Almost everything in MoR is generated by the underlying facts of the story. Sometimes it is generated by humor (I can’t realistically claim that Ch. 5 would have comic timing that precise in a purely natural universe). Nothing is generated to deliberately fool the readers.
There are two exceptions to this claim I can readily recall—cases where red herrings made it into the text—and they occur in Ch. 21 where my phrasing of Dumbledore’s note to Harry was influenced to be overly compatible with the fan theory (which took me quite by surprise) that the notes were sent by Sirius Black. And in Ch. 77 when Mr. Hat and Cloak says “Time—”, which was generated to be compatible with the postulate of a Peggy Sue. I may go back and eliminate both of these at some point to make the text herring-free.
Methods of Rationality is a rationalist story. Your job is to outwit the universe, not the author. There are also cases where people have scored additional points by successful literary analysis, e.g. Checkov’s Gun principles. But the author is not your enemy here, and the facts aren’t lies.
Of course there are various characters running deceptions and masquerades, but that is quite a different matter.
Eliezer, could you please confirm / deny / decline to answer whether the fic is past its halfway point? Anubhav and I have a persistent memory that you did at one point state that it was, but I can’t find that statement so I’m wondering if I just crossed a couple of brain-wires.
For purely selfish reasons I hope it’s in the “first 80% done, second 80% being worked on” sense.
For purely selfish reasons I’m ambivalent. I like fanfiction as much as the next guy but kind of wouldn’t mind it if Eliezer spent his efforts trying to save the world. ;)
As long as HP:MoR remains unfinished, thousands of people who could be helping Eliezer build a Friendly AI are instead sitting by their web browsers, repeatedly pressing Ctrl+R.
Finishing HP:MoR is the necessary first step towards Singularity.
If you have any more zingers like that please use them before the story is over. I don’t think my heart will be able to handle the combined laughter.
On this forum we tend to want Eliezer to get back to work sometime before 2049 and so we cant have an endless saga of 7 fan-fictions in sequence culminating with a double movie ;)
Having a few very minor read herrings is a generally accepted part of literature as long as they aren’t extremely deceptive. In this context, both of the two seem minor enough to be fair.
I think the time travel hint was a bit too strong. I basically had two possibilities: H&C is a time traveller with all the world breaking implications, or Eliezer is meta-screwing with us. There’s no other high probability reason for H&C to say that right before he obliviated Hermione. If the latter, all other bets are off—I can’t seriously approach predicting a work like that. So I’m very glad Eliezer let us know.
Look all I know is that when Harry gets killed by Voldemort in canon nothing was as it seemed. I assume the next chapter will be nearly as suspenseful despite the trial resolution if Eliezer has anything to say about it.
Check out Chapter 24, which mentions “The Rule of Three”: Any plot which requires more than three different things to happen will never work in real life.
I’m counting atleast 8 different things that have to go right for your plot to work (steal Draco’s wand, steal Hermione’s wand, steal Jugson’s wand, convince Snape/Quirrel/Dumbledore to cooperate with your plan, convincingly tamper with the wands, sneak back and return Hermione’s wand, return Draco’s wand, return Jugson’s wand)
I don’t think Harry has even noticed that the rule of three exists yet. He hasn’t actually had any of his plans fail, so he has no experience with trying to make sure that they don’t. This is why I’m fairly skeptical of his whole “If your plan isn’t working, be more clever” attitude—sometimes, clever isn’t enough. Dumbledore’s inactivity seems a lot more sensible in a lot of cases, as would be expected from someone who’s learned the hard way.
That a plan might be possible that would allow him to achieve all his goals will not benefit him if he doesn’t think of it, and there is no guarantee that he is capable of thinking of it. Harry is a very bright boy, and the laws of magic allow a lot of cheating. But there are a bunch of reasonably intelligent opponents out there that would be opposing his efforts, and the Harry of this story is demonstrably not smart enough to calculate in advance all of their possible countermoves and preempt them.
His knowledge of the rule’s existence is irrelevant. I don’t think It was meant to be taken as a limiting boundary on all plans, just good advice that Lucius seemed to trust. And his solution isn’t to be merely clever, its to be creative. Harry’s point is that a world where evil goes unchecked is barely worth living in, and so there’s no real room for compromise. With power like magic that can literally rewrite the laws of physics, no situation is ever really unsolvable if you’re creative enough to directly manipulate the rules.
I understand the attitude, but Harry’s default plan seems to be to throw complexity at any given problem. That doesn’t end well, magic or no magic. And to steal a quote from canon, “the problem is that our enemies have magic too”.
You lose trust when the next story comes around. So far everything in HPMOR makes sense, I think it is reasonable to assume this will continue.
I watched a few tv shows where a well thought out plot was promised upfront. But later it turned out the creators just made things up as they went along. This usually breaks down at some point. When this happens repeatedly one is less likely to get into it again.
General announcement:
I do not lie to my readers.
Almost everything in MoR is generated by the underlying facts of the story. Sometimes it is generated by humor (I can’t realistically claim that Ch. 5 would have comic timing that precise in a purely natural universe). Nothing is generated to deliberately fool the readers.
There are two exceptions to this claim I can readily recall—cases where red herrings made it into the text—and they occur in Ch. 21 where my phrasing of Dumbledore’s note to Harry was influenced to be overly compatible with the fan theory (which took me quite by surprise) that the notes were sent by Sirius Black. And in Ch. 77 when Mr. Hat and Cloak says “Time—”, which was generated to be compatible with the postulate of a Peggy Sue. I may go back and eliminate both of these at some point to make the text herring-free.
Methods of Rationality is a rationalist story. Your job is to outwit the universe, not the author. There are also cases where people have scored additional points by successful literary analysis, e.g. Checkov’s Gun principles. But the author is not your enemy here, and the facts aren’t lies.
Of course there are various characters running deceptions and masquerades, but that is quite a different matter.
Re-posting it so you see it in the inbox:
Eliezer, could you please confirm / deny / decline to answer whether the fic is past its halfway point? Anubhav and I have a persistent memory that you did at one point state that it was, but I can’t find that statement so I’m wondering if I just crossed a couple of brain-wires.
It’s past the halfway point.
For purely selfish reasons I hope it’s in the “first 80% done, second 80% being worked on” sense.
For purely selfish reasons I’m ambivalent. I like fanfiction as much as the next guy but kind of wouldn’t mind it if Eliezer spent his efforts trying to save the world. ;)
As long as HP:MoR remains unfinished, thousands of people who could be helping Eliezer build a Friendly AI are instead sitting by their web browsers, repeatedly pressing Ctrl+R.
Finishing HP:MoR is the necessary first step towards Singularity.
The thing is, I know he can do the fanfic. I seriously doubt he can save the world.
I am approximately 95% sure the world will be lost (ie. we’ll all die). It would seem that I must agree with you.
If you have any more zingers like that please use them before the story is over. I don’t think my heart will be able to handle the combined laughter.
On this forum we tend to want Eliezer to get back to work sometime before 2049 and so we cant have an endless saga of 7 fan-fictions in sequence culminating with a double movie ;)
:(
Does that preclude sequels?
If he wanted to write sequels, the obvious way to do it would be to continue the fic.
Thank you. Also, sigh.
Is it likely that the rest might take longer than you think or is this made with essentially p = 1 - epsilon?
(pleaseyespleaseyespleaseyespleaseyespleaseyespleaseyespleaseyespleaseyespleaseyes)
Having a few very minor read herrings is a generally accepted part of literature as long as they aren’t extremely deceptive. In this context, both of the two seem minor enough to be fair.
I think the time travel hint was a bit too strong. I basically had two possibilities: H&C is a time traveller with all the world breaking implications, or Eliezer is meta-screwing with us. There’s no other high probability reason for H&C to say that right before he obliviated Hermione. If the latter, all other bets are off—I can’t seriously approach predicting a work like that. So I’m very glad Eliezer let us know.
Anything in particular that spurred this announcement?
Oh, and do you ever intend to read the later books?
I’m guessing the large amount of very low probability ideas for Harry’s solution in the next chapter.
I’ve said it many times, and I’ll say it again… this is a better solution than most of what’s been proposed in the discussion thread so far.
Look all I know is that when Harry gets killed by Voldemort in canon nothing was as it seemed. I assume the next chapter will be nearly as suspenseful despite the trial resolution if Eliezer has anything to say about it.
Hopefully i’m not deluding myself by believing that my solution outlined here is equal or superior to Harry’s solution whatever it is.
I outlined my solution here
http://lesswrong.com/lw/axe/harry_potter_and_the_methods_of_rationality/64am
Check out Chapter 24, which mentions “The Rule of Three”: Any plot which requires more than three different things to happen will never work in real life.
I’m counting atleast 8 different things that have to go right for your plot to work (steal Draco’s wand, steal Hermione’s wand, steal Jugson’s wand, convince Snape/Quirrel/Dumbledore to cooperate with your plan, convincingly tamper with the wands, sneak back and return Hermione’s wand, return Draco’s wand, return Jugson’s wand)
I could be wrong, but i believe its been noted that Harry has a tendency to bypass the rule of three.
I don’t think Harry has even noticed that the rule of three exists yet. He hasn’t actually had any of his plans fail, so he has no experience with trying to make sure that they don’t. This is why I’m fairly skeptical of his whole “If your plan isn’t working, be more clever” attitude—sometimes, clever isn’t enough. Dumbledore’s inactivity seems a lot more sensible in a lot of cases, as would be expected from someone who’s learned the hard way.
sometimes, there isn’t enough clever
This is also true.
would you care to elaborate?
That a plan might be possible that would allow him to achieve all his goals will not benefit him if he doesn’t think of it, and there is no guarantee that he is capable of thinking of it. Harry is a very bright boy, and the laws of magic allow a lot of cheating. But there are a bunch of reasonably intelligent opponents out there that would be opposing his efforts, and the Harry of this story is demonstrably not smart enough to calculate in advance all of their possible countermoves and preempt them.
His knowledge of the rule’s existence is irrelevant. I don’t think It was meant to be taken as a limiting boundary on all plans, just good advice that Lucius seemed to trust. And his solution isn’t to be merely clever, its to be creative. Harry’s point is that a world where evil goes unchecked is barely worth living in, and so there’s no real room for compromise. With power like magic that can literally rewrite the laws of physics, no situation is ever really unsolvable if you’re creative enough to directly manipulate the rules.
I understand the attitude, but Harry’s default plan seems to be to throw complexity at any given problem. That doesn’t end well, magic or no magic. And to steal a quote from canon, “the problem is that our enemies have magic too”.
Of course this is exactly what you would say if you DID lie to your readers.
No, because unlike certain TV shows you the reader will hold him accountable afterwards.
What do you mean by “hold him accountable.” It’s not like I’d stop donating to SIAI if he pulled a dirty trick on HPMOR readers.
You lose trust when the next story comes around. So far everything in HPMOR makes sense, I think it is reasonable to assume this will continue.
I watched a few tv shows where a well thought out plot was promised upfront. But later it turned out the creators just made things up as they went along. This usually breaks down at some point. When this happens repeatedly one is less likely to get into it again.
This is totally not a red herring. I will die with my Peggy Sue theory!
Okay, I don’t have a Peggy Sue theory, I have a time traveler theory, which is not explicitly denied above.