All of csvoss's Comments + Replies

csvoss20

Wow, this is pretty.

csvoss30

Don't live in the Bay Area yet but am very much in favor.

csvoss490

I have taken the survey.

csvoss00

I am still super, super grateful for the existence of this website. I have noticed tangible improvement over the last month alone; one of my friends has described my current level of Chinese literacy as "terrifying".

csvoss70

Thank you!

I resonate with a lot of this, and it's really reassuring to hear that this is a common human experience. In particular, I've been choosing amongst job options lately, and I notice that I grieve for the choices I've passed over: I imagine the futures that could have been. For a while, I tried to ignore the pain - avoid confronting the fact that I could only choose one of a few possible futures - by prolonging the decision. And I found that, with time, I came to confront the true state of the world, and that at that point I had a better understanding of who I am and what matters to me.

Great read!

csvoss100

Having skimmed this post and the Less Wrong Slack wiki page, I had to really look to figure out what my Next Action for signing up to the Slack channel would be (I infer that it is to PM you my email address). Consider adding that information as a sentence in bold at the top of this page and/or the wiki page?

This is awesome, thanks for doing this!

2Elo
I am surprised that you are the first person to mention difficulty. I will put it in the top post more boldened.
csvoss00

This continues to be by far the most effective (for me) Chinese study tool I have come across. Nice work, and thanks for sharing it with us!

csvoss00

Yeah, that's my point: This is the translation I had been making, myself, and I had to realize that it wasn't correct.

csvoss10

The path to rationality is not the path where the evidence chooses the beliefs. The path to rationality is one without beliefs. On the path to rationality, there are only probabilities.

I realized something the other day. I don't believe in cryonics.†

But, I believe that cryonics has a chance of working, a small chance.

If I'm ever asked "Do you believe in cryonics?", I'm going to be careful to respond accurately.

† (By this, I mean that I believe cryonics has a less than 50% chance of working.)

0[anonymous]
But in this case, the degree of belief that becomes relevant is bounded by the utility trade-offs involved in the cost of cryonics and the other things you could do with the money. So, for my example, I assign (admittedly, via an intuitive and informal process of guesstimation) a sufficiently low probability to cryonics working (I have sufficiently little information saying it works...) that I'd rather just give life-insurance money and my remaining assets, when I die, to family, or at least to charity, all of which carry higher expected utility over any finite term (that is, they do good faster than cryonics does, in my belief). Since my family or charity can carry on doing good after I die just as indefinitely as cryonics can supposedly extend my life after I die, the higher derivative-of-good multiplied with the low probability of cryonics working means cryonics has too high an opportunity cost for me.
4ChristianKl
This is a very bad translation gives that most of people on LW who are signed up for cryonics give it a less than 50% chance of working.
csvoss00

Yeah, your guess is as good as mine.

csvoss20

Another thing: If you're looking for more text to use for your site, I would certainly enjoy being able to study off of the HPMoR Mandarin Chinese translation. :)

(You should probably ask the authors for permission, though.)

1Lemmih
Do you know how I can get in contact with the authors? When I try to send a message on lofter, I'm just redirected to the frontpage.
csvoss00

Awesome, thank you! I'm in the same boat, wanting to learn Chinese.

I'm waiting impatiently for Duolingo to support Mandarin, but in the meantime, I've been doing spaced repetition practice for reading and vocabulary via Memrise (https://www.memrise.com/). Memrise also contains a whole bunch of flashcard sets about pretty much everything, and allows you to create your own.

csvoss10

Huh, the screenshot reminds me of this thing that /r/hpmor ended up developing.

csvoss30

Woah, I like this idea.

I made a memory palace once; it contains a grand entrance hall, and within that entrance hall is a filing cabinet, and within that filling cabinet is a piece of paper with pictures about what I did on the day I made the memory palace. It's got remarkable fidelity, but it's useless unless I put something in it other than, well, that filing cabinet.

What would be a good way for us, as a group, to start creating a standardized memory palace? It would be cool to do this collaboratively somehow.

2TheOverseer
Hmm, this project might be of interest http://cci.mit.edu/deliberatoriumresearchpage.html Wad'ya think of it?
csvoss10

Discussing "humility" and "arrogance" is difficult without careful definitions. I was thinking about this recently; this is how I would like to define them.

Whenever I end up feeling like I have been arrogant, it is because I underestimated someone else's abilities, and I ended up surprised by what they were capable of. If humility is the opposite of arrogance, then humility is the ability to accept, as your prior, that somebody you meet just might end up being more wise or more accomplished than you. To be arrogant is to fail to realize... (read more)

1enfascination
Maybe this says more about me than about the world, but if this was StackOverflow, this comment would get the star. Thanks.
csvoss120

But, above all, there is the conviction that the pursuit of truth, whether in the minute structure of the atom or in the vast system of the stars, is a bond transcending human differences.

-- Arthur Eddington, "The Future of International Science", as quoted in An Expedition to Heal the Wounds of War: the 1919 Eclipse Expedition and Eddington as Quaker Adventurer

csvoss40

I couldn't attend this year, but I loved the album and I'm really looking forward to it next year!

csvoss40

Okay. Good thing I submitted "Atheist and not spiritual", then!

I guess that makes sense. When I hear "Atheist but spiritual" my first response tends to be "Sure, I would appreciate songs and rituals about the wonders of science and the awe-inspiring nature of the universe. That's spirituality, right?" -- and my first response tends not to be "Oh, right, I guess there technically could be people who believe in supernatural stuff that's not gods." Perhaps because I tend to forget such beliefs exist...

csvoss40

Is there anywhere I can read an explanation of (or anyone who can explain) the distinction between "Atheist but spiritual" and "Atheist and not spiritual"?

2blashimov
My understanding, you might believe in some continued life after death, something about human souls, any sort of supernatural things, but not believe in a personified interacting deity who gave humans orders like worship me, do this/that etc., nor be a deist who thinks there is such a being but doesn't give orders for some reason.