Nitpick: simulacrum is the singular, simulacra the plural. Usually used around these parts in the phrase "simulacrum/a level [1..4]", a reference to four "stages" in Baudrillard's theory in which direct attention to reality gradually gives way to something more like other people's models of other people's models of other people's models of reality, so that you say "there is a lion over there" not because there is a lion over there but because you want to align yourself with the people warning about a lion, who in turn are doing so not because there is a lion but because they hope to increase their own social power by making such warnings and being believed, etc.
Nitpick: It's the Unilateralist who has the Curse, not the Unilaterist.
Nitpick: You have "de gustabus" two times out of three; it should be "de gustibus" each time.
Not-exactly-nitpick: I don't think it's right to say that Scott Alexander, in his Meditations on Moloch, asks why systems no one likes persists and finds Ginsberg's answer of "Moloch" unsatisfying. Surely it's more that Ginsberg was never trying to answer that question; that Scott asks the question and finds "Moloch" a satisfying answer, provided that he gets to say what he means by "Moloch" which is not necessarily quite the same thing as Ginsberg meant.
Remark: When W.G. was reviewing the previous Less Wrong book set, he remarked that he was glad to have learned the word "hedon" meaning a unit of pleasure (or preference satisfaction or pain removal or whatever). This time around he is glad to have learned "utilon" which means, er, exactly the same thing :-).
"metis" is an ancient greek word/goddess which originally meant "magical cunning", which drifted throughout ancient greek culture to mean something more like "wisdom/prudence/the je ne sais quoi of being able to solve practical problems".
James C. Scott uses it in his book Seeing Like a State to mean the implicit knowledge passed down through a culture.
"FOOM" in the sense common here has got into Wiktionary: A sudden increase in artificial intelligence such that an AI system becomes extremely powerful.
And (I mention this only because of something WG said) neither the F, nor any of its other letters, stands for anything. It's just a sound suggestive of a big explosion.
I just read these essays!! They almost read like a new Bible - they give SO many lessons on what's moral, what's important, etc.. and they're way more readable than the average lesswrong essay!
Introduction[1]
For those who read my review of the first Lesswrong collection of essays, A Map that Reflects the Territory (see here for my review), this intro will give you a sense of what the Klingons call nlb’poH, the French call Déjà vu, and the English call Déjà vu.
Less Wrong is a forum founded by Artificial Intelligence Theorist Eliezer Yudkowsky in 2009. The stated philosophy is:
That seems to cover a lot of ground! The actual topics seem to be (1) how does one find the truth in science and in life, (2) AGI (Artificial General Intelligence), and (3) probability. The most common non-trivial word in this book might be Bayes. Another common non-trivial word is Goodhart. (Goodhart’s law is that when a measure becomes a target, it stops being a measure. It is often referred to when an AI system performs well but for the wrong reasons.) A trivial word would be something like the which is likely more common but less interesting. (Or is it trivial? The SIGACT News book review editor Fred Green pointed out that Ohio State has trademarked the. See https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/23/us/ohio-state-university-trademarks-the/index.html. I do not know if that is more or less absurd than Donald Trump’s failed attempt to trademark you’re fired. See https://www.cobizmag.com/who-owns-the-trademark-to-youre-fired/ to see who really owns the trademark to you’re fired.)
The Engines of Cognition are actually a set of four books, titled Trust, Incentives, Modularity, and Failure. Each book is small—about 9 inches long and 5 inches wide. They can be read in any order. This set of book is a best-of-2019 collection as decided by the readers in some fashion. 2 General Comments PROS: Many of the essays bring up a topic point that I had not thought of before, or have interesting thoughts about a topic I had thought of before.
General Comments
PROS: Many of the essays bring up a topic point that I had not thought of before, or have interesting thoughts about a topic I had thought of before.
CONS: Some of the essays go on and on about some point and either don’t have much to say, or take too long saying it. This is most notable in the essays on AI where I want to yell at the author try it out and see what happens rather than yakking about it. When I posted a review of another Lesswrong collection, A Map that Reflects the Territory here I had the same complaint. Some comments said that building AI systems is dang hard. Okay. Even so, stop yakking about it. It’s getting boring.
CAVEAT (both a PRO and a CON): Some of the essays use words or phrases as though I am supposed to already know them. If I was a regular member of the forum then perhaps I would know them. In the modern electronic age I can try to look them up. This is a PRO in that I learn new words and phrases. For me this is a really big PRO since I collect new words and phrases as a hobby. This is a CON in that going to look things up disrupts the flow of the essays. And sometimes I can’t find the new word or phrase on the web.
In the third to last section of this review I will have a list of all of the words and phrases I learned by reading these books and either their meaning or that I could not find their meaning. Why third to last? Because the second to last section is my summary opinion, and the reader of this review should be able to find it quickly (the last section is acknowledgments). I posted to Lesswrong a request for what some of the words mean, and got a few responses.
CAVEAT: As an extension of the last caveat, the essays tend to be written for other Lesswrongers. Now that I’ve read 9 Lesswrong books (5 from The Map. . ., 4 from The Engines. . ., and a few other occasional essays) I have become a Lesswronger; hence, this is no longer a problem for me. However, I sometimes read a paragraph and think “A mundane[2] would not understand this.”
In the spirit of the Lesswrong’s quest for objective truth I will, in each section (and at the end), tabulate how many of the essays were Excellent (E), Good (G), and Meh (M). This will be an objective record of my subjective opinion.
Trust
I quote the first paragraph:
There are 16 essays of which 7 are excellent, 6 are good, and 3 are meh. I will describe two that are excellent and linked, and one that is meh.
Excellent
Book Review: The Secret to our Success by Scott Alexander and Reason isn’t Magic by Ben Hoffman
Lesswrong is devoted to reason. Yes indeed, reason is how humans succeeded and is a valuable tool today. Hence it was great to see an article in Lesswrong that uses reason to challenge the notion that reason is so great.
Meta time: I am reviewing Scott Alexander’s review of a book. I wonder if when I post this on Lesswrong someone will review my review of Scott’s review.
I will only discuss one aspect of the review; however, the review is fascinating and I assume the book is also.
The book that Scott reviews is The Secret to our Success. How did human beings survive? Did you ever try hunting and gathering—it’s really hard! One common answer is that humans survived because they are smarter. The book Scott reviews challenges this notion. The book contends that the biggest advantage was cultural learning. Over time techniques that worked were learned and passed down to the next generation.
We discuss one of their examples: Manioc. This is a plant that some peoples used as a staple. The time and effort they used to prepare it was very intense. Was this just a tradition (and hence perhaps a waste of time) or was it beneficial? The answers are Yes and Yes. Manioc has a lot of cyanide in it and the process they used got rid of the poison. Of course, they didn’t know this. But that’s not quite enough— how would they know the long term affects of eating the plant? Fortunately the process also removed the bitter taste and got rid of some short term affects.
Someone could have tried to make the process less time consuming and still get rid of the bitter taste. This would have seemed reasonable but lead to cyanide deaths in the long term. But NO – nobody did this. So their lack of reason, their adhering to tradition for no good reason, was beneficial.
The second essay, Reason isn’t Magic challenges this view. Hoffman points out that the time spent processing the food is also time lost— and perhaps some people starved since the process also made the supply less. This reminds me of the joke:
Meh
Chris Olah ’s Views on AI Safety by Evan Hubinger
This is typical of the essays both in these books, in the last set of books I reviewed, on the Lesswrong blog, and other blogs that discuss AI Safety, AI alignment, and other AI issues. They seem to talk a lot but not really say anything. Or, more to the point, they have some ideas. Fine. TRY THEM OUT, then come back with what you found.
Of course there is a caveat: If I rate all of the AI article as Meh then does that mean there is something wrong with them (too long, not enough info) or with me (to impatient, not in the area of AI)?
Modularity
I quote the first paragraph:
There are 14 essays of which 6 are excellent, 2 are good, and 6 are meh. I will describe one
from each category, which is not a fair sample.
Excellent
Gears-Level Models are Capital Investments by John S. Wentworth
When doing research should you strive to understand why things are the way they are (Gears-Level) or just what is happening?
An Example from Marketing:
Gears-Level: With massive data find correlations like “People who earn over $100,000 prefer to buy brand name chocolate,” and use these to guide your ad campaigns.
Black-Box: Run lots of ad campaigns and see which one works.
The article discusses the pros and cons of these two approaches and gives lots of examples.
Good
Forum Participation as a Research Strategy by Wei Dai
If I read two articles and find a novel way to combine them, do an experiment to verify that my insight is correct, and publish the result, that’s clearly research. If I write a blog on Lesswrong (or some other forum) or write a comment on someone else’s blog, is that research? Probably not, but it can lead to research. This essay discusses the PROS of participating on a forum and how it can contribute to research.
Giving this a good instead of an excellent might not be fair since I’ve had a blog on theoretical computer science, shared with Lance Fortnow since 2007, so there was nothing new in it for me. The blog is at https://blog.computationalcomplexity.org/.
Meh
The Credit Assignment Problem by Abram Demski
This essay begins with examples of how to assign credit to success or failure and asserts correctly that this is an important problem. They then have some good ideas about the problem. But then the article goes off topic and is too long.
Incentives
I quote the first paragraph:
There are 16 essays of which 10 are excellent (wow!), 2 are good, and 4 are meh. I will review 3 of the excellent essays (2 of which are tied together) and none of the others. This is asymmetric, which is the topic of the first essay I describe. More to the point, it seems like all of my critiques of the Meh essays are the same: talk too much, don’t say much. Hence my critiques of them also talk too much and don’t say much, so I will not bother this time.
Excellent
Asymmetric Justice by Zvi Mowshowitz and The Copenhagen Interpretation of Ethics by Jai Dhyani
The Copenhagen Interpretation of Ethics is that when you observe or interact with a problem you can be blamed for it. Or perhaps you will be blamed for not doing enough. I give two examples, one from the second essay, and one from neither essay.
1. (This is from the second essay.) At one time Detroit was having a hard time with high water bills. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) told families that they would pay their water bills for a month, if the family went vegan for that month. This article says that PETA was criticized for this. One quote:
2. (This is not from either essay.) During the Flint Michigan Water crisis Ted Cruz donated water to crisis pregnancy centers, which are really places women go to thinking they will get help, but instead they are lectured about why they should NOT get an abortion. He was criticized for this. And I also thought badly of him (more than usual).
BUT WAIT A MINUTE! Did the guy who blasted PETA give any water or money to Detroit? Did I do anything for Flint? It is unfair to criticize them for doing something as opposed to doing nothing.
The two essays are about issues of justice. One is the issue above, that there may be a disincentive to help. Another issue is asymmetry: bad actions are punished but good actions are not rewarded. How to fix this? The two essays give you a lot to think about.
Moloch Hasn’t Won by Zvi Mowshowitz
This essay is one in a sequence of essays that go back before Lesswrong was a forum. In Hierarchy for Philosophers, C.S. Lewis writes:
Alan Ginsberg answers the question: Moloch does it (He gave a much longer answer, where he is howling at Moloch, but that’s the drift.)
Scott Alexander’s Slate article Meditations on Moloch, which you can find here, takes the question of why humankind is in such bad shape seriously. He is particularly interested in why, if nobody likes the current system, it persists. He finds Ginsberg’s answer Moloch unsatisfying.
Scott’s essay has a list of 14 real world phenomena which any rational person would want to change and yet nothing changes. They are mostly Prisoner’s Dilemma, Tragedy of the Commons, Malthusian scenarios, but they are not abstract. They are here. He then proposes some ways out of these traps.
Zvi’s follow-up essay says what Scott got right and what Scott got wrong. Hmmm, that sounds too shallow. Zvi’s essay is an intelligent comment on Scott’s essay. Read them both.
Failure
I quote the first paragraph:
There were 13 essays of which 5 are excellent, 2 are good, and 6 are meh. I will discuss 2 excellent, 1 very good, and 1 meh.
Excellent
Blackmail by Zvi Mowshowitz
This essay discusses why blackmail should be illegal. You might think of course it should be. This essay gives good arguments for why it is illegal but also raises questions about the entire endeavor.
Why wasn’t science invented in China by Ruben Bloom
The title is not quite right: some science was done in China at about the same time as in Europe. But far less. This essay gives cogent reasons for this. I quote one here:
Good
AI Success Stories by Wei Dai
This article discusses various AI success stories and gives criteria to tell if they really were successes. This is interesting; however, it was only 5 pages – I would have wanted more examples.
Meh
The Strategy Stealing Assumption by Paul Christiano
The strategy stealing assumption is that for any strategy an unaligned AI can use to influence the long-run future, there is an analogous strategy that a similarly-sized group of humans can use in order to capture a similar amount of flexible influence over the future. The article is speculative about this. I would prefer it to give concrete examples.
Newords that I Learned From These Books
The word Newords is not a misspelling. The best neologisms do not need to be explained. Oh well.
From the Book Trust
From the Book Modularity
From the Book Incentives
From the Book Failure
Should You Read This Book?
Yes.
Okay, I will elaborate on that.
Should You Read This Book? The Numbers
I review my ratings E for Excellent, G for Good, or M for Meh (none were B for Bad):
What to do with this information?
The ratio 28-12-14 is excellent and is better than that for A Map that Reflects the Territory which got 15-15-15. Although maybe I was a bit harsh in that review. Hence yes, you should buy this book.
Should You Read This Book? Not the Numbers
Let’s look at the extremes: the best and worst thing about the book.
Best things I got out of the book:
Worst things about the book:
Fortunately, as the numbers tell you, the meh essays were fairly few; however, as a book reviewer I had to read them. You can use a variant of Ebert’s rule:
I also hasten to point out, these are just my opinions, and as they say de gustabus non est disputandum.
Should You Read This Book? The Elephant in the Room
(The next paragraph is almost word-for-word what I wrote in the review of A Map that Reflects the Territory.)
And now for the elephant in the room: Why buy a book if the essays are on the web for free? I have addressed this issue in the past:
Here is an abbreviated quote from my book that applies to the book under review.
Acknowledgements
I thank the entire Lesswrong community for existing and putting forth reason as a way of life (though be careful eating Manioc).
I thank Oliver Habryka for giving me this opportunity to review these books.
I thank Nathan Hayes and Ben Pace for proofreading and useful comments.
I thank Ruby Bloom for helping me post this review to the LessWrong forum in text form (having a pointer to the review I learned was not as good).
I thank Fred Green, editor of SIGACT News for proofreading and not asking me to cut anything for length.
All of the people acknowledged help make this review LessWrong.
© 2022 William Gasarch
slang term for people who are not Lesswrongers