All of pre's Comments + Replies

pre00

Thanks, makes some sort of sense this morning at least.

pre10

It's not that I think many-worlds is 'needed' to explain it, just that whever likely-nonsense intuition I have over the subject is based on that model, so it's best understood by me if it can be expressed in that frame.

Tell me it's a photon that wasn't there and I'll go, "Whut?"

Tell me that the worlds cancel each other out to zero probability and I might, likely falsely, think I grok it.

0Shmi
Likely falsely, yes.
pre60

Heh. What's the odds of you having that winning lottery ticket?

50/50! Either I win, or I don't.

Seems like you're mostly saying that price-like things tend to return to an average price, then presenting a lot of evidence on why the price is low and likely to continue to be low, then claiming that it's therefore got to go up, because things return to their average price.

I have some bit-coin. It's still worth more than when I brought it. My best guess, as it was then, is that it'll be worth exactly zero in a decade or two.

Sounded like a lottery-ticket with ex... (read more)

pre300

I took the survey.

The answer to how many minutes I spend here is a bit lower than you might expect, in that my robots scan the RSS feeds and send me interesting stuff so basically it's almost zero, unless you count my robots time somehow.

pre50

That was pretty good fun.

What I was expecting: Half a dozen nerds boozing it up and shooting the breeze about math and poltiics and self improvement.

What actually happend: More like a classroom full of people, many less nerdy than me, mostly drinking water and eating icecream (apparently I was the only one drinking that awesome Devon 6% cider), chatting about widely variing topics including math and politics and polyphasic sleep and self improvement and fan-fiction and cults and meta self-organizing stuff.

Apparently this was a bigger turnout than usual, b... (read more)

pre280

i typed my age then hit return which submitted the form with only one answer. so then i filled it in again. you'll want to ignore that first entry. dinner arrived as i did that so that was a couple of hours ago now. age is 39 if that helps.

pre70

Bell curves may be the general case, but for the non-car-owning public-transport-using among us the situation is quite different. If a train runs every 20 minutes then being 1 minute late for the train means being 20 minutes late at the destination. Being 1 minute early has no effect on the time arriving at the destination.

It makes the prep-time discontinuous I guess.

Course, in London everyone expects everyone to often be 20 minutes late coz of the damned trains, so maybe it matter less then, heh.

1Marlon
For this problem, you could make the distribution of the time it takes to get to the train station - you could easily compute the average time it takes for going there, and seeing that by planning to take exactly this amount of time to get there will make you 20 minutes late 50% of the time. The prep time will only make the "late amount of time" discontinuous, it won't change the probability of being late.
pre10

I counted it, coz I'm mostly just a lurker here anyway. Far too busy!

pre100

Heh, this is pretty much how I live my life really. Coins go in the obvious coin place coz if I put 'em anywhere else I'll never remember where I put 'em.

See also: Proper Pocket Discipline. Everything that goes in pockets has an assigned pocket. No more searching for lighters! No more worry about keys scratching phone screens.

My books are in alphabetical order these days.

I suspect having a system for these things will also leave you better off if/when you go senile. If you've always looked in the same place for your coins for 60 years it'll be more ingraned.

0dlthomas
My books are emphatically not in any order - I enjoy the serendipity of the search, and rarely do I need something specific quickly (and when I do, the internet usually provides what is necessary). Edited to add: This does not generalize well to pockets.
5nazgulnarsil
pocket discipline? you mean everyone doesn't do this?! there are people walking around right now with their possessions in random pockets and they themselves might not know what pocket an item is in until they check? MADNESS. brb, accosting strangers.
pre20

Well, ish. Certainly no interface between uploaded consciousness and the (still very crude) motor-control and perception systems of such androids.

pre00

That's the vPre. It's the virtual version of me that looks after my websites and things. An early attempt to "upload" myself as it goes. He lives at my homepage, http://dalliance.net/ and mostly just recites my twitter stream, with a search function. :)

pre10

Thanks.

Didn't there used to be plenty of people who said blacks people don't have souls, for instance? The whole concept is so nebulous as to be practically meaningless.

One of the later scripts talks about him inventing that android-body type machine, or at least helping develop it.

0DanielLC
But they've already been invented.
0cousin_it
(silly comment retracted)
pre10

Um, yeah, you're probably right. Won't be around to reply/baby-sit it from now till after the weekend though. Maybe I'll do it Tuesday.

pre10

I remember reading about an experiment in which they did exactly that: change the text on a computer screen during eye sucades, when the eyes aren't processing data, IE while you're "Not looking". Which reminded me of trying to read in dreams, certainly.

I once had a lucid dream in which I decided to see how good my latent memory was by picking up a book from my self in the dream and reading the first line to see, when I woke, if I'd got it right. But it was just nonsense babble which, as you point out, kept changing. Oh well.

pre30

Thanks.

Yeah, you should have heard the sound before Danny cleaned it up ;) I should buy better equipment probably.

I think showing that the Uploads still react emotionally is going to be an important part of any work which features 'em, especially if they're "smart" people, otherwise it can look like uploading turns you into a Spock-Bot. Mostly I was just trying to keep the dialog tight. My natural writing is way too verbose for a five minute video, perhaps I overcompensated there a little.

0Raw_Power
I know that feel, bro. Whenever I write a play I have to compact the dialogues because there is no time-
pre20

Having access to information and actually having assimilated it are two entirely different things.

Indeed, this is what I was talking about with the Cyc project, just having the information isn't enough, it needs to be integrated, to have meaning.

Still, it seems many of my pub conversations are already changing with wireless mobile internet access as what would have been a large discussion about whether or not something was real, or what it did, or when it was, can be quickly checked by a source both people would agree is better than anyone physically p... (read more)

pre30

Sounds fun. I made a little video last month about what Hanson calls "Ems" that's supposed to grow into a bigger discussion on the political and social consequences. I call 'em "Uploads" though.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXAuglDs95s

That's more immediate-future rather than fifty years hence though. The script for later episodes talks more about their having failed to make any kind of AI work properly other than by scanning and uploading though, how learning facts is not the same as understanding with digs at the Cyc project.

If you're... (read more)

0Armok_GoB
You really should make a dedicated discussion-level post for this.
0curiousepic
I really enjoyed this, very watchable. Subscribed!
0Raw_Power
Watched the video. Loved it. Except for the bit at the end, the positions were made to look too emotional rather than reasoned. Instead of saying an outraged "going to church makes him moral?" he could have said something along the lines of "you know who else went to church every day? Archbishop Richeleu and Girgori Rasputin. You know what they had in common, besides being high-ranking priests? They shanked a number of women that's in the order of the hundreds" or maybe some shorter but equally strong counterexample in the "him going to church doesn't prove anything" line, including that exact phrasing, especially if they've talked about the topic before. There's also a serious audio problem, I really had to strain my ears to listen. Otherwise, as I said, I loved it, especially the implications of "living in the Metaverse".
1Raw_Power
Having access to information and actually having assimilated it are two entirely different things. Hainv Wikipedia wired into your brain will allow you to check cursory definitions and article-introductions near instantly, but your interlocutor must wait a couple of minutes for you to read and understand. That time will vary depending on how enhanced your intelligence is and how much you are already acquainted with the topic at hand. It might grow enormously if, say, upon meeting a lesswrongian for the first time, you're forced to make a wiki walk through their archives just to be up-to-date with them (seriously, this habit of peppering articles with links to other articles when they aren't strictly necessary for the understanding of the texts should stop, it creates an unhealthy in-house feeling and forces new users into month-long ermitatges trying to close the exponentially exploding army of tabs!). Given the fact that History is in constant acceleration and that things are more and more inter-connected, I assume there'd be a state-sponsored effort (if not an entire industry) of developing digest history books and other introductory material, not for Dummies, but for Thawees (we should get a better name than that for the Resurrected... we should also get a derogatory one, because racism and priviledge: "The Walking Dead"? "They're History"? "Time-Skippers"? "Dinosaurs"? (Cue jokes about blood in amber and the prophesized Dinoday),
pre00

Wicked. I was just thinking about writing a script to scrape 'em and stick 'em on my phone for those tube journeys when I haven't got a book with me.

Been using the Harry Potter fan-fic for that but seem to be about to run out of it.

Thanks to all those who have already done it for me :)

pre20

Heard back from the guy I emailed. Sounds like the meeting next month is mostly for folks who are signed up already, with more policy and practice stuff than enrolment and talk about the actual process.

I've asked him if he'll either do a Q&A here on exactly what UK folks would have to do, or else suggest someone who will.

Seems like it'd be a lot of effort to trek up to Sheffield for just the answers to some questions.

Hopefully he'll say yes :)

pre10

Yeah, I can't help on finding stuff written on cryo though I'm afraid. That's the topics it'd have to address to have much meaning to me: Whether or not the distribution of those proteins in the cell membrane are stored or destroyed. It might still not work even if it saves those things, but if it doesn't save those things it's not got a chance.

There's some kinda cryonics UK meeting next month which I'd half planned to think about going to. Will give it more thought when I get back from a work-trip next week.

{EDIT: Actually, I'll email 'em now and see what the score is]

pre30

I'm a long way from being an expert neuroscientist, but as far as I can tell the mechanism under which neural change happens essentially involves a few physical changes:

1) Myelination - the Myelin coating over the Axon of a neuron grows, making the Axon conduct it's signal more powerfully and quickly

2) Change in number and distribution of neurotransmitter receptors in the dendrites of the neuron. Obviously the more of them you have, the more likely the neuron is to fire in the presence of the transmitter which fits that receptor.

3) Change in the number and... (read more)

2Paul Crowley
If the topic is the technical plausibility of cryonics then this is on-topic, but I'm hoping to focus a little more narrowly than that, on the specific subject of existing writing that argues against cryonics, its accuracy and quality, and what we can infer from that. BTW: I too am in the UK and having real trouble!
pre20

Thanks folks, sounds like the entire point of quantum computing is to avoid the kinda differences in interpretation that Copenhagen/MWI are concerned with, so my suspicion that a MW computational image would help is mistaken. Which is good, read around some Quantum Algorithms a bit. Have a better grasp of how that actually works than the terrible "explore all possibilities and pick the best" line that seems to come up so much.

Still leaves me a bit at a loss with these quantum effects in photosynthesis though:

We have obtained the first direct ev

... (read more)
-1Mitchell_Porter
Right now it looks unlikely that a quantum algorithm is being enacted anyway.
0MendelSchmiedekamp
My post does describe a distinct model based on a Many Worlds interpretation where the probabilities are computed differently based on whether entanglement occurs or not - i.e. whether the universes influence each other. It is distinct from the typical model of decoherence. As for photosythesis, it ought to behave in much the same way, as a network of states propagating through entangled universes, with the interactions of the states in those branches causing the highest probabilities to be assigned to the branches which have the lowest energy barriers. Of note, there are other, more esoteric models based on even more unusual interpretations of quantum mechanics, but I suspect that's not something we need to get into here.
3Zack_M_Davis
Quantum computing is totally fun.
pre00

Interesting. Sounds like you're saying that the entire process of quantum computation aims to keep the system coherent, and so avoid splitting the universe. Which make sense. They tell me the difficulty, in an engineering sense, is to stop the system de-cohering.

Is that remotely accurate?

1Eliezer Yudkowsky
Yes. Except that the universe doesn't ever split. It's always continuous. But we're trying to keep two blobs of amplitude in close contact rather than letting them diverge, so that some parts can overlap and add up or cancel out.
pre10

Saying that a quantum algorithm is "simultaneously sampling all possibilities and choosing the best one" has always been, I've found, a strange way of putting it,

Indeed, misleading and annoyingly common and the kinda thing that's always encouraging my more cosmic hippy friends down blind alleys. I'm hoping to find a better way, it seemed to me that MWI might have done that.

Maybe it doesn't, I'm certainly not an expert, hard for me to tell without being able to read a good one :)

This is better, certainly:

A quantum algorithm such as Grover's a

... (read more)
pre00

Vague grasp of what the maths is supposed to do, without ever having actually worked through most of it. More than just SA and Eleizer, but mostly pretty much around that level.

The trouble with the explore-and-prune way of describing these things is it automatically makes people fall into speculation on what's doing the choosing, how maybe 'consciousness' is picking the 'best' of the results and shaping the universe.

Understand enough to know it ain't that, and that the maths tells us the probabilities of the outcomes, there's no 3rd party 'picking' the one... (read more)

pre40

Oh no! Does just mentioning the problem cause people to notice dust-specs that would have otherwise gone unnoticed? If we ask 3^^^3 people the question are we in fact causing more trouble than torturing a man for 50 years?

If you ask one person and expect them to ask the advice of two others, who do the same in turn....

Seems best to stay quiet!

Pre..........

pre00

Thanks, I think it shall be one of the best End Of The World Shows we've ever done. And this is at least number twelve :)

For anyone who's never done it, I thoroughly recommend climbing on a soap-box in silly clothes and ranting a load of nonsense at speakers corner like you're an insane nutcase. Liberating for it to be so obvious for a change.

pre10

One, probably not very useful, possibility is of course to turn up at the Subgenius party I'm running. It'll be loud and noisy and not particularly rational (after all, most of the point is to highlight irrationality by mocking and exaggerating it), but fun and weird.

Personally I'm far too busy to meet anywhere else before that though. And indeed, I'll be busy all night long at the show too, up on stage for five minutes out of every hour introducing the acts etc.

Still. You're all invited anyway.

0hrishimittal
That looks wicked!
pre70

Oh, so we're just using techniques which win without being sneaky? Isn't 'sneaky' a good, winning strategy?

Rationality's enemies are certainly using these techniques. Should we not study them, if only with a view to finding an antidote?

pre10

memetic engineering

The art of manipulating the media, especially news, and public opinion. Sometimes known as "spin-doctoring" I guess, but I think the memetic paradigm is probably a more useful one to attack it from.

I'd love to understand that better than I do. Understanding it properly would certainly help with evangelism.

I fear that very few people really do grok it though, certainly I wouldn't be capable of writing much relevant about it yet.

1Emile
I'm not sure that's something worth studying here - it's kinda sneaky and unethical.
pre70

That's almost exactly the phrase I used when I pointed this place out to my friends. I added one word though: "I've joined another cult." I said.

I find that if I talk as though all my groups of friends are cults of various kinds that it takes the "You're in a cult" wind out of their sails.

"Yes, I'm in lots of cults, including this one here with you in it too."

Don't think any of the members of my other cults have wondered in this direction yet though.

pre50

No need to remove it, just don't put a mic on the crowd.

My suspicion would be that the actors would appear to be reacting to something which didn't exist, and that it'd be even worse than no audience at all.

We'd have to do some experiments to check though.

pre200

Anyone got any other examples of things just about everyone here has seen the folly of, even though they're widespread among otherwise-smart people

The idiocy of the drug war tends to be my own favourite example.

The so-called terrorism threat? I did a count the other day on how many civil liberties had been removed by the terrorists vs those removed by the government.

Nationalism in general?

I guess you'd claim that things like forwarding chain letters, belief in homoeopathy or healing crystals or orgone guns, the 'nature is good' fallacy and whatnot aren't common enough.

2A1987dM
How about astrology? I had a physics teacher in high school who believed in horoscopes!
6Paul Crowley
I still have that I must be missing something feeling about that one. It seems so obvious that terrorism is very low down on the chart of public health problems, and that little would do more to defeat their aims than treating it as such; but when someone like Hitchens takes it seriously, I really want to know if there's an argument I haven't considered.

I think that marijuana legalization in particular can be used as an example we all agree about. (Does anyone reading this actually disagree about that? Leave a comment if so.)

pre00

Seems that talking about favourite games that you think really judge how to judge nothing but skill is good, and apparently we should be talking about things which others may not have experienced so I thought I'd waffle on about Dip for a bit.

It's a great game. I wish I didn't have a job or something so I had time to play again really.

pre20

The first thing that comes to mind is maybe she's able to teach students how to practice more in their youth than she did.

That'd work at least.

pre120

So if you find you ARE that friend, presumably you'd have no fear of stepping in front of that gun barrel yourself for a few million flips right afterwards. I mean it's pretty convincing proof. Then you get to see the confusion in each other's face!

Though you're both more likely to end up mopping your friend's blood of the floor.

On the whole, I think a good friend probably doesn't let a friend test the Quantum Theory of Immortality.

9AllanCrossman
I don't believe so. While the person who underwent the experiment has a completely convincing proof of MWI+QTI, the friend doesn't. What he saw is just as unlikely under MWI as it is under Copenhagen.
MBlume160

Even if QTI is true, a good friend doesn't test it, for fear of leaving behind (many copies of) a bereaved friend.

pre30

"why certain ideas are communicated only indirectly for good reasons" by Pre.

Rather than use an obscure example like Zen, we'll use a fairly simple idea: Learning how to catch a ball.

Now I can directly explain to you how a ball is caught. I can describe the simultaneous ballistic equations that govern the flight of the ball, instruct you on how to alter your idea of where the ball will land based on Bayesian reasoning given certain priors and measured weather conditions.

These things are almost certainly needed if you're gonna program a computer ... (read more)

3thomblake
Incidentally, that's not how we tend to program computers to do things like catch balls (successfully). We instead build a sort-of general learning system attached to grasping and visual systems, and then teach it how through observation.
4Dustin
But first explaining how to catch a ball won't keep the person from then learning how to catch it.
pre10

I quite like the idea of infiltrating some religion and taking over. I doubt the christian ones would be the best bet, but it's a nice plan. One of the newer religions may be more corruptible.

It's a fantasy though, not something that I think could actually be orchestrated.

Karma here is pretty simple: You get a point for every upvote, and lose one for every downvote. You automatically upvote your own comments (unless you deliberately cancel it).

So make 20 posts that don't get voted down and you're there.

2Loren
pre, if we are to be successful, there needs to be some attitude adjustment on our part. We need to gain some humility, and some respect for what religion has accomplished in the past several thousand years. We wouldn't be infiltrating, we would be transforming, in the spirit of Martin Luther and Paul the Apostle. There are many Christian churches that are dying because their theology doesn't speak to people today, and they know it. Mainline Protestants are the most obvious examples, but the evangelicals now realize they are in trouble too: http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0310/p09s01-coop.html Many, many, Christians are desperate for renewal. We have a tremendous opportunity to provide it for them, if we can steer Christian theology back to its original intent, which is reverence for knowledge. It's quite possible that a sub-group of Gnostics, or knowers, wrote the New Testament. I'll post more on this later. So, we aren't corrupting the Christian religion. I think it is quite likely we're restoring it back to it's original intent. If you don't think this can be orchestrated, take a look at what just one person, Michael Dowd, has been able to accomplish in just a few years. Christianity is ready to hear a new Gospel, and I hope Judiasm, Islam, and other religions are too. So I get a karma point for commenting on someone's comment about my comment? Getting to 20 points may be easier than I thought.
pre30

There's any number of movements whose adherents have a priority of spreading the word, and right now I can't think of a single such movement I'd want to be associated with.

Innit. Personally I think I get more out of a community with a wide range of views anyway.

pre20

I've never been to a mensa meeting. On the web they seem to do little other than congratulate each other for being so smart. Do they do more when they meet in meatspace?

1[anonymous]
Really? I've seen them spend more time insulting each other for being so stupid. :P Yes, from what I've seen. However, I'm somewhat out of the typical age bracket so haven't involved myself all that much. Ask me in 10 years.
pre20

Well, I meant that being a lone rationist doesn't spread rationalism, essentially. If that's the motive, you need to be more accepting of those that aren't in order to move them towards the path.

cousin_it150

You've nailed exactly what worries me in your comment and the original post. You see, belief systems that aim for self-propagation are prone to turn really icky over time. A scientist doesn't want above all else to spread the scientific worldview, a painter doesn't set out to make everyone else paint, even a pickup artist has no desire to make all males alphas - they all have other, concrete goals; but religious or political views have to be viral. There's any number of movements whose adherents have a priority of spreading the word, and right now I can't think of a single such movement I'd want to be associated with.

pre130

Yes! Community matters. The support and friendship my folks get from their church is so intense, so useful to them, that I stopped trying to talk 'em out of their religion when I understood it. Unless you can replace that, give them that support and encouragement they got when my brother went schizophrenic say, you may well do them a disservice by talking them out of their religion even it if were possible.

Personally I get mine from a few places. The subgenii thing doesn't really work well enough, there's maybe two dozen of us active here in the whole cont... (read more)

2[anonymous]
Mensa works adequately. "Only the top 5%" and even "only the top 2%" really isn't all that exclusive. In fact, compared to typical social barriers to entry, Mensa's simple one of test is the epitome of inclusiveness. At least, it is for those smarter than they are charming.
4cousin_it
Surely you mean "a lone altruist". A lone rationalist can be very successful. Sorry about the nitpick, but Eliezer has recently been trying to conflate the two words for whatever aims.
pre20

Innit. I quite like the sleep deprivation high, but it's not a good state for thinking straight. And I also love sleeping and dreaming.

pre30

Yeah, see, figuring things out from first principles, rigorously applying your values, calculating the best option given a multi-dimensional array of preferences in various categories and doing a weighted sum on them to determine an appropriate course is a good thing. People should definitely know how to do that. I'm glad I have whatever basic grasp on the functions involved that I do have.

But it's not actually how human beings think.

Even determining what heuristic you'd use to judge a situation's utility on that multidimensional scale would be a monumenta... (read more)

pre10

Oh, so like a badge to put on your profile page.

I did wonder why people joined so many pointless groups.

I think it would likely bring more facebook randoms here. Not really sure what the aims of the place are in that regard. Presumably we DO want to encourage rationality outside our own little clique, so bringing more people here would be good. But presumably we also don't want to drown in trolls and noise and idiots and spam which is what tends to be the final result of that kinda recruitment drive.

Probably should figure out what the plan is for that before you start, effectively, advertising on facebook I reckon.

1timtyler
The OB group has 231 members. There will be a LW group - but who will make it?
pre30

But there IS a flavour that you'd enjoy most, it's just that without projecting yourself into that future position and imagining the emotional content of it you can't decide which will be best.

new scientist had an article {subscription needed, mirrored here} which mentions "Elliot", a patient described in Descarte's Error:

Intellectually, Elliott is unimpaired. IQ and memory tests reveal nothing abnormal

. . .

Eventually the researchers trace this myopic indecisiveness to a curious absence of feeling, itself the result of damage to the frontal

... (read more)
-1Annoyance
If I can't decide which will be best, I'll just choose one. Elliot seems to have problems valuing things - not surprising, since the frontal lobes make it possible to associate abstract ideas and the valences of preference, among other things. It seem to me that he would have made a decision based on his feelings, and how that his feelings can no longer be associated with states, the decision process no longer terminates. Think rather of people with "flattened affect". That's what we should be aiming for. Think Mr. Data.
pre00

Seriously? Why? To encourage the Facebook masses to come here?

  • shudders *
2timtyler
For reasons associated with signalling affiliations - the same as with most such groups.
pre160

In the Free Software movement the typical response to these kinds of demands is pretty simple, "There's the code, please do feel free to go fix it!"

Likewise in the hippy anarchist movements if you suggest something like a rally or a sit-in the usual answer is "Sounds good, when are you going to organise it?"

Which I tend to think is pretty much the right answer. If someone can't be bothered to do the things they suggest themselves then I can't really understand why they think they should be able to convince others to do it for them.

The k... (read more)

In the Free Software movement the typical response to these kinds of demands is pretty simple, "There's the code, please do feel free to go fix it!"

One could argue that a large portion of the success of free software is because the ability to fork means that it is less damaged by internal dispute than other collective efforts.

7thomblake
Except in those situations where the response is, "I know you fixed a critical bug, but I've simply reverted all of your edits because you used the wrong indent style"
pre30

Oh, then microchips? Writing "IBM" in individual atoms with a scanning electron microscope? Nano-motors for nano-machines? Richard Hammond was on the TV the other week with a probing scanning electron microscope writing his name on a strand of hair. Awesome.

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