Working on multi-agent safety, hoping for the least-bad future. Other interests include s-risks (safe-pareto improvement) and theoretical computer science.
Thao Amelia Pham
I think these advice can also be applied to adults, especially young adults, when many of them are in a transition phase, whose past mistakes might not be too deep or problematic to recover from, or their life principles are still forming.
Personally, I like number #8, specifically:
“Start planning the life you want by thinking freely in your own head. You can beat others by starting earlier because you respect yourself and haven’t fallen for the “children aren’t people”-style propaganda.”
I feel like this is crucial for children who need to overcome adversaries, and even more for those who live in a hostile environment (toxic parents, schools or bully), by setting up priorities and long-term plans, or having agency in general. Though, I do wonder how much of agency a child can cultivate when power is not in their control in the first place.
I used to do translation, and I found vocabulary landscape quite trivial. I can understand both languages fluently but can’t find some equivalent characterization without losing a little bit of their semantic properties.
I feel the same struggle to tackle the Beetle problem. But I also think sometimes it’s fair to not try to force a perfect structural mapping between our internal language and theirs (which is circular if both are private). Likewise, if both beetles are genuinely incompatible, a thoughtful approximation is fine.