From what I see, it seems like rationalists don’t act on ideas often enough. To help people get the motivation to act on ideas, I sense that a hackathon would be effective. People would talk and group together to prototype different ideas, and at the end of the hackathon, participants would vote on the best ideas, and hopefully this would spark some action.
I guess what makes this different from the typical hackathon is:
1) Participants would be Less Wrong readers, or people part of other rationality-minded communities.
2) The goal would be to start things that are as beneficial as possible to the world (people at hackathons usually just want to build something “cool”).
The more complex a project is, the less likely are people to complete it successfully. The more meta a project is, the less likely is the model of its usefulness correct.
I expect a risk that people will vote on something very nebulous (more meta! more meta!) as the best idea, and at the end pretty much nothing measurable happens.
To avoid going too much meta, I would recommend adding an artificial constraint, such as “we must be able to complete the whole thing in one week”. Sure, this drastically limits how useful things you can do. On the other hand, it allows multiple iterations and feedback.
I expect a risk that people will vote on something very nebulous (more meta! more meta!) as the best idea, and at the end pretty much nothing measurable happens.
Maybe there’s a risk, but do you think it’s big enough to make the Hackathon not worth doing? I think that people here are smart enough to Get Something Done.
To avoid going too much meta, I would recommend adding an artificial constraint, such as “we must be able to complete the whole thing in one week”.
Hmm, maybe.
1) I think that if a private group wants to do something more future-oriented, they should be allowed. Maybe you could just restrict people that enter voting to be things that could be done in a certain time period.
2) “You have to have a useful version in x weeks” is probably better than “You have to have completed your project in x weeks”.
An idea: a rationality hackathon.
From what I see, it seems like rationalists don’t act on ideas often enough. To help people get the motivation to act on ideas, I sense that a hackathon would be effective. People would talk and group together to prototype different ideas, and at the end of the hackathon, participants would vote on the best ideas, and hopefully this would spark some action.
I guess what makes this different from the typical hackathon is:
1) Participants would be Less Wrong readers, or people part of other rationality-minded communities.
2) The goal would be to start things that are as beneficial as possible to the world (people at hackathons usually just want to build something “cool”).
Thoughts?
The more complex a project is, the less likely are people to complete it successfully. The more meta a project is, the less likely is the model of its usefulness correct.
I expect a risk that people will vote on something very nebulous (more meta! more meta!) as the best idea, and at the end pretty much nothing measurable happens.
To avoid going too much meta, I would recommend adding an artificial constraint, such as “we must be able to complete the whole thing in one week”. Sure, this drastically limits how useful things you can do. On the other hand, it allows multiple iterations and feedback.
Maybe there’s a risk, but do you think it’s big enough to make the Hackathon not worth doing? I think that people here are smart enough to Get Something Done.
Hmm, maybe.
1) I think that if a private group wants to do something more future-oriented, they should be allowed. Maybe you could just restrict people that enter voting to be things that could be done in a certain time period.
2) “You have to have a useful version in x weeks” is probably better than “You have to have completed your project in x weeks”.