This post gave me hands down the most useful new mental handle I’ve picked up in the last three years.
Now, I should qualify that. My role involves a lot of community management, where Thresholding is applicable. It’s not a general rationality technique. I also think Thresholding is kind of a 201 or 301 level idea so to speak; it’s not the first thing I’d tell someone about. (Although, if I imagine actually teaching a semester long 101 Community Management or Conflict Management class, it might make the cut?) It’s pretty plausible to me that there were other ways my last three years could have gone where Thresholding wasn’t the problem that kept coming up, again and again, and so I’d look at this handle and go “huh, seems fine I guess but not important” or even “do people really do that?”
Given the way my three years actually went though, I think it makes accurate claims, and having the word is really useful in how I think and act. If I had the option to send a copy of Thresholding back in time to myself on January 1st, 2023, along with assurance from my future self that it was important no seriously. . . well, obviously not the best use of a time machine. But that would obviously have been advice worth at least ~$500 USD to me.
I’m not arguing it’s worth that much to everyone; again, I have some vocational applications. But even if you don’t handle community complaints, you live among other people, and some of those people are going to butt up against the thresholds of the rules, and I claim this will help you react more sensibly to that. I’ll further claim that, given the kinds of people who hang out around LessWrong, the Thresholding concept is unusually useful for the blind spots we have. We like to have explicit rules, and we pride ourselves on being principled and holding to exactly what we said. But man, that doesn’t stop incessant 2.9ing from being a problem. It’s also a concept that gains from more people having the word in their vocabulary.
I want this thing in the Best Of LessWrong collection, because I want more people to read it and recognize it when it happens. Mostly, I really want past!me to have read it, and the next best thing I have is telling folks like me about it.
This post gave me hands down the most useful new mental handle I’ve picked up in the last three years.
Now, I should qualify that. My role involves a lot of community management, where Thresholding is applicable. It’s not a general rationality technique. I also think Thresholding is kind of a 201 or 301 level idea so to speak; it’s not the first thing I’d tell someone about. (Although, if I imagine actually teaching a semester long 101 Community Management or Conflict Management class, it might make the cut?) It’s pretty plausible to me that there were other ways my last three years could have gone where Thresholding wasn’t the problem that kept coming up, again and again, and so I’d look at this handle and go “huh, seems fine I guess but not important” or even “do people really do that?”
Given the way my three years actually went though, I think it makes accurate claims, and having the word is really useful in how I think and act. If I had the option to send a copy of Thresholding back in time to myself on January 1st, 2023, along with assurance from my future self that it was important no seriously. . . well, obviously not the best use of a time machine. But that would obviously have been advice worth at least ~$500 USD to me.
I’m not arguing it’s worth that much to everyone; again, I have some vocational applications. But even if you don’t handle community complaints, you live among other people, and some of those people are going to butt up against the thresholds of the rules, and I claim this will help you react more sensibly to that. I’ll further claim that, given the kinds of people who hang out around LessWrong, the Thresholding concept is unusually useful for the blind spots we have. We like to have explicit rules, and we pride ourselves on being principled and holding to exactly what we said. But man, that doesn’t stop incessant 2.9ing from being a problem. It’s also a concept that gains from more people having the word in their vocabulary.
I want this thing in the Best Of LessWrong collection, because I want more people to read it and recognize it when it happens. Mostly, I really want past!me to have read it, and the next best thing I have is telling folks like me about it.