Are there any shapes of mind you think don't have much to offer alignment, or will have unusual hindrances making it more difficult?
I, too, am interested in this question.
(One note that may be of use: I think the incentives for "cultivating more/better researchers in a preparadigmatic field" lean towards "don't discourage even less-promising researchers, because they could luck out and suddenly be good/useful to alignment in an unexpected way". Like how investors encourage startup founders because they bet on a flock of them, not necessarily because any particular founder's best bet is to found a startup. This isn't necessarily bad, it just puts the incentives into perspective.)
This post is part of the work done at Conjecture.
This post has been written for the first Refine blog post day, at the end of a week of readings, discussions, and exercises about epistemology for doing good conceptual research.
I have recently presented my model behind the Refine incubator that I'm running. Yet in the two weeks since this post was published, multiple discussions helped me make legible an aspect of my intuitions that I didn't discuss in this post: the notion of different "shapes of mind".
There are two points to this intuition:
I've given my current best model of the different forms of pluralism and when to use them in another recent post. What I want to explore here is the first point: this notion of shape of mind. For that, let's recall the geometric model of bits of evidence I introduced in Levels of Pluralism.
Here the shapes of mind are favored operationalizations — that is, the favored low-dimensional compression of the high-dimensional space where the bits of evidence lie. More precisely, a shape of mind is a cluster of "close" such transforms.
What makes someone have a given shape of mind?
One thing this handle makes clear is the difference between my model for different programs as Refine, SERI MATS, and PIBBSS respectively aim at:
I'm excited to finally be in a field with all three.
Thus we can see framing exercises as a way of shaping your mind to see the hidden bits of evidence that you want to access.