If you suggest the country; maybe some more relevant advice can be given.
Try meetup; check your local library for local group events. Look around for community notice boards. The problem of community finding is a hard one; for both communities looking to attract people; and people looking to find their community; it is as yet only now being solved partially by things like meetup.
There are also charitable volunteering opportunities that I have found will tend to host interesting people to interact with. Consider looking around for these groups too.
Sporting groups (I have little experience with but) should be around even in a small town.
Pub trivia—less good, but also possible to meet groups of people at.
Meetup, library boards, etc. are useful, but I don’t need more groups, I need to know which of my many choices are likely to be useful. I’d like to do better than showing up at vaguely interesting meetups and seeing if they happen to be comprised of interesting people… Although this basically is what I have been doing. It is not a motivating task.
Volunteering tends to be very good, except that there is usually (in my area) an oversupply of religious people at the non-political charities, and an oversupply of mindkilled people at the political ones. Still, a good suggestion, and I should probably focus on finding new opportunities of this sort.
I think these are good general suggestions that fit well into this thread, but they are not quite what I was looking for. However, the fact that you could provide a fairly comprehensive list that more or less matches my own does confirm that I am not missing any easy targets, and that is very useful information.
I know of a project to start building a list of related groups; but even that will be limited to “explore and find out to confirm”. Without us explicitly knowing what “lesswrongers” are; other than people who hang around lesswrong.com; its quite hard to find others quite like our little in-group.
Do you know if the project intends to address that lack of definition in what attributes we see as being similar (in groups and individuals)? I could see how even just having a list of characteristics for a person/group might be an excellent place to start in evaluating choices for where to spend social/networking capital.
If you suggest the country; maybe some more relevant advice can be given.
Try meetup; check your local library for local group events. Look around for community notice boards. The problem of community finding is a hard one; for both communities looking to attract people; and people looking to find their community; it is as yet only now being solved partially by things like meetup.
There are also charitable volunteering opportunities that I have found will tend to host interesting people to interact with. Consider looking around for these groups too.
Sporting groups (I have little experience with but) should be around even in a small town.
Pub trivia—less good, but also possible to meet groups of people at.
Does this help?
I am in America.
Meetup, library boards, etc. are useful, but I don’t need more groups, I need to know which of my many choices are likely to be useful. I’d like to do better than showing up at vaguely interesting meetups and seeing if they happen to be comprised of interesting people… Although this basically is what I have been doing. It is not a motivating task.
Volunteering tends to be very good, except that there is usually (in my area) an oversupply of religious people at the non-political charities, and an oversupply of mindkilled people at the political ones. Still, a good suggestion, and I should probably focus on finding new opportunities of this sort.
I think these are good general suggestions that fit well into this thread, but they are not quite what I was looking for. However, the fact that you could provide a fairly comprehensive list that more or less matches my own does confirm that I am not missing any easy targets, and that is very useful information.
I know of a project to start building a list of related groups; but even that will be limited to “explore and find out to confirm”. Without us explicitly knowing what “lesswrongers” are; other than people who hang around lesswrong.com; its quite hard to find others quite like our little in-group.
Do you know if the project intends to address that lack of definition in what attributes we see as being similar (in groups and individuals)? I could see how even just having a list of characteristics for a person/group might be an excellent place to start in evaluating choices for where to spend social/networking capital.