I share the sense that “flaky breakthroughs” are common, but also… I mean, it clearly is possible for people to learn and improve, right? Including by learning things about themselves which lastingly affect their behavior.
Personally, I’ve had many such updates which have had lasting effects—e.g., noticing when reading the Sequences that I’d been accidentally conflating “trying as hard as I can” with “appearing to others to be trying as hard as one might reasonably be expected to” in some cases, and trying thereafter to correct for that.
I do think it’s worth tracking the flaky breakthrough issue—which seems to me most common with breakthroughs primarily about emotional processing, or the experience of quite-new-feeling sorts of mental state, or something like that?—but it also seems worth tracking that people can in fact sometimes improve!
I share the sense that “flaky breakthroughs” are common, but also… I mean, it clearly is possible for people to learn and improve, right? Including by learning things about themselves which lastingly affect their behavior.
Personally, I’ve had many such updates which have had lasting effects—e.g., noticing when reading the Sequences that I’d been accidentally conflating “trying as hard as I can” with “appearing to others to be trying as hard as one might reasonably be expected to” in some cases, and trying thereafter to correct for that.
I do think it’s worth tracking the flaky breakthrough issue—which seems to me most common with breakthroughs primarily about emotional processing, or the experience of quite-new-feeling sorts of mental state, or something like that?—but it also seems worth tracking that people can in fact sometimes improve!