Without HPMOR and his sequences, many probably wouldn’t become interested in rationality (or the way it’s presented in them) quite as quickly or at all. But then, without his fascination of certain controversial ideas (like focusing on AI takeoff/risk that depend on overly sci-fi-like threat models—like grey goo, virus that make all humans just drop dead instantly, endless intelligence self-improvement etc that we don’t know to be possible, as opposed to more realistic and verifiable threat models like “normal” pandemics, cybersecurity, military robots and normal economic/physical efficiency etc; and focusing too much on moral absolutism, and either believing AGI will have some universal “correct” ethics or we should try to ensure AGI have such ethics as the main or only path to safe AI; or various weird obsessions like the idea of legalizing r*pe etc that might have alienated many women and other readers), AI safety and rationality groups in general may have been seen as less fringe and more reasonable.
various weird obsessions like the idea of legalizing r*pe etc that might have alienated many women and other readers
Sidenote: I object to calling this a weird obsession. This was a minor-to-medium plot point in one science fiction story that he wrote, and (to my knowledge) has never advocated for or even discussed beyond the relevance to the story. I don’t think that’s an obsession.
Without HPMOR and his sequences, many probably wouldn’t become interested in rationality (or the way it’s presented in them) quite as quickly or at all. But then, without his fascination of certain controversial ideas (like focusing on AI takeoff/risk that depend on overly sci-fi-like threat models—like grey goo, virus that make all humans just drop dead instantly, endless intelligence self-improvement etc that we don’t know to be possible, as opposed to more realistic and verifiable threat models like “normal” pandemics, cybersecurity, military robots and normal economic/physical efficiency etc; and focusing too much on moral absolutism, and either believing AGI will have some universal “correct” ethics or we should try to ensure AGI have such ethics as the main or only path to safe AI; or various weird obsessions like the idea of legalizing r*pe etc that might have alienated many women and other readers), AI safety and rationality groups in general may have been seen as less fringe and more reasonable.
Sidenote: I object to calling this a weird obsession. This was a minor-to-medium plot point in one science fiction story that he wrote, and (to my knowledge) has never advocated for or even discussed beyond the relevance to the story. I don’t think that’s an obsession.