FWIW, here’s a data point for you: improved instrumental rationality / less akrasia is definitely the most tangible benefit I’ve gotten from reading LessWrong (though I feel I may be underestimating its effects on my epistemic rationality.)
I still procrastinate ridiculously, but I can picture the goals better, and the sequence of actions needed to get to them. (It’s doing them that gets tricky and prone to bogging down.)
LW has made me realize that there’s really important stuff I should be doing. So now it feels like akrasia when before it just felt like having nothing better to do.
Mine is mostly quotidian middle-aged suburban dad/stepdad stuff. But crikey, when it’s finally your turn to turn the crank that makes the world go round … it’s more work than it ever looked from the outside when you were a kid. I’m suddenly appreciating my parents a lot more. Good thing they’re still around to tell this.
FWIW, here’s a data point for you: improved instrumental rationality / less akrasia is definitely the most tangible benefit I’ve gotten from reading LessWrong (though I feel I may be underestimating its effects on my epistemic rationality.)
I still procrastinate ridiculously, but I can picture the goals better, and the sequence of actions needed to get to them. (It’s doing them that gets tricky and prone to bogging down.)
LW has made me realize that there’s really important stuff I should be doing. So now it feels like akrasia when before it just felt like having nothing better to do.
Mine is mostly quotidian middle-aged suburban dad/stepdad stuff. But crikey, when it’s finally your turn to turn the crank that makes the world go round … it’s more work than it ever looked from the outside when you were a kid. I’m suddenly appreciating my parents a lot more. Good thing they’re still around to tell this.