religions with unusual premises..." way), but forgotten what it was called and who came up with it. I had speculated that it might have been from a Heinlein novel, since the half-remembered premise of "lone protagonist is saved from arctic peril and then gets to listen to someone politely explain their philosophy" sounded vaguely Heinleinish.

Huh. I'm certain that I hadn't read this before.

Obviously he gave it a little more thought than my own shower-musings received.

You know, I was musing on the "Universe as Matrix" idea a while back, and I came to some interesting conclusions.

I realized first that, given sufficiently attentive creator(s), any attempt to prove that the Universe was a simulation must inevitably fail. Because if if such a proof were found, the proverbial Dark Lords could simply pause the sim, patch out the error that revealed the discrepancy, and roll back to before it was revealed. Similarly, proof that we weren't in a Matrix should be equally impossible, since any evidence that proved the im... (read more)

0NancyLebovitz
If you look at the number of different sorts of stories created by humans, who are probably less complex than whoever made our universe, I think it's fair to say we have no idea what counts as interesting to them.
2Locaha
Interesting as in "interesting times"? I think the Dark Lord already designed us to be interest maximizers. They probably lead dull lives, the poor things...
1Nornagest
That seems to share some ideas with Neal Stephenson's fictional religion of Kelx, as described in Anathem.
2Lukas_Gloor
Great post but this is where you lost me. I have a hard time prioritzing "interesting" over reducing suffering, and I find it repugnant that some beings created a universe where quintillions of sentient creatures have been suffering and dying for half a billion years on this planet alone. OK, maybe the creators had the decency to "shortcut" all the suffering so it wasn't actually experienced, that's the upside of the thought. Hmm, that makes for a good religion too, you only remember the suffering, but during the actual moments you were zombified, you're misremembering!
2NancyLebovitz
I'm a different sort of Dark Lord, I suppose-- if my sims found out they were living in a simulation, I'd be fascinated to see what they'd do next.
6Luke_A_Somers
You're assuming that the Dark Lords are aware of our existence and care. Given the fraction of the universe that we occupy, I'm not betting on it.
8CarlShulman
Robin Hanson has written on this topic.

I really dislike "The Sequences: How to become Less Wrong." The problem I have with it is that I think it misrepresents what one of titular sequences actually is. The impression I receive is that this book offers some step by step instructions, known as the Mysterious and Capitalized "Sequences" that will improve your life and make you a better person.

...ok so maybe it's not that far off but the point I'm trying to make here is: A book that advertises itself that way doesn't sound legitimate. It gives me an impression of belonging to t... (read more)

Based on the Wikipedia definition of "kinetic novel" I almost feel like the two terms should be reversed.

...So what were preteens reading 17 years ago?

8Manfred
I'll tell you what I was reading that came out 17 years ago. Animorphs. :P

Well, that post was from the January thread. If you only Control-F'd this page, then it wouldn't have come up.

gryffinp450

I think you just independently invented the holy war.

I think if I've already precommitted to destroying one sentient life for this experiment, I'm willing to go through two.

Besides, you only get one line right?

It just occurred to me that Eliezer's original stipulation that no chat logs would be released gives him an advantage. The responses of a Gatekeeper who knows that his inputs will be thoroughly scrutinized by the public will be different then one who has every reason to believe that his discussion will be entirely private.

Has someone else pointed this out before?

The easiest answer, the one that leapt to my mind with a moment's thought, is "Yes, if they get a warrant."

That would probably be the answer that fits best into the current American legal system. (I have even less understanding of the laws of other countries, so I can't make any claim about that.)