All of Danylo Zhyrko's Comments + Replies

I do tend to doubt what I should invest my efforts into. If I'm not really sure they get paid back, I'm inclined to hesitate. That's why my decision what to invest into might depend on other people's reactions unless I'm damn sure. Though, I'm trying to shift this dependency point to data. For me, solely inner motivation isn't enough.

I am unsure whether I've grasped the mechanism behind this inner work stuff. You feel your limbs weird, and what? What implication are you trying to point to? How should your experience or insight contribute to rationality and moral philosophy? Yes, we have inherent biases but, as far as I've managed to get acquainted with the rationality discourse, they are not resolved by merely being aware of them or expanding consciousness. I cannot clearly see the added value of this inner work. Why is experimental psychology insufficient? Thanks for your answer.

7senguidev
The reasoning is quite basic actually. 1. You believe, for decades, that X happening would make absolutely no rational sense. 2. X happens. 3. You are shocked. You realize your rationality was lacking. 4. You didn't thought your rationality could be lacking in this way. 5. This meta-fact is important for rationality. Except if the biases are "fixable"*. Suppose they are. Then you need to work on them. But to do so, it's pretty logical that you need to be aware of them first. The emphasis on the awareness ensues. *somehow, partially, and with lot of efforts. I hope it's somehow clearer!

Do you really presume everyone on LW understands Russian, citing a Russian-language poem?

1dirk
I can't vouch for the quality as I don't speak Russian myself, but https://lyricstranslate.com/en/крылья-krylya-wings.html has a human-authored translation, and I found google translate to line up with it reasonably well should that be your go-to.

Thanks for your comment! You're right I was mostly a passive reader on LW. I tried to make the essay sound as logic and unbiased as I possible. If you could recommend any blogs or public online spaces where I could post my essays on situations about Ukraine and be heard, I'd be really pleased.

Concerning the question you referred to, I wish the rule of international law would prevent countries from invading one another rather lack of nukes. Ukraine took such a step to signal about its good intentions by swapping nuclear weapons for respect for its borders but the good intentions were nullified by Russia's invasion.

2Viliam
You could start your own blog on Substack, but then the problem will be how to find an audience. But posting a link somewhere in a comment section is easier than posting the entire article. The international law is just a very thin layer on top of the "law of the jungle". Czechoslovakia also had all kinds of guarantees in 1938 and they also turned out not to be worth the paper they were written on.

Besides voting Democrat (which is also valuable), you can spread the message of why it's necessary to stand for Ukraine. When communicated, the message may encounter someone who would make the difference. Secondly, you can donate to Come Back Alive Charity Foumdation or Serhiy Prytula Charity Foundation.

It'd be more appropriate to call Russia a fascist state if we take Umberto Eco's criteria. Here's an article dealing with Eco's definition of fascism. I referred to Nazi dictatorship because of the article cited.

To be honest, I can't catch your take. It isn't transparent for me. If you could put it more straightforwardly, I'd be thankful. Russia exploits the narrative about NATO enlargement. But I can't see any evidence why NATO threatens Russia's security.