My current plan does still call for me to write a rationality book - at some point, and despite all delays - which means I have to decide what goes in the book, and what doesn't. Obviously the vast majority of my OB content can't go into the book, because there's so much of it.
So let me ask - what was the one thing you learned from my posts on Overcoming Bias, that stands out as most important in your mind? If you like, you can also list your numbers 2 and 3, but it will be understood that any upvotes on the comment are just agreeing with the #1, not the others. If it was striking enough that you remember the exact post where you "got it", include that information. If you think the most important thing is for me to rewrite a post from Robin Hanson or another contributor, go ahead and say so. To avoid recency effects, you might want to take a quick glance at this list of all my OB posts before naming anything from just the last month - on the other hand, if you can't remember it even after a year, then it's probably not the most important thing.
Please also distinguish this question from "What was the most frequently useful thing you learned, and how did you use it?" and "What one thing has to go into the book that would (actually) make you buy a copy of that book for someone else you know?" I'll ask those on Saturday and Sunday.
PS: Do please think of your answer before you read the others' comments, of course.
I really can't think of any one single thing. Part of it is I think I hadn't yet "dehindsightbiased" myself, (still haven't, except now sometimes I can catch myself as it's happening and say "No! I didn't know that before, stop trying to pretend that I did.")
Another part is that lots of posts helped crystallize/sharpen notions I'd been a bit fuzzy on. Part of it is just, well, the total effect.
Stuff like the Evolution sequence and so on were useful to me too.
If I had to pick one thing that stands out in my mind though, I guess I'd have to say the consciousness sequence. Specifically, making it much easier for me to imagine the day that it could be explained (REALLY explained, in the sense of "ooooh, now it really does make sense") in terms of perfectly ordinary stuff.
Bits and pieces I'd thought out on my own, but, again, you brought home the point strongly.
That's the best I can think of as far as specific things. The rest, well, it's the effect of all of it on me, rather than any single one that I can point to.
EDIT: oh, really really important thing: your definition of, well, definitions. ie, the whole clusters in thingspace, natural boundries around them, etc.