Solving willpower seems easier than solving aging

I’m awake about 17 hours a day. Of those I’m being productive maybe 10 hours a day.

My working definition of productive is in the direction of: “things that I expect I will be glad I did once I’ve done them”[1].

Things that I personally find productive include

  • Chores

  • Work

  • Eating

  • Cooking

  • Reading a good book

  • Watching TV with my Wife/​Kids

  • Playing with the kids

  • Socialising with friends

But not

  • Doomscrolling

  • Watching TV alone

  • Playing most computer games

  • Sitting on the couch doing nothing

  • Reading a book I’m not particularly interested in

etc.

If we could find a magic pill which allowed me to do productive things 17 hours a day instead of 10 without any side effects, that would be approximately equally as valuable as a commensurate increase in life expectancy. Yet the first seems much easier to solve than the second—we already have some drugs which get pretty close (caffeine, amphetamines).[2]

Now obviously the correct thing to do is both, but in the same way as we want a Manhattan project for anti-aging, we should also advocate for a Manhattan project for focusing/​willpower.

  1. ^

    The point of this definition is to include things like working on a project which failed, but exclude things like playing a computer game which I enjoy at the time but leaves me feeling drained afterwards.

  2. ^

    I imagine “throw away your phone” will get me 90% of the way there.