From Raemon's Project Hufflepuff thread, I thought it might be helpful for there to be a periodical check-in thread where people can post about their projects in the spirit of cooperation. This is the first one. If it goes well, maybe we can make it a monthly thing.
If you're looking for a quick proofread, trial users, a reference to a person in a specific field, or something else related to a project-in-progress this is the place to put it. Otherwise, if you think you're working on something cool the community might like to hear about, I guess it goes here too.
I certainly see some negative attitudes towards this sort of thing on LW, but it doesn't look to me at all like "vague annoyance that Rationalist principles are being challenged". Could you explain why you think that's what it is?
(Full disclosure: your description above seems to me like an example of my snarky thesis that postrationality = knowing about rationality + feeling superior to rationalists. But I think that in feeling that way I'm being uncharitable in almost exactly the way I'm suspecting you of being uncharitable. :-) )
For what it's worth, I'm not a fan of the notion that anything that successfully builds on rationality is a part of rationality. Not because it's exactly wrong, but because surely it could happen that the self-identified rationalist community has a wrong or incomplete idea of what actually constitutes effective thinking. In that case, a New Improved Version should indeed be "part of rationality", but until the actual so-called rationalists catch up it might not look that way. And if the rationalist community were sufficiently dysfunctional, calling the New Improved Version "rationality" might be counterproductive. I am not claiming that any of this is actually the case, and in particular I am not claiming that the "postrationalists" or "metarationalists" are in fact in possession of genuine improvements on LW-style rationality. But it's not a possibility that can be ruled out a priori, and this "automatically part of rationality" thing seems to me like it fails to acknowledge the possibility.