A related request: there are a lot of goals common enough that better achieving these goals should be of interest to a large-ish portion of LW. I’m thinking here of: happiness; income; health; avoiding auto accidents; reading more effectively; building better relationships with friends, family, dating partners, or co-workers; operationalizing one’s goals to better track progress; more easily shedding old habits and gaining new ones.
Could we use our combined knowledge base, and our ability to actually value empirical data and consider counter-evidence and so on, to find and share some of the better known strategies for achieving these goals? (Strategies that have already been published or empirically validated, but that many of us probably haven’t heard?) We probably don’t want to have loads and loads of specific-goaled articles or links, because we don’t want to look like just any old random internet self-help site. But a medium amount of high-quality research, backed by statistics, with the LW-community’s help noticing the flaws or counter-arguments—this sounds useful to me. Really useful. Much of the advantage of rationality comes from, like, actually using that rationality to sort through what’s known and to find and implement existing best practices. And truth being singular, there’s no reason we should each have to repeat this research separately, at least for the goals many of us share.
Though I guess Eliezer’s caution is worth attention.
A related request: there are a lot of goals common enough that better achieving these goals should be of interest to a large-ish portion of LW. I’m thinking here of: happiness; income; health; avoiding auto accidents; reading more effectively; building better relationships with friends, family, dating partners, or co-workers; operationalizing one’s goals to better track progress; more easily shedding old habits and gaining new ones.
I think this would be very helpful (esp. income, as for most people it would seem to be the whole of success at utilitarianism).
A related request: there are a lot of goals common enough that better achieving these goals should be of interest to a large-ish portion of LW. I’m thinking here of: happiness; income; health; avoiding auto accidents; reading more effectively; building better relationships with friends, family, dating partners, or co-workers; operationalizing one’s goals to better track progress; more easily shedding old habits and gaining new ones.
Could we use our combined knowledge base, and our ability to actually value empirical data and consider counter-evidence and so on, to find and share some of the better known strategies for achieving these goals? (Strategies that have already been published or empirically validated, but that many of us probably haven’t heard?) We probably don’t want to have loads and loads of specific-goaled articles or links, because we don’t want to look like just any old random internet self-help site. But a medium amount of high-quality research, backed by statistics, with the LW-community’s help noticing the flaws or counter-arguments—this sounds useful to me. Really useful. Much of the advantage of rationality comes from, like, actually using that rationality to sort through what’s known and to find and implement existing best practices. And truth being singular, there’s no reason we should each have to repeat this research separately, at least for the goals many of us share.
Though I guess Eliezer’s caution is worth attention.
I think this would be very helpful (esp. income, as for most people it would seem to be the whole of success at utilitarianism).