There is a big difference between something being ‘the best group ever’ and being ‘an easier shortcut to rationality than digging through philosophical writings the old-fashioned way’, which is how I interpreted this post. There is a community component to LessWrong that obviously isn’t present in old books, but I don’t think that’s paramount for most people. For me, in the beginning, the Sequences were just a good way to read about interesting ideas in small, digestible chunks during my breaks at work. Now it’s a bit more than that; LessWrong gives me a chance to post my ideas where they’ll be criticized by people who don’t have any social-etiquette reason not to tear apart my arguments. But there’s a big difference between a group being the optimum, the best any group of its kind could be, which LessWrong obviously isn’t...and between being the best out of all the options in a limited area, which is more what this post is claiming (I think).
There is a big difference between something being ‘the best group ever’ and being ‘an easier shortcut to rationality than digging through philosophical writings the old-fashioned way’, which is how I interpreted this post. There is a community component to LessWrong that obviously isn’t present in old books
Reading books never was a good way to learn rationality. You need to learn it in practice, through discussion and debate, and you can do that in the context of mainstream philosophy because mainstream philosophy has its blogs and NGs too. (of course it doesn’t have a “community” with a leader, a set off canonical works and a number of not-very provable doctrines everyone is supposed to subscribe to—and it’s better for it).
There is a big difference between something being ‘the best group ever’ and being ‘an easier shortcut to rationality than digging through philosophical writings the old-fashioned way’, which is how I interpreted this post. There is a community component to LessWrong that obviously isn’t present in old books, but I don’t think that’s paramount for most people. For me, in the beginning, the Sequences were just a good way to read about interesting ideas in small, digestible chunks during my breaks at work. Now it’s a bit more than that; LessWrong gives me a chance to post my ideas where they’ll be criticized by people who don’t have any social-etiquette reason not to tear apart my arguments. But there’s a big difference between a group being the optimum, the best any group of its kind could be, which LessWrong obviously isn’t...and between being the best out of all the options in a limited area, which is more what this post is claiming (I think).
Reading books never was a good way to learn rationality. You need to learn it in practice, through discussion and debate, and you can do that in the context of mainstream philosophy because mainstream philosophy has its blogs and NGs too. (of course it doesn’t have a “community” with a leader, a set off canonical works and a number of not-very provable doctrines everyone is supposed to subscribe to—and it’s better for it).