Time affluence is like a wonder drug. It eliminates stress. It increases happiness. It helps you engage the world and increases the chance that you’ll stumble into something interesting.
~ Cal Newport
Time affluence is like a wonder drug. It eliminates stress. It increases happiness. It helps you engage the world and increases the chance that you’ll stumble into something interesting.
~ Cal Newport
It took me FOREVER to find http://wiki.lesswrong.com/wiki/User:Cousin_it/Leveling from this page. Is there a way you can edit a link into the OP?
A certain amount of knowledge you can indeed with average faculties acquire so as to retain; nor need you regret the hours you spend on much that is forgotten, for the shadow of lost knowledge at least protects you from many illusions.
~ William Johnson Cory
People affected by Charles Bonnet syndrome, according to Wikipedia, are often sane and able to distinguish their hallucinations as hallucinations.
The DH tier seems to correspond to an upper-bound on the effectiveness of an argument of that tier.
In prose, the worst thing one can do with words is surrender to them. When you think of a concrete object, you think wordlessly, and then, if you want to describe the thing you have been visualizing you probably hunt about until you find the exact words that seem to fit it. When you think of something abstract you are more inclined to use words from the start, and unless you make a conscious effort to prevent it, the existing dialect will come rushing in and do the job for you, at the expense of blurring or even changing your meaning. Probably it is better to put off using words as long as possible and get one’s meaning as clear as one can through pictures and sensations.
~ Orwell
Effort.
I couldn’t find a better place for this, but today I learned this tip:
A book’s table of contents shows you its structure, but don’t forget to skim the index too, to get a second look at how its content is distributed.
What is your information diet like? (I mean other than when you engage in focused learning.) Do you regulate it, or do you just let it happen naturally?
By that I mean things like:
Do you have a reading schedule (e.g. X hours daily)?
Do you follow the news, or try to avoid information with a short shelf-life?
Do you significantly limit yourself with certain materials (e.g. fun stuff) to focus on higher priorities?
In the end, what is the makeup of the diet?
Etc.
Inspired by this question (Eliezer’s answer).
This is (morbidly) fascinating, please keep at it.
“FAI” here generally means “Friendly AGI”, which would make “FAI is harder than AGI” trivially true.
Perhaps you meant one of the following more interesting propositions:
“(The sub-problem of) AGI is harder than (the sub-problem of) Friendliness.”
“AGI is sufficiently hard relative to Friendliness, such that by the time AGI is solved, Friendliness is unlikely to have been solved.”
(Assuming even the sub-problem of Friendliness still has prerequisite part or all of AGI, the latter proposition implies “Friendliness isn’t so easy relative to AGI such that progress on Friendliness will lag insignificantly behind progress on AGI.”)
This feels like it should be a separate post to me.
Piotr Woźniak doesn’t seem to think lucid dreaming is worth pursuing.
Though speaking from my personal experience, it’s pretty fun, and for that you don’t have to be good at it; my control was pretty limited (flying is easy).
s/deny/defy
Every Sauron considers himself a Boromir.
Perhaps you are beginning to see how essential a part of reading it is to be perplexed and know it. Wonder is the beginning of wisdom in learning from books as well as from nature.
~ Mortimer J. Adler, How to Read a Book
I read this as concerning organization instead of capacity.
relevant: Your inner Google
Please talk to David McRaney (http://youarenotsosmart.com) to see if he’d be interested. His recent book, while far from comprehensive, has become the first place I look whenever I want to reference an accessible explanation of a particular cognitive bias.
~ garcia1000, Witchhunt game