jchan
Austin LW/SSC/EA “Meetups Everywhere” Meetup: 9/30 6pm
Austin meetup notes Nov. 16, 2019: SSC discussion
Austin LW: Survey for far-traveling attendees Jan-Feb 2020
Reminder to complete this survey by the end of today.
Austin LW/SSC Far-comers Meetup: Feb. 8, 1:30pm
Reminder: The Austin Far-comers Meetup is tomorrow! Here’s the announcement on our mailing list: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/austin-less-wrong/fG6anRooLY0
Socially-distanced outdoor Petrov Day ceremonial manual
Austin Petrov Day: 6:30pm 9/26
What chat/meeting tool will be used for this event?
For an outdoor ceremony, you’ll want to avoid open flames because (a) the wind might blow them out, and (b) they’ll attract bugs that die in the flame. Instead you can use lanterns like these. (Peel off the branding sticker for a cleaner look.) The aesthetic ends up being more rugged/industrial than fancy/refined.
Practical considerations when using these lanterns:
The glass window and the upper surface of the lantern get extremely hot (enough to boil water, at least). Use an oven mitt to manipulate these parts.
For this reason, opening and closing the window is cumbersome. To light the lantern or transfer the flame, use a thin bamboo skewer that you can insert through the gap in the top of the lantern. When you’re done with the skewer, douse it in a jar of sand (not water, so you can reuse it).
This method also loses the “Candle #1 [being] the one lighting Candle #2, rather than vice-versa” distinction.
What does the skewer itself symbolize? Perhaps “the generations who died carrying #1 forward to #2 without ever seeing the result” (I dunno, I just made that up now; maybe it doesn’t need to symbolize anything.)
The flame can be extinguished by pushing down the top of the lantern (using an oven mitt) into its “collapsed” position, and then placing an inverted glass bowl on top of it for 3-5 seconds to choke off its oxygen supply. (Glass, rather than ceramic or metal, so that you can see when the flame has gone out.) Then un-collapse the lantern, again using the oven mitt. (See the video on the Amazon page for a demo of collapsing/uncollapsing.)
Or, you can blow sharply through the top of the lantern, but this is difficult if you’re wearing a mask.
If you’ve opened the window in order to pour wax from the candle, collapsing+uncollapsing is the easiest way to re-close the window.
I’d suggest that even a counterfactual donation of $100 to charity not occurring would feel more significant than the frontpage going down for a day.
This suggests an interesting idea: A charity drive for the week leading up to Petrov Day, on condition that the funds will be publicly wasted if anyone pushes the button (e.g. by sending bitcoin to a dead-end address, or donating to two opposing politicians’ campaigns).
I’m trying to wrap my head around this. Would the following be an accurate restatement of the argument?
Start with the Dr. Evil thought experiment, which shows that it’s possible to be coerced into doing something by an agent who has no physical access to you, other than communication.
We can extend this to the case where the agents are in two separate universes, if we suppose that (a) the communication can be replaced with an acausal negotation, with each agent deducing the existence and motives of the other; and that (b) the Earthlings (the ones coercing Dr. Evil) care about what goes on in Dr. Evil’s universe.
Argument for (a): With sufficient computing power, one can run simulations of another universe to figure out what agents live within that universe.
Argument for (b): For example, the Earthlings might want Dr. Evil to write embodied replicas of them in his own universe, thus increasing the measure of their own consciousness. This is not different in kind from you wanting to increase the probability of your own survival—in both cases, the goal is to increase the measure of worlds in which you live.
To promote their goal, when the Earthlings run their simulation of Dr. Evil, they will intervene in the simulation to punish/reward the simulated Dr. Evil depending on whether he does what they (the Earthlings) want.
For his own part, Dr. Evil, if he is using the Solomonoff prior to predict what happens next in his universe, must give some probability to the hypothesis that him being in such a simulation is in fact what explains all of his experiences up till that point (rather than him being a ground-level being). And if that hypothesis is true, then Dr. Evil will expect to be rewarded/punished based on whether he carries out the wishes of the Earthlings. So, he will modify his actions accordingly.
The probability of the simulation hypothesis may be non-negligible, because the Solomonoff prior considers only the complexity of the hypothesis and not that of the computation unfolding from it. In fact, the hypothesis “There is a universe with laws A+B+C, which produces Earthlings who run a simulation with laws X+Y+Z which produces Dr. Evil, but then intervene in the simulation as described in #3” may actually be simpler (and thus more probable) than “There is a universe with laws X+Y+Z which produces Dr. Evil, and those laws hold forever”.
Interest survey: Forming an MIT Mystery Hunt team (Jan. 15-18, 2021)
You may be right… I just need a rough headcount now, so if you want to take time to ponder the team name feel free to leave it blank now and then submit the form again later with your suggestion. (Edited the form to say so.)
Same here.
Texas Freeze Retrospective & Emergency Planning (Non-Texans Welcome!)
Texas Freeze Retrospective: meetup notes
Good to know that this was useful. I hadn’t thought of this meetup as “journalism,” but I suppose it was in a sense.
I think the “normal items that helped” category is especially important, because it’s costly in terms of money, time, and space to get prepper gear specifically for the whole long tail of possible disasters. If resources are limited, then it’s best to focus on buying things that are both useful in everyday life and also are the general kind-of-thing that’s useful in disaster scenarios, even if you can’t specifically anticipate how.
After thinking about this a bit, I’m not sure I agree. First, gathering everyone together puts all the eggs in one basket, which risks vulnerability to external disruption (e.g. the Nazis taking over Budapest). Second, a brain-drain of intellectuals into one central city deprives up-and-coming students (if they can’t afford to relocate) of teachers and mentors.