Six months ago, we launched the Guild Beta. Our goal was -- and is -- to produce people who are impressive in everyday life. We are interested in real-life effectiveness, not armchair philosophy. This attitude is why, when people join the Guild and embark on our Rank Advancement program, we have them make a list of problems they encounter in their day-to-day lives. These problems serve as a guidepost for their Guild endeavors and help keep them anchored to reality.
In that spirit, one of the Council's chief concerns is feedback and iteration. We want to help, and we want to stay tightly bound to reality. Articulation improves clarity of thought, so we strive to be transparent in our activities. This article is a look back on the past six months of the Guild Beta and a look forward at what we want to do with the next six months.
Yes, this is straightforwardly correct. We're not the first group to attempt something like this. Dragon Army and CFAR have both tried to improve people and neither met with much success (CFAR's workshops seem decent, from my outsider perspective, but are very limited in scope). Many other educational institutions exist, most of which have failed even worse than ours. With that said --
I believe rationality can be transformative because it was for me. My life has improved drastically since discovering the Sequences, and I effected most of the change while entirely alone. Cases like mine are somewhat uncommon even among rationalists, but this suggests to me that more is possible. We're missing something.
(Yes I know the above is inside view, but it's a critical part of why I think the Guild has a chance of success.)
Still, the vision of self-improvement isn't what drives me to pour my time and energy into the Guild. I'm more here for the community aspect of "community based self improvement". Community is a lot easier to do, and the outside view is far less pessimistic there. People start new communities all the time! I think we're well on our way to success here through the cohort system, but we won't really know for sure until we cross 150 members.
The rest of the Council might want to weigh in; we each have our own reasons for joining the project and I know David and Alex are much more focused on the grand vision aspects.