Less Wrong is based on reddit code, which means we can create subreddits with relative ease.
Right now we have two subreddits, Main and Discussion. These are distinguished not by subject matter, but by whether a post is the type of thing that might be promoted to the front page or not (e.g. a meetup announcement, or a particularly well-composed and useful post).
As a result, almost everything is published to Discussion, and thus it is difficult for busy people to follow only the subjects they care about. More people will be able to engage if we split things into topic-specific subreddits, and make it easy to follow only what they care about.
To make it easier for people to follow only what they care about, we're building the code for a Dashboard thingie.
But we also need to figure out which subreddits to create, and we'd like community feedback about that.
We'll probably start small, with just 1-5 new subreddits.
Below are some initial ideas, to get the conversation started.
Idea 1
- Main: still the place for things that might be promoted.
- Applied Rationality: for articles about what Jonathan Baron would call descriptive and prescriptive rationality, for both epistemic and instrumental rationality (stuff about biases, self-improvement stuff, etc.).
- Normative Rationality: for articles about what Baron would call normative rationality, for both epistemic and instrumental rationality (examining the foundations of probability theory, decision theory, anthropics, and lots of stuff that is called "philosophy").
- The Future: for articles about forecasting, x-risk, and future technologies.
- Misc: Discussion, renamed, for everything that doesn't belong in the other subreddits.
Idea 2
- Main
- Epistemic Rationality: for articles about how to figure out the world, spanning the descriptive, prescriptive, and normative.
- Instrumental Rationality: for articles about how to take action to achieve your goals, spanning the descriptive, prescriptive, and normative. (One difficulty with the epistemic/instrumental split is that many (most?) applied rationality techniques seem to be relevant to both epistemic and instrumental rationality.)
- The Future
- Misc.
Well, in my opinion this is the best single action a LW admin could take, because I think the tacit sexism and racism on LW prevents most humans (who are neither white nor male) from taking the teachings of Yudkowsky seriously, and I think that fixing the representation problem would go a long way towards solving that. Once the global majority are able to take LW seriously, it'll spread much faster, and the world will become more rational.
All the other suggestions I saw previously were just ways to split up existing discussion on LW by categories, whereas this will hopefully bring new people and types of discussion to the community.
I also think that this has near-zero costs besides some moderator effort. Parts of the LW community will be irritated by the idea of spaces that exclude them, because they're white men who have never been excluded, but in the long run, those people aren't very valuable to LW, because they serve to alienate people who aren't white men, and most people aren't white men.
OK. Thanks for clarifying.