Would you buy the claim you can “Be more right and get less wrong”? (asked because I feel like I’m pointing to the same thing as the first bullet, but the first bullet is not phrased super well)
On the question of “does understanding your mind make you fail less often”, I notice that there are 3+ cases that immediately jump to mind that match, “I didn’t fail because I learned more about my mind”. Do you think a lot of those cases I didn’t fail for reasons other than understanding my mind, or do you expect that I’m racking up new-different failures as a result of understanding my mind more?
On post rationality, I just now read a bit more, and my reaction was, “Wait, wasn’t that a key piece of rationality in the first place?” I’m interested to see if I’ve secretly always been of a post-rationalist persuasion, or if I’m not seeing the main angle of post-rationality.
Would you buy the claim you can “Be more right and get less wrong”? (asked because I feel like I’m pointing to the same thing as the first bullet, but the first bullet is not phrased super well)
On the question of “does understanding your mind make you fail less often”, I notice that there are 3+ cases that immediately jump to mind that match, “I didn’t fail because I learned more about my mind”. Do you think a lot of those cases I didn’t fail for reasons other than understanding my mind, or do you expect that I’m racking up new-different failures as a result of understanding my mind more?
On post rationality, I just now read a bit more, and my reaction was, “Wait, wasn’t that a key piece of rationality in the first place?” I’m interested to see if I’ve secretly always been of a post-rationalist persuasion, or if I’m not seeing the main angle of post-rationality.