Hi!
I can’t seem to find a discussion of free will in the Quantum Physics sequence. I only know this: http://lesswrong.com/lw/of/dissolving_the_question/ (which demonstrates the method I was talking about).
Hi!
I can’t seem to find a discussion of free will in the Quantum Physics sequence. I only know this: http://lesswrong.com/lw/of/dissolving_the_question/ (which demonstrates the method I was talking about).
That was my first book on quantum mechanics and I remember reading this. Accordingly, the Stern-Gerlach experiment is usually the first thing I explain to someone who is interested in QM, not these things about cats. Apart from that, I found the book to be a bit too terse and I had to read other books to really master the notation and so on.
Me: But sir, can you explain why it gets the right answer?
So you wanted to know not how to derive the solution but how to derive the derivation?
I wouldn’t blame the teacher for not going there. There’s not enough time in class to do something like that. Bringing the students to understand the presented math is hard enough. Describing the process of how this math was found, would take too long. Because especially for harder problems there were probably dozens of mathematicians who studied the problem for centuries in order to find those derivations that your teacher presents to you.
Is the paper worth reading in that it offers solutions to this problem?
For what it’s worth I would love if LessWrong stuck to only decision theory, microeconomics, cognitive science, …
So, now that you know the reason why your post was removed, do you agree with the decision? It seems that you’re generally in favor of removing “stupid shit that gets upvoted”. (And your post wouldn’t even have been needed to be removed if you had hosted it at fanfiction.net and posted the link in an open thread.)
This is a great idea. I assume it’s 16 and a half because of print limitations? The first 21 chapters would make more sense.
Maybe it’s just me but I also feel silly writing a gmail-address on a CV. May I suggest MyKolab instead? It’s a professional (not too expensive) secure open-source e-mail service. Your address could be john.smith@swisscollab.ch.
(I think what we call Bio in German is called “organic” in English.)
How do you know it’s a German Army War College publication? Reasons for my doubt:
“Ellis Bata” doesn’t sound at all like a German name.
There was no War College in Germany in 1923. There were some remains of the Prussian Military Academy, but the Treaty of Versailles forbid work being done there. The academy wasn’t reactivated until 1935.
The academy in Prussia isn’t usually called “Army War College”. However, there are such academies in Japan, India and the US.
There is no logical argument against miracles. They could exist.
But there really is no reliable evidence for them. If there was, I would also think this is a supernatural universe. But as it stands I’m pretty sure this is a natural universe, without souls and without praying superpowers.
I mean have you heard about the beatification of Pope John Paul II? A nun with symptoms similar to Parkinson’s was healed after she prayed to John Paul. She even had a relapse but they went with it anyway.
Hm, substitute ‘miracle’ with ‘supernatural phenomenon’, then.
(“supernatural” still in this sense: A “supernatural” explanation appeals to ontologically basic mental things, mental entities that cannot be reduced to nonmental entities.)
So the question of whether lightning is a supernatural phenomenon or not is now about an empirical fact, not about my own ignorance. If the lightning is due to electrically charged regions in clouds, it’s natural. If it’s due to Thor’s rage and only a god can produce it, it’s supernatural.
And of course even if we think that lightning is a supernatural phenomenon it could still be Zeus and not Thor ;)
I’m also in the process of signing up. I already submitted the application for life insurance and filled out the membership application form by Alcor. The next step then is to meet up with a notary and transfer ownership of the insurance policy to Alcor. After that, Alcor has to check the documents and then I will hopefully be a full member.
I’ve also heard rumors that Alcor is considering opening a new facility in Switzerland. But even if that’s true it will take years and will probably not be cheaper than storage in the US. Though maybe easier to sign up for.
Concerning your second question, from my understanding adequate cooling is really easy, keeping the body in ice water should be enough. That’s also how they preserve donated organs, I think.
Probably not too interesting, but after studying physics at university I was pretty sure that the Many-Worlds interpretation of QM was crazy-talk (nobody even really mentioned it at uni). Of course I didn’t read Eliezer’s sequence on QM (although I read the others). I mean I had a degree in physics and Eliezer didn’t.
Then after seeing it over and over again on LW, I actually read this paper to see what it was all about. And I was enlightened. Well, I had a short crisis of faith first, then I was enlightened.
This all could have been avoided if I had read that paper earlier. The lesson is that I can’t even trust my fellow physicists :(
Hm, because I spend more time researching the issue than I had before? That should count for something, shouldn’t it?
Also, I can actually explain things like decoherence without hand-waving now. Looking back there were some gaps in my understanding that I just brushed over. You could say it was a failure of rationality to give as much credence to the Copenhagen interpretation in the first place.
but there exists a not-too-horrible more-mainstream party whose members have led me to understand that they’d be glad to have me if I was up for it
What did they see in you? If I may ask. You would disagree with your fellow party members on quite a lot of things, I’d imagine.
What language will proceedings generally be conducted in?
English, of course.
Is there actually good AI research somewhere in Europe? (Apart from what the FHI is doing.) Or: can the mission for FAI benefit at all from me doing my PhD at the AI lab of some university? (Which is my plan currently.)
nanobots released into the atmosphere
Wait, were you allowed to design them yourself? (The timestamp is in UTC iirc.)
However Mr. Eliezer’s basic rules say it doesn’t count.
Ah, I see. Didn’t know the rules were so strict. (Btw shouldn’t it be “Mr. Yudkowsky”?)
I’m Thomas, 23 years old, from Germany. I study physics but starting this semester I have shifted my focus on Machine Learning, mostly due to the influence of lesswrong.
Here are a few things about my philosophical and scientific journey if anyone’s interested.
I grew up with mildly religious parents, never being really religious myself. At about 12 I came into contact with the concept of atheism and immediately realized that’s what I was. Before, I hadn’t really thought about it but it was clear to me then. For a long time I felt a bit ashamed of not believing in god. I never mentioned it to anyone, probably fearing the reaction I would get. I would have called myself agnostic then. Only recently did I realize the extent to which religion can be dangerous and how deeply irrational it is. I consider it completely useless these days and I’m get actually confused whenever I find out that someone I thought of as rather intelligent turns out to believe in god.
Apart from that I had a minor existential crisis when I realized the implications of a deterministic world on free will. I was in the equivalent of high school when I read an article about the topic. Afterwards I felt strange for days, always thinking that nothing really mattered. But then I was actually able to (crudely) ‘dissolve the question’ and found peace with this issue.
After that, I spent very little time on philosophic topics for a long time. I thought I knew roughly what there was to know. I was wrong there.
Regarding my scientific education, I did always very well in math and consequently began studying physics (and as seems to be the case with some other physicists here I’m very skeptical towards the Many-World Interpretation). I always wanted to do something to advance our society and I thought physics was the right way. My original plan was to work on fusion reactors to solve the energy crisis this world is facing. Though, now, after spending some time on this site, I don’t think anymore that the energy problem is our most urgent problem.
Discovering lesswrong was not that easy for me. Until 19 I spent my time in the German-speaking part of the Internet. Then someday I stumbled upon reddit (was that a pun?). Incidentally that really improved my English. And somewhere on reddit I clicked on a link which led me to HPMoR (thank you who ever posted that). Then I found lesswrong and now I’m here.
I’m about halfway through the sequences and I hope I can contribute once I finish. Learning about biases has already helped me a lot. For the future I think I’m most interested in learning about reasoning and decision theory.