I considered not posting this comment, because it seems like you guys (and Raemon especially) have put a lot of effort into this, but I do want to sort out my response to this whole thing. Please don’t take this as judgment; I’d really like to hear input about whether my reaction is wholly unwarranted, and why or why not.
When I read about this event (and I had a similar reaction to reading about last year’s one, too), I get a strong sense of “ick”; a deep and profound feeling of being creeped out. I mean, you’re designing and instituting a ritual. Intentionally. Why on earth would you do something like that?
From Yvain’s review:
The idea was that since most rationalists and Less Wrongers are atheists for whom the traditional categories of Christmas and Hanukkah don’t apply (and, let’s face it, way too white for Kwanzaa), we would make our own ritual,
Whyyyyyyyy????
Why not just get together and hang out and… I don’t know. Play party games? Talk? Watch movies? Why a ritual?
one centered around rationalist ideals, and use it as a Winter Season Positive Affect Schelling Point the same way all the religions do theirs.
Ok, I thought I knew what a Schelling Point is, but this usage puzzles me a bit. If I’m interpreting it right, though, my question is… why do this?
Is it because some (most?) of the people involved come from religious backgrounds, and miss the holiday rituals that took place in their families?
By the way, what happens if people present don’t want to participate in the songs? Is there social pressure? I know I’d feel pretty darn uncomfortable if I was at a gathering and everyone started a collective sing-along.
Separately and unrelatedly, I really feel rather unsettled by the fact that you’re using Eliezer’s writings as a kind of… I don’t know, mass? Sermon? It seems to me like that’s taking entirely the wrong message away from all of it… to actually enshrine it as a sacred tradition or ritual of some sort.
I lurk on the OB/LW NYC mailing list, and you guys seem like pretty interesting people (I’ve been to one or two of the “public” meetups that were like… 1-2 years ago, now?); once in a while I think that maybe I should try and come to some of your meetups on occasion.
Stuff like this pushes me away. That’s probably unfortunate, so if someone from the group (or whoever, really) could explain this whole ritual business to me, I would appreciate it.
Why not just get together and hang out and… I don’t know. Play party games? Talk? Watch movies? Why a ritual?
Because humans experience an emotion of “sacredness” (in scare quotes because although the feeling is commonly associated with religion, it doesn’t need to be), which many people think is fantastic. This blogger puts it pretty well:
Haidt, an atheist Jew, is not suggesting a particular path to that which is Divine. He is certainly not concluding, for instance, that religion is the only path to that which is divine. Rather, he is emphasizing that we all have a sense of what is sacred to us, what is “divine,” and we justify it in various ways. He cites Mircea Eliade’s The Sacred and the Profane, agreeing with Eliade that “sacredness is so irrepressible that it intrudes repeatedly into the modern profane world in the form of “crypto-religious” behavior.” He specifically cites Eliade’s conclusion that even a person who is committed to a “profane existence” has
privileged places, qualitatively different from all others–a man’s birthplace, or the scenes of his first love, or certain places in the first foreign city he visited in his youth. Even for the most frankly nonreligious man, all these places still retain an exceptional, a unique quality; they are the “holy places” of his private universe, as if it were in such spots that he had received the revelation of a reality other than that in which he participates through his ordinary daily life.
(Page 193). For Haidt, this passage perfectly characterized his own sense of “feeble spirituality,” one which was limited to “places, books, people and events that have given me moments of uplift and enlightenment. Even atheists have intimations of sacredness, particularly when in love or in nature. We just don’t infer that God caused those feelings.”
Haidt’s writing caused me to consciously realize that I too hold various things to be sacred, even though I hadn’t before consciously labeled them with the word “sacred.” Here are some of the things I would put in this category:
Holding the hand of either of my daughters while we walk.
Having an honest and intense conversation in a quiet place.
Beating back the temptation of the confirmation bias through self-critical thinking, thus recognizing that one was previously wrong about something important.
Being part of a sustained group endeavor to lessen real world human suffering.
Being in the presence of another person who is cheerfully working hard for the benefit of others.
Viewing certain photographs representing transitions in my life.
Reveling in the Milky Way stretching all the way across the sky.
Catching up with a good friend after many years apart.
Noticing the kind eyes of a good friend while we visit.
Rediscovering the intense beauty of something I had been taking for granted.
Creating high-quality art or music, or enjoying high-quality art created by others.
Resisting the temptation to edify one’s self above others.
Being consciously aware of places that were important to me, such as the house where grew up, or the location of my high school (even though it is now a shopping center).
Experiencing the natural healing powers of one’s own body after an illness or injury.
Holding my wife at the end of a day or the beginning of a new day.
I agree with Haidt that these sorts of experiences have a certain character to them that seems to “transcend” ordinary daily activities. It seems equally true that damaging any of these things, ridiculing them or preventing them would trigger a deep mourning, and even a sense of disgust, and that this emotion would go well beyond any sense of pragmatic loss.
Perhaps, then, the existence of the sense of the Sacred is something on which believers and nonbelievers can agree. Really, we should add experience of the sacred to that long list of things that believers and non-believers have in common. Perhaps we can learn to humbly allow each other to celebrate these moments in his or her own way. If only we could allow each other the freedom to experience such things without casting arrogant judgment, without acting like know-it-all experts of the ineffable. Without succumbing to the temptation to use others’ experiences of such elevated emotional experiences as the springboard to start arguments.
Your reaction seems to be “this ritual stuff smacks of religion, and I don’t want to get involved with any of that!”. My response would be, roughly, “Humans have this awesome in-built feeling that makes things feel beautiful and great and fantastic and helps us give moments of respite in the middle of all or other worries, and religion has made this land-grab and laid unfair claim on the whole experience. Well, why the hell should we put up with that? Why should the whole thing be labelled ‘religious’, when it’s a basic emotion of human beings that doesn’t require being religious in the first place? Religion has done a lot of harm already, and if we begin cutting off valuable and important parts of ourselves simply because we feel those parts are associated with an enemy tribe, we’re voluntarily letting religion do more damage. I say we stop that shit right here.”
Your reaction seems to be “this ritual stuff smacks of religion, and I don’t want to get involved with any of that!”.
That’s not my response at all. I’m afraid you seem to be reading things into my response that are simply not there. There seems to be some sort of misunderstanding here that’s causing you to set up (what is from my perspective) a straw man about objections to religion and then extensively knocking it down with arguments that have little bearing on what I’ve said.
I don’t know why that is; perhaps I’ve been unclear; perhaps you are rounding to the nearest common objection? In any case, my objection has nothing directly to do with these rituals “smacking of religion”. I do think, as I’ve mentioned in a previous post, that the desire for such rituals is stronger in people who come from a religious background and are used to such things from their youth. (I also have to wonder — and this is a bit of an aside — why we should use rituals that draw so directly from religion in form: someone (juliawise?) mentioned saying grace at the meal, and that strikes me as incredibly unlikely to be something an entirely non-religious person would come up with if given the task of “think of some cool and effective rituals”.)
I do experience the emotion of sacredness. What I find extremely offputting and downright scary is the collectivization of that emotion. I don’t like spectator sports, protests, and other mass actions for the same reason (substitute pride, righteous anger, or whatever other appropriate emotion for sacredness in those examples). I have absolutely no desire to subordinate my feelings of exaltation and transcendence to a group. While I can’t say that triggering sacredness in a collective “secular” context is as bad as triggering it in a collective religious context, the fundamental problem is the same.
someone (juliawise?) mentioned saying grace at the meal, and that strikes me as incredibly unlikely to be something an entirely non-religious person would come up with if given the task of “think of some cool and effective rituals”
I think grace is underrated. As I said, I’m used to silent grace about three breaths long. It gives you fifteen seconds to relax your body, look around at who is gathered, and think “We are about to sit down and eat together. It’s nice to be here.”
As has been extensively pointed out in Eliezer’s writings and elsewhere on this site, you can come up with a reasonable-sounding justification for just about anything; if you start with your bottom line filled in, the rest of the page is easy to write.
Here’s a question. You’re saying that the value of grace at a meal is that it gives you, personally, some time to whatever (relax, look around, think, etc.). You would therefore be perfectly ok with being the only one at the table participating in this silent grace ritual, or being one of only some participants, while the others merrily dug in and proceeded with conversation — yes?
I sometimes do it alone if no one else is doing it, yes. Or two of us may do it if the others in the family don’t want to. But I enjoy it more if we all do it at once. This seems to set off some kind of alarm bell with you, and I’m not sure there’s a good reason it should or shouldn’t set off alarms other than some kind of aesthetic preference.
This seems to set off some kind of alarm bell with you
Indeed it does. Because it’s a short step from there to social pressure on people who wouldn’t otherwise have any interest or motivation whatsoever in participating.
And here’s the thing: it’s a different sort of social pressure than the sort experienced by e.g. someone who doesn’t feel like playing a board game that everyone else at the party is playing, or someone who isn’t hungry when everyone else is deciding whether to go to a restaurant for dinner. It’s not “everyone else is doing it; join in, it’ll be fun!”; it’s not “your abstention is making the situation less convenient for everyone else”; it’s “you’re offending the group by not participating”.
I’m not saying that you apply such social pressure on people, only explaining the reason for the alarm bells.
I like the feeling of doing things together. We can probably both think of evolutionary and neurological reasons why humans enjoy group activities. Ultimately, like I said, I think it boils down to an aesthetic preference that isn’t right or wrong.
I see your point about not letting this become a social pressure on people who don’t want to participate, and I’ll try to be mindful of this.
Yes, at this point I’d have to agree that it’s an aesthetic preference, neither right nor wrong, though I think it’s a preference with potential dangerous consequences, on which point it seems we’ve also come to some sort of agreement. That said, I appreciate that you’ve given my view consideration; some of my comments may have come off as less tactful than I intended, and you and other commenters have been quite patient.
By the way, thank you for the link; as it happens, reading the post and some of the comments has cemented my views on rituals and group bonding. I think this comment by JenniferRM (and her longer comment just downthread) is very insightful and quite appropriate to the current discussion.
ETA: Another data point for the “some people don’t like this sort of thing” claim.
My family has a similar tradition of silence before meals. It provides a moment to relax and change mindset to meal time. It says that this is a time to spend together, and not just another thing to be rushed through. It’s nice if everyone participates, because that provides a pause in conversation and makes it easier to stop and relax.
I think before meals is not that unlikely a time working from a blank slate. There is something powerful about sharing food. It’s a bonding ritual. Using that same time to reflect and relax makes the moment of silence, grace, etc. more effective.
Agreed. As I mentioned at the last meetup, saying grace is a form of negative visualization, which allows you to gain more satisfaction from your meal than you otherwise would. It works by using framing-effects to change your “default” mindset from having the meal to not having it.
Separately and unrelatedly, I really feel rather unsettled by the fact that you’re using Eliezer’s writings as a kind of… I don’t know, mass? Sermon? It seems to me like that’s taking entirely the wrong message away from all of it… to actually enshrine it as a sacred tradition or ritual of some sort.
as being motivated by a dislike of religious ritual, as it explicitly mentioned “mass” and “sermon” as examples of things to avoid. But upon a re-reading, I can see that you were rather worried about Eliezer’s writings being promoted to a status where they wouldn’t be questioned.
Also, I might have somewhat used your comment as an excuse to make a general point I’d been wanting to make for a while. Sorry about that. But also thank you, for giving me an excuse to make it. ;)
All of that said, I can understand having a dislike of the collectivization of sacredness, I just don’t share it myself.
Heh, no worries. Rereading that quoted bit of mine, I can see the source of the confusion. Your revised interpretation of my intent is correct.
Incidentally, the term “sermon” as applied in this context is from Yvain’s linked review.
Also, I might have somewhat used your comment as an excuse to make a general point I’d been wanting to make for a while. Sorry about that. But also thank you, for giving me an excuse to make it. ;)
In Japan, it is customary to say “itadakimasu” before eating, which is a sort of grace, and which is not seen as religious at all.
My dad has a gracelike ritual which he has carried on despite having been an atheist for decades (people lean over to kiss those sitting next to them) which my mom and many others have been very happy with.
In Japan, it is customary to say “itadakimasu” before eating, which is a sort of grace, and which is not seen as religious at all.
Many languages have equivalents of bon appétit. That’s like “cheers!” but for food instead of drinks. (In English there’s “enjoy your meal” but IME IIRC it’s very uncommon among native speakers in non-formal situations.)
Hmm. Well, first of all, I don’t guarantee that what I’m thinking of is the same (or analogous) emotion as what everyone else here is talking about; after all, if I don’t experience it in the same way, or in the same condition, who’s to say it’s even the same thing at all? But to pursue that line of reasoning is to get into the problem of other minds, and that’s probably an unnecessary tangent. (Although this may be empirically investigated; perhaps check to see whether the same parts of my brain and e.g. Raemon’s brain trigger in situations we would both describe as being consistent with emotional responses to sacredness, etc.)
Anyway, to your question: the most recent thing I can think of was watching Cosmos (as in the Carl Sagan series, and yes, I really hadn’t ever seen it before this year). Some parts of Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality trigger a similar feeling.
As an aside, I think sacredness is not the most apt term for this emotion; I think a better word might be exaltation.
I think of sacredness and exaltation as overlapping circles in a ven diagram. The parts of HP:MoR that I assume you’re talking to are both exalting and sacred to me. They’re specifically about humanity rising up and conquering a powerful challenge.
Wandering out into the night and looking at the stars gives me a sense of sacredness that is not inherently about exaltation—My connotation of exaltation is a sort of power, and the stars make me feel simultaneously big and small, but in such a way that power is almost irrelevant. I’m just experiencing being this small but meaningful part of the universe. I’m not sure if my use of the words here is common though.
Mmm… I sort of see what you mean. What I meant was that “sacredness” does not feel grammatically appropriate to be naming an emotion. Also, “sacredness” in the moral-philosophy sense in which I’ve seen it used refers to an infinite value, something which may not be traded off. I wouldn’t apply the term to stars (don’t get me wrong, contemplating the cosmos does trigger in me that-emotion-to-which-I-think-we’re-both-referring, I just don’t think they have infinite value; to the extent that I think anything could sensibly be construed to have infinite value, stars just don’t qualify).
As someone who enjoyed the Solstice a great deal, I’d like to throw a data point out there:
my family doesn’t have a religious or spiritual background of any kind, so I didn’t experience rituals as a child. I still enjoy spiritual / religious singing in groups, both in languages I understand and don’t, and usually don’t take the lyrics seriously. I find most of the value in the feeling of bonding / appreciation.
The event felt more playful than solemn, and certainly not authoritative. People seemed to be taking it with a grain of salt, it was like a social experiment of sorts. I felt perfectly comfortable with not singing along for some of the time, and this didn’t feel alienating or disengaging.
That said, I think I do understand your revulsion towards rituals, and your view about collectivization of emotional experience is an interesting point that hasn’t occurred to me.
I’ve never been to any LW meetup, but I wouldn’t surprise me if such reports sound creepier than the actual rituals were due to their, er, literary genre.
Thank you for writing this. My reaction has been pretty much the same. I’m guessing that people are just wired differently, a lot of people seem to be feeling like they’d like to participate in something like this.
Some people are interested, some people aren’t. There have been comments on every post related to the Solstice celebrations by someone creeped out by the idea, but generally people creeped out by the idea don’t comment (or only comment once) and people enthused by the idea do comment (and often repeatedly).
Well, yeah. The whole point of rituals like this in religion is to switch off thinking and get people going with the flow. The epistemic danger should be pretty obvious. Ritual = irrational.
I’d like to say that I have similar feeling concerning this.
Even if I wouldn’t probably feel bad participating in any ritual, the described things (candles, people crying, reciting texts by Yudkowsky) are completely incompatible with my taste. Perhaps it is the apparent absolute lack of humor and the exalted seriousness which is most off-putting for me.
There really wasn’t a lack of humor, it just doesn’t translate very well into a blog post. In person, my natural demeanor is high energy and silly, most of the time. When writing, for some reason it comes much easier to write seriously. Writing comedically is something I need to work on.
It may be that this would feel less offputting to some people if I had done emphasized other parts of the ceremony more. However, part of the biggest selling point of the night is that we (the NY group, and most other LW folk I’ve met), are generally pretty fun, often funny in self-depreciating ways. So having a night that starts with that, yes, but which also builds to something powerful and profound is a novel, interesting experience. People came from across state lines to experience something that isn’t normally a part of their lives at all.
Yvain touched on this elsewhere—we (the broader American western culture, in general) are really good at being ironic and silly and fun. We’re not really good at taking serious, important things seriously. I set this in motion because I thought it was something I didn’t get nearly enough of, that I wanted and that other people seemed to want too.
Since you mention that you had the same reaction last year, I assume that you’ve read the discussion that took place then that covers this issue, yes?
I know I’d feel pretty darn uncomfortable if I was at a gathering and everyone started a collective sing-along.
You are talking as if a required ritual was sprung on unsuspecting meetup participants. This is obviously not true. Both Raemon’s and my rituals were advertised specifically as such. If you don’t want to participate in a ritual don’t go to one. There are plenty of non-ritual meetups that go on year round. I know Raemon even made the solstice event a two-day event. One day was ritual, and the other was just a regular get-together. So if you wanted to meet everyone without taking part in the ritual you could just go to the second day. In Columbus we didn’t have to do that, because it wasn’t open invite, and everyone in our group wanted to do the ritual (plus we have regular get-togethers all the time anyways).
Whyyyyyyyy????
Why not just get together and hang out and… I don’t know. Play party games? Talk? Watch movies? Why a ritual?
For us (Columbus), our goal was to increase group bonding and cohesion. We find the people in our group to be worthwhile individuals, and want to increase positive affect between group members. Rituals and traditions are a good way to strengthen group ties, and when we were building our ritual we were specifically looking for ways to hack ourselves into feeling closer to the people we want to feel closer to. (i.e. doing things in unison, affirmations, etc)
I really feel rather unsettled by the fact that you’re using Eliezer’s writings as a kind of… I don’t know, mass? Sermon?
Again, this is a good route towards consensual group/self-hacking. It is one thing to read something and rationally think “yes, this is a good idea/this is true.” It is quite another thing to actually change your daily thoughts and actions to fall into line with what you rationally think is true (think of the difficulties people have battling akrasia, for example). In order to do this, you need to get those beneficial thoughts and ideas deep inside your intuition/system 1 reasoning. Ritual is one way to hack yourself to do this.
The things that we recited were the Litany of Gendlin and the Litany of Tarski. The ideas they represent (I value the truth, and want to believe only what is true. What is true is already so, and my belief-state doesn’t change that, etc) are ideas that I very much WANT to be put as deep into my psyche as I can get them.
If you want to change your daily thoughts and actions, you need to change your elephant. Not just your rider.
Rituals and traditions are powerful things to our primitive monkey brains. We are purposefully, and with the full knowledge and consent of every participant, using it to engage in group self-hacking.
Since you mention that you had the same reaction last year, I assume that you’ve read the discussion that took place then that covers this issue, yes?
Uh… maybe? I don’t remember, honestly. Link?
You are talking as if a required ritual was sprung on unsuspecting meetup participants. This is obviously not true. Both Raemon’s and my rituals were advertised specifically as such. If you don’t want to participate in a ritual don’t go to one.
Well, yes, obviously. I didn’t mean to imply that anything was sprung on anyone, just saying that yes, I wouldn’t go to such a thing. The issue for me is that this (for any value of “this”; the NYC LW group, for instance) is a group that does this sort of thing.
Again, this is a good route towards consensual group/self-hacking.
How can something be consensual if you enshrine it as a ritual? Once it’s ritualized, it stops being consensual, except insofar as you can choose whether to go along with it or leave the group. Not participating is inherently alienating.
The ideas they [the litanies of Tarski and Gendlin] represent … are ideas that I very much WANT to be put as deep into my psyche as I can get them.
Really? I rather think I want these things as deep in my psyche as is warranted by how true/useful I judge them to be, and absolutely no deeper than that.
In any case, it… doesn’t seem like this is the only purpose of these rituals — and quite unlikely that it’s the only effect.
we were specifically looking for ways to hack ourselves into feeling closer to the people we want to feel closer to.
I… don’t understand this sentiment at all. That is, I don’t understand what you mean by this (and consequently don’t understand why it’s something you’d want). Clarification would be much appreciated.
I know Raemon even made the solstice event a two-day event. One day was ritual, and the other was just a regular get-together. So if you wanted to meet everyone without taking part in the ritual you could just go to the second day.
From a comment on Yvain’s review:
One thing I wish I had known was that if you skip the ritual and just come to the “general meetup” the next day—as seemed like a perfectly good option on paper—not only do you miss out on the fun described in the post, but you look and feel totally lame. Well, okay, maybe that’s a slight exaggeration, since you still do get to meet (and re-meet) great LW (and LWish[*]) people; but those people will have just spent the previous day in, you know, a bonding ritual which, strangely enough, has this weird effect of bonding them together more closely to each other than to you who weren’t there. (Also, they will have gotten most of their general meetup-socializing done the previous day, before the ritual, so as not to be strangers to each other during the latter.)
It makes sense that some people might be turned off by ritual. I hope those people went to one of the several other New York Less Wrong megameetups, or to the designated ritual-free day Sunday, or even on Saturday for the two hours before the ritual started. If they come to an event that has “RITUAL” in big letters all over it on the day when the ritual is scheduled to occur then I don’t think you can fairly accuse it of being inflicted on them without such a sweeping redefinition of “consent” that it becomes impossible to ever do anything that doesn’t exactly conform to social norms.
A lot of the above criticisms act like the ritual ruined a perfectly good meetup, but I think without the ritual this meetup would not have occurred. I went there all the way from Maryland because I wanted to see the ritual after reading about it last year. I dragged a friend who was also there because she loved rituals. Many people there weren’t even in the LW community at all and came only because they wanted to see what the ritual was about. Quite a few people organized cross-continental flights from California because they wanted to participate in the ritual. If Raemon had said “Okay everyone, let’s have yet another meetup and talk about Bayes for a few hours”, there simply wouldn’t have been a meetup of this size.
So on utilitarian grounds, I think it is a pure loss to take dozens of people for whom this is one of the highlights of their year, and hold them hostage to the purely theoretical possibility that there might be someone who wants to go to a megameetup, refuses to go to any of the many non-ritual megameetups, mysteriously hates ritual despite her insistence on only going to the megameetup with “ritual” in the name, refuses to go on the designated non-ritual day, refuses to leave or even go upstairs when the ritual starts, and is such a utility monster that her needs outweigh those of everyone else.
And knowing what the ritual was like, it’s also hard for me to take the idea of exclusion seriously. I understand why people who came on the second day might feel like they missed something, but the same would be true if we’d all gone out to watch a movie Saturday night and they hadn’t seen it. But other than that? We sung silly songs from Portal and Firefly together for a while. Now we are closer far than brothers, and shall never again feel respect or human feeling for anyone outside our sacred circle.
No, seriously, I do understand the idea of the Dark Arts (I coined our community’s use of the term). But I think there’s a difference between brainwashing and inspiration. Brainwashing changes your beliefs, inspiration helps you live up to them. I don’t know if it’s possible to do inspiration without even the slightest chance of brainwashing, but I’d rather not ban all inspirational activities until we prove it.
If it helps, think of this less as people in robes chanting in a dead language and more as our version of a school graduation (which, uh, also involves people in robes chanting in a dead language, but you get the picture). At a school graduation they sing songs, somebody talks about the values of the school and the importance of learning, and then everyone goes forth psyched about their future and has fond memories later. The same is true of weddings, funerals, the Fourth of July, birthday parties, summer camps. To excise all of those things from our lives because we can’t prove they don’t cause some residual brainwashing would make the world less than it was.
As a secular Jew, I grew up treating Passover and even my Bar Mitzvah in about the same way I treated birthday parties and summer camps; a fun time to get together and sing and appreciate family and friends, a marking of life transitions and the passing of time. But it grew harder and harder for me to appreciate them when I realized that I didn’t really approve of celebrating the deaths of the Egyptian first-born, or that chanting the Torah and drawing moral lessons from it felt kind of like BSing in front of everyone. Even school graduations got to feel a little like “go forth and be a cog in a slightly more complex machine than the one you are currently a cog in.”
In New York, I was able to have a good time and sing and meet people and mark the passings of the seasons, and for one of the first times affirm values that I really believed in. When Raemon got up there and started talking about how each year the sun went dark, and each year people died during the winter, but each year the sun came back—and when he went onto how each year we humans added a little bit more of our own light, and one day we would conquer the darkness entirely and no one would have to die anymore—well, it was a beautiful experience. Not life altering, not rationality-maximizing, but beautiful. And to be terribly clinical, the person I was before the ritual would have approved of everything that went on, which is not a test simple brainwashing can pass.
I agree that experiencing the sacred can be done individually. So can sex. It’s not the same, though, in either case. Ever since the days of lighting fires and chanting about the gods, we’ve been doing our sacredness in groups. Even the ancients who took “sacred” totally literally knew you needed a minyan. It just works better. It’s something I feel a need for. And I’d only fulfill that need in a group I completely trust, because of the brainwashing and awkwardness concerns you mentioned. And this was it. I don’t think I took it seriously on an intellectual level, and I didn’t have the same feelings as the people above who said it helped cement concepts into their mind. But I felt catharsis afterwards. I smiled a lot and sang a lot and it was good.
A commenter downstream said that his worry here “has to do with seriousness and how much I value banter and puncturing self-importance”. I think we already have too much self-importance puncturing; too much irony. I think on the scales of “funny things should be taken lightly, solemn things should be taken with solemnity”, we are too good at the former and too worried about social stigma to do the latter. In fact, of everything I’m impressed with Raemon for, the thing that impressed me most was his ability to take himself seriously, to resist the overpowering urge to say “Ha ha guys, I don’t really think I’m cool enough to have strong feelings and officiate a celebration of the seasons, it’s all just ironic, I’m not silly or something.”
Except when it was silly. Raemon had the rare skill to design a night for us that was both funny and solemn at once, in exactly the right places, and to the exact degree that each idea required. I appreciate the humor but I think it was the solemnity that was beautiful.
I don’t think I’m worrying about brainwashing concerns or failing the social proof respectability checks.
I’m seeing a community cementing thing that I see no intrinsic fun in and a lot of other people seem to be seeing intrinsic fun in, which is tripping my “pretend to be like the normals and make the extra effort to participate in the unfun thing that is actually fun for them because they are not like you and then they might be less likely to kill you” instinct.
What if next year’s ritual includes chanting thrice unto the heavens a solemn vow not to kill the people who don’t go to next year’s ritual?
...nah, I don’t think anyone wants to to kill or even shun people who don’t go to the ritual. Of the top ten LW contributors on the table on the right, only two of them (me and Alicorn) attended, and for me it was a last-second sort of thing. Eliezer didn’t go. It would be kind of hard to shun Eliezer and 80% of the top contributors, even if people wanted to. Only a tiny proportion of the community went to the ritual and those who chose not to were in good company.
More philosophically, wouldn’t the same complaint apply to having real-life meetups at all (wouldn’t it exclude people who prefer to just talk via the Internet?) or writing HPMoR (now non-readers feel left out of a lot of discussions and don’t get in-jokes, so they might feel pressure to read it) or CFAR minicamps (people who don’t get selected to go might feel like they’re less a part of the community). And I know one commenter above managed to find some trivial differences between board game night and ritual night, but the fundamental problem of “What if I don’t enjoy this but I feel like I have to go anyway?” remains sound.
I think the road of not doing fun things that most people want because someone who doesn’t want to do it might feel left out leads to sitting quietly in a dark room. And the road of never doing community cementing things because people might be outside them leads to never trying to cement the community. And I think that the ritual, in this case, is being held to a much higher standard than any other activity of this sort just because it sounds kind of weird.
The particular problem with the ritual is that unlike the other things, it seems to exist only for the purpose of community-building. Opting out of the other activities makes your cognitive dissonance module say “well, maybe I don’t like fanfiction / board games / decision theory that much”, which isn’t that bad. Opting out of the ritual makes the cognitive dissonance module say “well, maybe I don’t care that much for being a community member”, which is a bit more unfortunate.
Then there’s also the small thing where the nonsensical community forming rituals have popped up in every human culture everywhere as far back as we know anything about human cultures, and always tend to develop the side effect of the socially gelled people favoring each other a bit more over the boring people who don’t bother to play along with the rituals. This is what the social instinct response is about, not paranoia about hooded murderers going about stabbing people one night. Traditional societies seem to end up with all members participating in whatever the local ritual is, because that’s the guarantee for belonging in the in-group and the other in-group members having your back. If you don’t see the point in the ritual, tough. The social cohesion mechanism wasn’t built for you, just smile and play-act along for the bit of extra guarantee that someone might have food to spare for you as well on the next famine year.
I think that people’s response to ritual is hard to explain. I have trouble explaining it. “Community-building” is sort of the default explanation. In the same way, if there were a real-life meetup, “getting to know people better”, which is almost a synonym for “community building”, is a default explanation because it’s hard to explain why we like meeting people face to face when online conversation is so much easier.
I think you make a good point that presenting it as “community building” might sound exclusionary, and I will stop using that justification. But in the end I don’t think it is any more about community building than meetups or board games or anything like that—only harder to explain, so that that explanation becomes more salient. Maybe we should just bill it as “Come and sing and feel emotions.”
it’s hard to explain why we like meeting people face to face when online conversation is so much easier.
Sure, but this is in the same sense that it’s hard to explain why we perceive three-dimensional objects when the input we’re getting is two-dimensional arrays. It took a lot of smart people paying attention to unravel that particular puzzle, but there’s nothing fundamentally mysterious about it.
There’s a lot of stuff going on in face to face interactions that isn’t present in online conversation, and it evidently includes things that many of us find gratifying.
Which things those are is worth knowing (not least because we can use that knowledge to build more gratifying telepresence rigs) but not knowing it doesn’t preclude being gratified by them, any more than not knowing how to derive 3D models from 2D images precludes perceiving 3D objects.
Not that you’re saying otherwise, granted. I suspect I’m just responding emotionally to the idea of demanding an explanation before it’s OK to value something.
I suspect I’m just responding emotionally to the idea of demanding an explanation before it’s OK to value something.
I agree with this sentiment in general, but in cases where the “something” that’s being valued is valued only by some people, rather than all (here I am referring to rituals, rather than just “meeting people face to face”), seeking an explanation is more important.
(blink) That is, if I value two practices P1 and P2, and 95% of the population values P1 and only 5% values P2, you’re saying it’s more important to seek an explanation for valuing P2 than an explanation for valuing P1… yes? Can you expand on why you believe that?
I’m not sure how you got what you said from what I said; I surmise that I was much less clear than I thought, or that I am not understanding you. Attempt #2, in the hope that it’s the former:
If everyone likes a thing, then asking “why do we like that thing” is of academic interest.
If some people like a thing but other people don’t like that thing, then asking “why do some people like that thing” has practical use. Maybe we can bring the naysayers around. Maybe we will discover that the advocates’ reasons for liking the thing are bad reasons. Maybe we’ll discover something about the underlying preferences that will allow the pro-thingers and the anti-thingers to get along better. In any case we’ll very likely come to understand each other better, and will be less likely to think that people of the other preference type are abnormal; at the most basic level, we’ll do better at keeping in mind that people of the opposite preferences exist at all. That’s a good thing.
The relevance to the discussion of rituals has to do with the fact that some participants and pro-ritual commenters have expressed sentiments such as “humans need ritual” or “people like ritual” or “people have a need for experiences of sacredness” or other things along those lines. My motivation for commenting has been largely to point out that such comments are sorely in need of having the word “some” (or, at best, “most”, conditional on at least some data supporting such a claim) inserted into them.
And given that that’s the situation — that some people like rituals, but some clearly do not — the question of “why do some people like ritual” acquires a more than academic interest, for the reasons I outlined above.
Sorry about the failure of communication, but as it happens you answered my question. Thank you.
To my mind, asking why everyone likes a thing that everyone likes has practical use. If we can answer that question, we can understand how we make that judgment, we can understand how we make related judgments. That’s a good thing. (I do agree that it’s of academic interest, though. Like many things of academic interest, it has practical use.)
That aside, though… sure, if your motivation is largely to point out that some people don’t need ritual, like ritual, or need experiences of sacredness, I expect that’s true.
Right. I probably am going for a bit of a selective reduction here with my kneejerk reactions. There’s all sorts of quite strange when you think about it stuff going on with playing board games too, for instance, which I’m not being concerned about.
Still, I think we have a mutual appreciation here that rituals are powerful stuff. I worry a bit when I see a not that broad culture (compared to society at large, or the academia as a whole, for example) like LW picking up on a ritual and taking it up as its own, and thinking about what role rituals end up having everywhere in human history. I’m seeing things getting on a path to ending up as something like Freemasonry (assuming for the moment that they’re more secular than they are), where there might be an understanding that the rituals are just a formality, but participating in the culture without participating in the rituals still basically doesn’t work.
I might also notice that all the subcultures that stick around for more than a generation or two seem to come with rituals running the show. It might be that the actual problem I’m pattern matching isn’t about adopting rituals at all, but about subcultures sticking around past their expiration date instead. Subcultures that go bad quickly tend to have more overt badness indicators.
Maybe we should just bill it as “Come and sing and feel emotions.”
“Come join the Solstice Ritual” sounds like just people being silly to me, while this sounds like something from a Grant Morrison comic book that will end with someone’s head being carved open by robed creatures with giant insect heads.
Hmm… although I’ve never been to any of these rituals, but from reading the descriptions, it hasn’t been my impression that it would exist only for community-building. For example, I found the description of the 2011 ritual touching on an emotional level even though I was reading it all alone at home, and I expect that the rituals would also have given me a strong emotional kick that wasn’t directly related to the group bonding aspect. Going out to a movie with friends would probably be a good analogy: being in a group does enhance the experience, and the group bonding is a plus, but the main reason we go there is the movie itself.
The social bonding and getting to meet new folks was not what gave me a strong feeling of “man, I want to participate in that” when I read the description of the original ritual. In fact, all of the social bonding stuff was just extra: a nice plus, but hardly the point. What attracted me was, well, the ritual itself: the feeling that it could give me a deep, lasting emotional experience that’d move me to the core, a faint echo of which I felt while reading the post. That would ultimately be a solitary and personal experience, even if I needed the presence of a group to help me achieve it.
What I was trying to say was that I don’t think that its level of “(only community building)-ness” is much higher than that of board games or fan fiction. A little higher, maybe, but not that much. I don’t know if I’d feel differently if I’d actually participated in such a ritual, though.
I think the road of not doing fun things that most people want because someone who doesn’t want to do it might feel left out leads to sitting quietly in a dark room.
But I don’t want to sit quietly in a dark room. If that’s our new thing I’ll feel left out!
I mean, that actually was sort of the central point of the event (which I know you had to miss out on!) so I’m not entirely sure what Yvain’s point was :P
(Actually come to think of it you may well have been sitting in a dark room at the time)
When you say “see no intrinsic fun in” do you mean “this doesn’t sound like fun” or do you mean “I have tried this, it wasn’t fun, and I don’t anticipate rationalists being able to do it in a way that would make it fun”? If the former, do you think actually trying it would be valuable in the name of gathering more information? In general, what are your thoughts on comfort zone expansion?
The latter. I’ve been through all sorts of community forming rituals, and always found them nonsensical and mostly unfun. Comfort zone expansion is good, but if a tried thing is not working out, it’s not working out.
It makes sense that some people might be turned off by ritual. I hope those people went to one of the several other New York Less Wrong megameetups, or to the designated ritual-free day Sunday, or even on Saturday for the two hours before the ritual started. If they come to an event that has “RITUAL” in big letters all over it on the day when the ritual is scheduled to occur then I don’t think you can fairly accuse it of being inflicted on them without such a sweeping redefinition of “consent” that it becomes impossible to ever do anything that doesn’t exactly conform to social norms.
It was not my intention to accuse the ritual of being inflicted on anyone; I didn’t think I said or implied such a thing, but if so, let me assure you that I quite realize that attendance was voluntary. As for the other megameetups, I will try to attend the next time a non-ritual one happens. I was sadly unable to make it on that Sunday. They seem to happen about once a year, yes?
Your other comments seem to suggest that you think that I am worried about brainwashing, or what have you; that’s just not the issue here. So your comments such as
I don’t know if it’s possible to do inspiration without even the slightest chance of brainwashing, but I’d rather not ban all inspirational activities until we prove it.
To excise all of those things from our lives because we can’t prove they don’t cause some residual brainwashing would make the world less than it was.
miss the mark a bit. Like Risto_Saarelma, I just dislike rituals (fairly strongly). From your comment, and others in this thread, I’ve discovered that some (most?) people do like them, and like them enough to serve as motivation for traveling some distance, or at least for attending an event they’d otherwise skip. All I can say is: mind = blown. I really, genuinely did not expect this to be such a prevalent preference in the rationalist community.
I’m sorry, I may have either rounded you to the nearest cliche or lumped my responses to other people’s comments into my response to yours.
Your comments about “social pressure” and “how can something be consensual if you enshrine it as a ritual” did make me think there was a consent aspect to it, and your comment about “using ritual to insert things deep into your psyche is something that I think is just bad” was where I got the feeling of brainwashing from, but I can see how I might’ve been misunderstanding them.
So you’re saying you have such strong anti-ritual preferences that you assumed people must have been awkwardly attending something they didn’t like in order to fit in? Hm. That makes sense.
I guess what I’ve learned from this is that I still can’t describe the reasons for why I like things. “Community bonding” sounds good, but when you press me on it I admit it’s kind of dumb and the ritual wasn’t really about that at all. “Sense of the sacred” sounds good but there were a lot of other easier ways to get that feeling I didn’t go for. I’m just going to say I have an unexplained preference for rituals of about the same magnitude as an unexplained preference for playing fantasy role-playing games, and although I can come up with just-so stories for it (“group bonding”, “search for meaning”, whatever) I can’t explain it but would like to keep doing it anyway.
So you’re saying you have such strong anti-ritual preferences that you assumed people must have been awkwardly attending something they didn’t like in order to fit in? Hm. That makes sense.
I… suppose. Sort of.
Reading the OP made me immediately update to a realization that at least some people really liked this sort of thing; I assumed the other attendees had their own reasons for attending (which may not have just boiled down to peer pressure); I didn’t expect to subsequently learn that a preference for rituals is a) apparently everyone’s reason for coming, and b) much more common in the rationalist community than I thought. My own concerns about consent and social pressure are part of my reaction, though not, as I’ve said, the entirety.
For what it’s worth, I, too, have a pretty strong preference for playing fantasy role-playing games (especially of the tabletop variety), so your analogy hits close to home. I am trying to imagine what it would be like to have a strong “ick” reaction to tabletop RPGs such that I couldn’t understand why anyone would do it and would avoid a group that engaged in this activity, and I think I am succeeding, at least partly. (Of course, what I can’t do is verbalize any reason why I’d have such a reaction, which I definitely can for my objections to rituals.) Putting myself back in my own shoes, my response to such a person would be a lack of comprehension of what it was they found so objectionable; I guess I wouldn’t have much to say in response other than a shrug and “well, RPGs are awesome and we like playing them and it doesn’t hurt anyone”. I surmise from your comment that your response to my feelings about rituals can be summed up similarly?
Which assumptions generated the incorrect predictions? Are you pulling your Bayesian updates backwards through the belief-propogation network given this new evidence?
(In other words: updating on a small probability event should change your mind about a whole host of related beliefs.)
I think it was some variant of the Typical Mind Fallacy, albeit one based not only on my own preferences but on those of my friends (though of course you’d expect that I’d associate with people who have preferences similar to mine, so this does not make the fallacy much more excusable).
I think the main belief I’ve updated based on this is my estimate on the prevalence of my sort of individualistic, suspicious-of-groups, allergic-to-crowds, solitude-valuing outlook in the Less Wrong community, which I have adjusted strongly downward (although that adjustment has been tempered by the suspicion, confirmed by a couple of comments on this post, that people who object to things such as rituals etc. often simply don’t speak up).
I have also been reminded of something I guess I knew but hadn’t quite absorbed, which is that, apparently, many people in aspiring rationalist communities come from religious backgrounds. This of course makes sense given the base rates. What I didn’t expect is that people would value the ritual trappings of their religious upbringing, and value them enough to construct new rituals with similar forms.
I will also add that despite this evidence that way more people like rituals than I’d have expected, and my adjustment of my beliefs about this, I am still unable to alieve it. Liking ritual, experiencing a need for and enjoyment of collectivized sacredness, is completely alien to me to the point where I am unable to imagine it.
(although that adjustment has been tempered by the suspicion, confirmed by a couple of comments on this post, that people who object to things such as rituals etc. often simply don’t speak up)
For epistemology’s sake I’ll speak up so you may be more confident in the suspicion...
I find these rituals, as described, to be completely uninteresting as social activities, and have a visceral negative reaction to imagining people doing this, even semi-seriously. “Group self-hacking for cohesion and bonding” is the...sort-of good way to put it I guess, because I would rather describe it as “optimistically wielding double-edged daggers forged from the Dark Arts”.
I do want to note that, for at least one proponent of the ritual (Yvain, see here), the “cohesion and bonding” turned out not to be the underlying motivation. This makes sense to me, and I am very suspicious about any claims such as “research indicates that group bonding increases happiness, so I choose to do this thing that I believe will generate group bonding”, or “group cohesiveness is beneficial, so we should have rituals because they promote group cohesiveness”. They just don’t ring true; I have a hard time believing that people think that way. It seems to me that some people just really like and enjoy rituals. I don’t really understand why, of course, but that’s just because my preference skews in the opposite direction. The stuff about bonding and cohesion seems like rationalization, or, at best, an attempt to describe one’s bare preference, rather than an explanation of what actually motivated a choice.
That having been said, I quite agree that rituals are forged from the Dark Arts. This contributes to, though does not constitute, my dislike of them.
Thanks! You have already updated, so I’m not sure if you want to update further, but I’m wondering if you had read Why our kind can’t cooperate, and what your reaction to that was?
I have indeed read it; I’ve even linked it to other people on this site myself, and taken explicit steps to counteract the effect; see e.g. this post.
I have no problem saying “I agree; you are right and/or this is awesome”. This happens to be a topic to which my reaction is otherwise. I think it’s especially important to speak up in cases where I disagree and where I think a number of other people also disagree but hesitate to speak.
Sorry, that’s not the context at which I meant it—I’m sure you’re as willing to admit you were wrong as the next rationalist. I mean it in the context of “Barbarians vs. Rationalists”—if group cohesion is increased by ritual, and group cohesion is useful to the rationality movement, than ritual could be useful. Wanting to dissociate ourselves from the trappings of religion seems like a case of “reversed stupidity” to me...
Wanting to dissociate ourselves from the trappings of religion seems like a case of “reversed stupidity” to me...
Yes, and if that were the reason behind my dislike of ritual, that would be an apropos comment; but as I explained, that’s not the case.
(I apologize for the harsh tone there, but I am failing to think of a way to express that response with a suitable level of tact, maybe because it’s 2 AM here. Sorry. :\ )
As for the larger “Barbarians vs. Rationalists” point, I have two responses.
One: I really don’t think that “rituals generate group cohesion, and group cohesion is useful” is actually anyone’s true motivation here. I think people just like rituals. Which… is fine (with some caveats), even if I dislike it. But I don’t think we should be putting forth rationalizations as true motivations.
Two: I don’t think we should look at everything solely through the lens of “is this useful to the rationality movement”. If doing things that are “useful to the rationality movement” causes us to systematically do things we don’t actually like doing, or want to do, then I think we’ve rather missed the point. Now you might respond: “But Said, we do like this thing! We do want to do it!” Well, ok. Then do it. But then, as the mathematicians say, this reduces to the earlier argument.
How can something be consensual if you enshrine it as a ritual? Once it’s ritualized, it stops being consensual, except insofar as you can choose whether to go along with it or leave the group. Not participating is inherently alienating.
I don’t understand this. How does a ritual differ from any other social event in this regard? I mean, if the group decides that some folks want to have a rationality discussion or a board game evening, then you also have a choice of attending or not, and a decision not to attend can also be interpreted as alienating.
The difference is that if we decide to play some board games once, all potential participants have input on whether or not to do it, and if the activity takes place, anyone who didn’t want to do it can abstain.
The next time the suggestion is brought up, the process repeats, with no decrease in consensualness.
With a ritual, once it’s instituted, when the time comes to do it again, there is not a repeat of the discussion wherein we decide whether to do it, and if so, how. Now it’s “well of course we’re going to do it, this is the ritual that we do”. AND it’s now tied to your group’s identity. Not only is there no longer anywhere near the same possibility of saying “eh, on second thought, forget that, let’s do something else”, but people who abstain aren’t just deciding not to do this one particular thing, they’re now abstaining from something which defines the group, and therefore mark themselves as Not Part Of The Group.
You seem to essentially be drawing a distinction between 1) events that are negotiated separately each time, and 2) ones which have become established and are held repeatedly with no negotiation. But board game evenings can also become so popular that they become traditional and are held at regular intervals with no express negotiation, and rituals can also fail to draw an audience and so never become a tradition in the first place.
This doesn’t make sense. Either a ritual is qualitatively different than a board game night and saying it’s pretty much the same thing and therefore just as harmless is false, or it’s basically the same thing, in which case why do you want to do it so much?
I wasn’t saying that there’s no qualitative difference between board games and ritual. I was saying that I don’t see a difference with regard to the specific aspect that SaidAchmiz was bringing up.
Last time I kept telling people “I’m eventually going to respond to this” and people were sort of annoyed (until I eventually did respond to it).
I’m going to be doing that again, and apologize, but it’s easier to address all the concerns at once.
I would, however, recommend that you attempt to revisit that paragraph, steelman your opposition a bit, and see if you can think of some ways in which rituals might be qualitatively different than board games in some ways, but not in others.
My comment was more an invitation for Kaj to steelman his own point than an objection, but I see what you’re getting at.
Key differences:
1: weirdness:
A Boardgame night is extremely normal. Tons of normal people and nerds have variations on the concept. A Ritual night is very odd, and therefore automatically screens out outsiders.
Exclusionary:
Indeed, the entire point of Rituals is to draw a line between them and us. This is off-putting to anyone who does not want to put themselves into the “us”. A new person can happily join in and enjoy the familiarity of playing boardgames and not feel like they’re being indoctrinated. They can get to know and bond with strangers over something familar. This is basically what Said earlier in this thread.
Room for individuality/nonparticipation:
Boardgame night does not consist of the same thing each time. Maybe some nights we play Resistance, maybe other nights we play Dominion, and maybe different subsets of boardgame night play different games. A ritual not only makes everyone do the same thing, it makes them do it all at once. No one really cares if you overhear “I’ve got wood for sheep!” while you’re playing Ascension, or just having a conversation, but it would certainly ruin the mood of a ritual. The only polite responses to Ritual are participation, silence, or leaving.
There’s some more I feel I can say on this but I can’t yet articulate it appropriately. It has to do with seriousness and how much I value banter and puncturing self-importance.
I endorse this response as sufficiently representative of my own views also, especially the 2nd and 3rd bullet points (the first slightly less because I am not terribly concerned about being “normal” as such).
I tend to be pro-weirdness in general, but trying to emulate religion feels like weirdness (in the positive sense) trying to emulate normalcy, which feels (negatively)weird to me.
That reminds me of this: since where I am most people my age are non-religious (and often take the piss out of practising Catholics), being a practising Catholic strongly feels to me like meta-contrarianism (both when I was one—though I didn’t know that word—and now that I’m not).
Regarding the point about “us vs them”, I agree that some traditional rituals have this issue, but I can’t think of anyone who would fill the role of “them” in the case of the Solstice celebration. The event was mostly about humanity as a whole prevailing over darkness / death / ignorance / etc. This seems much less problematic than ritualistic bonding over being different from some particular group of people.
That is indeed a much better answer. Thank you. (It actually does update me slightly away from ritual-use, although I wasn’t planning on doing the things that I’d have avoided after updating)
I used to have a group of friends (some closer than others), and we would all get together and play Settlers of Catan a given day of the week (~4 years ago, I don’t remember which day it was). It consisted of the “same thing” (obviously the game turned out differently every week, but still) every week. There was not really room for “nonparticipation” in the sense that if you wanted to hang out with these people that day, you played Catan. Would it upset you if you learned that there was a regular meetup of Catan LW enthusiasts who meet once a week to play?
Some of my closest friends are from the Israeli filking community. There’s no “ritual” per se, but we know and love the same songs, we sing them together and not-singing is kinda frowned upon. It’s certainly “weird”, and even somewhat exclusionary (helped by a bit of justified feeling of persecution from the rest of SF fandom). Would it upset you if you learned that there was a regular meetup of Filk LW enthusiasts who meet once a week to sing together?
I’m really asking these questions (in the sense that I do not find myself certain either way for what your answer will be, although I assign >.5 that it will be “no” on both).
If it is a “no”, then it seems these are not your true rejections.
If it is a “yes”, you seem to have a wide brush to paint “things I do not want LWers to do.”
Basically, rituals force themselves to be identity components more than other activities. I can play catan or not without feeling like I’m a cataner or not. I don’t want there to be rituals that make you feel like an lwer or not.
It would upset me if either of those were primary activities of the lw group in the place I was in.
There is a rather enormous difference between things I care whether lwers do and things I care whether lw does. Some lwers somewhere having rituals doesn’t bother me, every lw group deciding rituals are a good idea and adopting them would. I don’t think this is actually a big risk but I think it’s worth pointing out especially since the context is the especially influential NYLW group.
Also, the less strict something is the less I care whether it’s a ritualized regular occurrence. I would much rather come to a song night than to a night for the same specific songs each time, and I would basically never go to catan night.
There is a rather enormous difference between things I care whether lwers do and things I care whether lw does. Some lwers somewhere having rituals doesn’t bother me, every lw group deciding rituals are a good idea and adopting them would.
I feel the same way, and this is a large part of my motivation for posting my objections in this thread.
I’m trying to steelman your arguments as much as I can, but I find myself confused. The best I can do is: “I’m worried that people would find LW communities unwelcoming if they do not go to rituals. Further, I’m worried that rituals are a slippery-slope: once we start having rituals, they might start being the primary activity of LW and make the experience unwelcoming even if non-ritual activities are explicitly open, because it feels more like ’a Church group that occasionally has secular activities. I’m worried that this will divide people into those who properly mark themselves as “LWers” and those who don’t, thus starting our entropic decay into a cult.”
So far, your objections seem to be to this being the primary activity of the LW group, which—honestly—I would join you. But if a regularly meeting LW group also had a Catan night once a week (for Catan enthusiasts, obviously—if you don’t like Catan don’t come) and a Filk night once a month (for filk enthusiasts, again), I am not sure this would hasten a descent into a Catan-only or filk-only group. Similarly, if a LW group has a ritual once a year (or even if every LW group has a ritual, and even it’s the same ritual), it doesn’t seem likely rituals will become the primary thing the group does.
“There is a rather enormous difference between things I care whether lwers do and things I care whether lw does.”
I notice I am confused. LessWrong is a web site, and to some extent a community of people, which I tend to refer to as “Less Wrongers”. If you mean these words the same as I do, then I do not understand—“LW does something” means “the community does something” which means “many members do something”. I’m not really sure how LW does something is distinguished from LWers doing it...
If I join a golf club where all its members apart from me also happen to be in the bowling club, I’m still not joining the bowling club. I don’t care if “Golfers” go bowling, but it would be really annoying if “gold club” became about bowling, or if I showed up to golf club and all the golfers spend the day talking about that awesome bowling experience they had over the weekend. I never wanted to be parted of a rituals club and wouldn’t have joined a “Have debates/hangouts about AI, epistemology, rationality, morality, meta-ethics, and logic with interesting people and do rituals with them club.”
Basically, I agree with Said’s answer to Raemon’s answer to you.
Insofar as the rituals are something fun people want to do, I don’t mind. Insofar as the rituals are presented as “This is something objectively awesome that you should rationally want for your own LW group!” I do.
“There is a rather enormous difference between things I care whether lwers do and things I care whether lw does.”
This actually makes a fair amount of sense to me. There’s a few ways to interpret it. The most obvious one to me is “Less Wrong has a reputation, built into its mission statement, about caring about rationality, winning at life, etc. I value those things.” Depending on how collectivist you are, you might either care that people can look at you, say “That person is a LWer,” and then correctly infer that you care about rationality and winning at life.
Or, more collectivist-y (which ordinarily I’d give higher likelihood to but maybe not in this case), one might enjoy feeling an identity as a Less Wronger, which includes, built into that identity, caring about epistemic truth and instrumental victory.
I can definitely see it unpleasant if “being a Less Wronger” came to be known, both among the community’s allies and enemies, as (insert arbitrary thing you don’t like here)
For example, I’m not a Objectivist, but Less Wrong terminology shares some common ancestry with Objectivism. So when I’m explaining LW to new people (especially more liberal people), I often get “wait, so is this an Objectivism thing?” which is annoying to me, not just because they are drawing false conclusions about me which I have to correct—but also because I don’t really like Objectivism and it leaves an icky (irrational) feeling just to feel connected to that movement.
There’s another interpretation, which is “the sorts of things that LW groups do affects whether I participate in LW communities [in the sense of particular local groups] and thereby the extent to which I participate in the greater LW community [in the larger sense of “people who identify as ‘LWers’ and do things collectively on that basis]”.
After all, if I want to engage with the larger LW community, the most direct (and one of the most feasible by far) ways to do so is to participate in your local LW community, should such exist. One can hardly choose to participate in some other local LW community that is located in Whatevertown, Distantstate.
For example, I’m not a Objectivist, but Less Wrong terminology shares some common ancestry with Objectivism. So when I’m explaining LW to new people (especially more liberal people), I often get “wait, so is this an Objectivism thing?”
I’m very unfamiliar with Objectivism, and this comment made me curious: what terminology do we share with that movement?
I think it’s quite unlikely for this ritual to become tied to the group’s identity, let alone define the group. There are a lot of people strongly involved in the community who don’t participate (as Yvain said), and a number of people who explicitly voice objections against it. Also, the event only happens once a year, there’s nothing as pervasive as e.g. a ritual component in every meetup, so the influence on the whole group’s mentality is probably minimal.
Not only is there no longer anywhere near the same possibility of saying “eh, on second thought, forget that, let’s do something else”
I agree that this is likely to happen, since holding the ritual and organizing “something else” are not mutually exclusive. Are you also concerned about opportunity cost?
I think it’s quite unlikely for this ritual to become tied to the group’s identity, let alone define the group.
What?! The winter solstice ritual is already tied to the OB/LW NYC group’s identity — or at least it very much seems that way from the outside, and it certainly looks like (at least some of) the group’s members are actively working to both make that be the case, and to promote that image of the event to the rest of LW.
Sorry, I misunderstood, I do agree that the ritual is connected to the group identity. Do you expect it to have significant effects on the LW group identity besides increasing the sense of community?
I think that opting out of a component of the group identity doesn’t necessarily lead to alienation. For example, caring about FAI is a significant part of the LW group identity, but people who care about FAI much less than, say, building rationality skills (like myself) are still welcome and included.
they’re now abstaining from something which defines the group, and therefore mark themselves as Not Part Of The Group.
Do you mean signaling that you’re not part of the group, or feeling that you’re not part of the group, or both?
I think that opting out of a component of the group identity doesn’t necessarily lead to alienation.
This is true, but a ritual designed explicitly as a group-bonding exercise (and, it seems, the most prominent such exercise) is more likely to be something opting out of which contributes to alienation than, say, caring about FAI.
Do you mean signaling that you’re not part of the group, or feeling that you’re not part of the group, or both?
Both. Although I didn’t so much mean “signaling that you’re not part of the group” as “doing something which is interpreted by other group members as an indication that you’re not part of the group”, but the difference is of emphasis at best.
Ok, I thought I knew what a Schelling Point is, but this usage puzzles me a bit. If I’m interpreting it right, though, my question is… why do this?
I stole that usage from (I think) Marcello. The idea is that people come together to be thankful and have fun and celebrate in one specific place and time and manner, and that makes it a unifying event that everyone enjoys more.
My question then is: why make it a ritual rather than just a holiday party? Why not: “Every year, we [my friends/this meetup group/whoever] get together on December the whateverth and have a holiday party! It’s tradition! Yay!”? That works as a Schelling Point too, no?
Of course, at this point, “why” is partly rhetorical, as daenerys and Raemon have more or less responded.
First off, I upvoted your post. I probably should edit something to this effect in the main post—I value this kind of feedback very much. I think ritual is valuable, but I acknowledge that it has some important costs, most notably in the form of visceral reactions among both existing important members of the community, and potential newcomers who might be turned off.
Daenerys covered a lot of the important points. I’ll be addressing some additional points in a later post. Most of what I had to say about this is covered in my post from last year, The Value (and Danger) of Ritual
Thank you; I appreciate your response. Based on what daenerys wrote, I think that my response breaks down as follows:
Using ritual to insert things deep into your psyche is something that I think is just bad. Using writings on rationality as sermons, reciting litanies about truth by candelight, etc., misses the point and is dangerous because it attaches you to the views and propositions in question too closely.
Using ritual as group bonding… I don’t understand the motivation, to be honest. I acknowledge that it probably works, I just can’t understand why you’d want to do it. This is, of course, a personal preference, not any kind of criticism per se.
The above two points notwithstanding, I find rituals very icky and offputting (especially, upon reflection, when they have an (explicitly?) religious feel to them!). This is the case regardless of whether the purpose is worthwhile and whether the ritual effectively serves the purpose.
From your linked post:
Some people may be turned off. Skeptics who specifically turned to rationality to escape mindless ritual that was forced upon them may find this all scary.
This describes me. Not literally; I never (well, almost never) had any mindless rituals forced upon me, but I don’t like mindless ritual and enjoy the rationalist perspective for absence thereof.
Quality, intelligent individuals may come to our website, see an article about a night of ritual and then tune out and leave.
I haven’t tuned out, but I do find it offputting, as I mentioned.
I think this is an acceptable cost to pay. Because for good or for ill, most humans like emotional things that aren’t strictly rational. … There are smart cynics who will be turned off, but there are also smart idealists who will be drawn to recognizable human emotional arcs.
I find this view unfortunate. Not just for the personal reason that you’re describing my reaction as an acceptable cost (which I can understand, even if it makes me somewhat sad), but because I don’t agree with your framing. I don’t think I’m a cynic. I consider myself rather idealistic. I’m not sure why you think only cynics would be turned off by such things.
The rest of your post largely doesn’t address my concerns, I’m afraid. bryjnar’s comment here is fairly close to my own views, and the responses don’t seem at all satisfactory to me.
I am beginning to suspect that this may be a fairly fundamental difference in preferences.
Using ritual as group bonding… I don’t understand the motivation, to be honest.
Happiness research is pretty clear that better social connections make us happier. There’s a reason that church-goers are happier than non-attenders. Ritual is good at facilitating group bonding, and group bonding is good for people. (Provided it doesn’t lead you to do stupid stuff.)
I fear that part of my comment was not entirely clear...
Let me ask you this: do you actually want to group bond? This is quite a separate question from “based on research, I believe group bonding will make me happier”.
For myself, I sometimes think: “Hm, I like this person/these people; they are cool and interesting. I enjoy hanging out with them, and intend to continue doing so in the future.”
I can’t imagine myself thinking “Hm, I want to group bond with some people/these people. What can I do that will have that effect?”
That is, group bonding seems to be the goal here. Is it actually something that you directly want, or is this a case of “research says that it will make me happier, and I want to be happier, so I will do this”?
P.S. As for the church goers… yes, I can believe that they are happier (although that’s “happier on average”, right?). I don’t think we should therefore conclude that they have the right idea about this whole ritual-as-group-bonding thing.
Yes, group bonding is something I directly want, because I’ve enjoyed it in other contexts before. For one thing, I’m not that good at making casual friendships, and given a casual social setting, I won’t get very close to people. I wouldn’t have traveled to New York just to hang out. Participating in a more structured group activity makes people more likely to actually get together and connect with each other. Also, ritual is good for bringing up topics (death, hope) that are hard to bring up in casual conversation. Once introduced in a structured way like a ritual, the topics are easier to address afterwards in unstructured conversation.
Also, I think community support is a good thing that most of us don’t have enough of. Group bonding helps produce a norm of helping each other, even if we’re not especially interested in every group member as an individual.
I imagine group bonding is valuable because of reasons like “I want to adapt those values and behaviors, because they seem useful, but I can’t individually self-modify—I should find a group that follows these behaviors/values, so that I can adapt them via peer pressure.” At least, that’s my perspective.
I am beginning to suspect that this may be a fairly fundamental difference in preferences.
That is almost certainly what it is. I am going to unpack some things in an upcoming post and possibly explain what I mean better, but in the end, you won’t say “oh, now that you cleared that up I agree with you,” it’ll be more “now I understand why we disagree on this.”
For the time being—taboo the word ritual. What is it that we did that is different from a “holiday party?” Be specific.
I’ll be addressing in more detail in an upcoming post, but it’d be helpful to know what exactly you’re concerned about. To the extent that you think this has negative consequences beyond ostracizing people who find in aesthetically distasteful (which I agree is a non-trivial consequence), could you also elaborate on why it is bad to use ritual to hack your psyche? Is it also bad to use positive reinforcement to hack your psyche? What consequences do you anticipate?
These are good questions, and I ask that you bear with me as I try to verbalize my gut-level response.
For the time being—taboo the word ritual. What is it that we did that is different from a “holiday party?” Be specific.
For one thing, you sang songs. Together. Songs intended to trigger emotional responses both by their content and by the fact that they were being sung as a group.
You recited litanies — again, together (right? please correct me if I’m misunderstanding any of the details here!) — and read “sermons” (of rationality content, albeit excellently written, of course; I certainly don’t deny that Eliezer’s writing is evocative), in a candle-lit room (with intentionally decreasing candlelight? I’m going by Yvain’s description here), again, in an atmosphere designed to evoke emotional responses.
If any of my friends suggested doing any of this at any holiday party I’ve been to, I (and most other people present) would look at them as if they had spontaneously gone stark raving mad. If the host of the party were the one suggesting this, and if they managed to make it happen, I would seriously consider never attending any of their holiday parties again.
There was apparently an altar? I understand this to be a metaphor for… something — a place for some prop(s) used in the ceremony? Heck, the fact that there WAS a ceremony at all, of any kind, is part of what I’m talking about.
As for the rest of your questions, I will have to give them a bit more thought before posting a reply. For now, I will emphasize that yes, ostracizing people who find this aesthetically unpleasant is indeed a non-trivial consequence, to say the least. Not the only consequence, but a serious one.
In the meantime, please clarify something: what exactly do you mean by “hack your psyche”? I think I understand the phrase as you’re using it, but it would help if I were sure.
“Hack your psyche” was Daenerys’ phrasing, but I’d approximately endorse it. Basically, there are ways that are brain works, badly. For example, we tend to want to shy away from harsh truths, and look for excuses not to do a lot of work. Reading Litanies of Tarski is explicitly supposed to build into yourself the idea that you are a person who IS capable of re-evalulating beliefs, regardless of how comfortable they are. Reciting the litany may or may not actually be useful for this, especially in group settings. I actually lean towards it NOT being that useful, but being harmless and fun. (More on this later)
In “The Value and Danger of Ritual” I go into how I used the ritual-development process to make myself the sort of person who cared about the world and was willing to work to improve it, even if it meant accepting math that felt intuitively wrong to me.
If any of my friends suggested doing any of this at any holiday party I’ve been to, I (and most other people present) would look at them as if they had spontaneously gone stark raving mad. If the host of the party were the one suggesting this, and if they managed to make it happen, I would seriously consider never attending any of their holiday parties again.
I do understand your visceral response to this (I can easily imagine similar visceral responses of my own to things that are only slightly different), but you make a leap from “the host does this thing which I am not used to” to “the host appears stark raving mad.” There’s a big gap there where I think you think something actually bad happened, but which you haven’t articulated any negative consequences beyond your instinctive aversion.
I recognize that this is asking a fairly hard question, and don’t feel obligated to respond right away. But I’d like to you to articulate, if you can, which of the following, you feel revulsion to:
Singing songs Singing songs about things you believe strongly in Singing or reciting things in groups
Making any deliberate effort to build group cohesion and signal tribal loyalty Having candles Deliberately lighting and extinguishing candles to produce an effect Deliberately manipulating lighting to produce an emotional effect
Reading excerpts from authors you like Reading excerpts from authors you respect a lot and who have shaped your worldview Reading excerpts from only one particular author you respect (I share this concern, I’ll address it in an upcoming post)
Giving a speech in deliberately manipulated lightning (taboo “sermon”) Giving a speech in to an audience whose emotional state has been deliberately altered Giving a speech whose goal is to build group unity Giving a speech whose goal is to call people to action towards a difficult goal
Having some meetups featuring group activities that some portion of the potential community won’t enjoy (examples include music, as well as strategy games, presentation on material you don’t care about) Having some group activities that some portion of the potential community actively dislikes
Deliberately provoking emotional responses (without attempting to build group cohesion or call to action)
Do any of those trigger a response individually? Can you identify which ones either cause a visceral response, or you feel would cause a negative consequence to occur? Either individually, or collectively?
Reciting the litany may or may not actually be useful for this, especially in group settings. I actually lean towards it NOT being that useful, but being harmless and fun.
I thought the Litany worked really well as a running gag, especially with the addition of the meta-litany as a punchline.
If reciting the Litany of Tarski in a group setting is valuable, I desire to BELIEVE that reciting the Litany of Tarski in a group setting is valuable. If reciting the Litany of Tarski in a group setting is NOT valuable, I desire to believe that reciting the Litany of Tarski in a group setting is NOT valuable. Let me not become too attached to beliefs I may not want.
Oh I thought it was fun and funny and worth including on those grounds, but I don’t think it caused most people to actually reflect on anything useful in the long term.
I do understand your visceral response to this (I can easily imagine similar visceral responses of my own to things that are only slightly different), but you make a leap from “the host does this thing which I am not used to” to “the host appears stark raving mad.” There’s a big gap there where I think you think something actually bad happened, but which you haven’t articulated any negative consequences beyond your instinctive aversion.
Mmm… no, I don’t think there’s actually a leap here. You should understand that by “stark raving mad” I didn’t actually mean anything like “I am seriously considering the possibility that my friend has had a sudden onset of severe, debilitating mental illness, and I should contact the nearest hospital forthwith”. I meant something more like “my friend has suggested an activity which I find aesthetically objectionable, though I don’t necessarily have any moral objections to it, and I am aware that some people out there do this and enjoy it, and that’s fine. I am surprised to hear my friend suggest it, because I did not think he/she was the kind of person who enjoyed it, and am additionally surprised that he/she would think that I or any of our other friends would enjoy it, as that conflicts with what we all know about each other’s personalities and preferences.” As an example, if I were at a party and one of my friends said: “Hey, let’s go to a strip club, and then a football game!” My reaction would be similar. I don’t think there’s anything morally wrong with strip clubs or football games (not inherently, anyway), but if one of my friends suggested that we go do this, I would be unpleasantly surprised, to say the least.
Of course there was also a strong element of, as you say, visceral response.
I will attempt to respond to your questions on visceral responses; I have to demur for now on negative consequences, though I will give it some thought and attempt a coherent reply soon.
Do I feel revulsion to:
Singing songs Singing songs about things you believe strongly in Singing or reciting things in groups
Yes (somewhat), … (am having trouble coming up with any examples and therefore no response for now; can you provide any?), yes (strongly).
Making any deliberate effort to build group cohesion and signal tribal loyalty Having candles Deliberately lighting and extinguishing candles to produce an effect Deliberately manipulating lighting to produce an emotional effect
Yes (strongly), no (unless they’re scented, in which case yes, blegh), yes, yes.
Reading excerpts from authors you like Reading excerpts from authors you respect a lot and who have shaped your worldview Reading excerpts from only one particular author you respect (I share this concern, I’ll address it in an upcoming post)
Depends on the context. Are we holding an excerpt-reading-aloud party? (Is that a thing? It should be a thing, I think. Like a poetry reading, only… reading cool stuff other people wrote aloud. I’d participate maybe.) Then no, no objection. Are we doing it because this excerpt(s) triggered an emotional response and that’s what we’re going for overall? Then yes, strongly object.
My objection in this case is affected by whether we’re reading the thing with the intention of thinking and discussing it, in a casual atmosphere, or with the intention of not discussing it but instead just using it to generate emotions.
As for reading excerpts from only one particular author… I mean, I agree that it’s a concern… but I admit that it’s hard to get around the fact that Eliezer’s writing is exceptionally excellent. This, however, is really not the biggest problem in the whole enterprise.
Giving a speech in deliberately manipulated lightning (taboo “sermon”) Giving a speech in to an audience whose emotional state has been deliberately altered Giving a speech whose goal is to build group unity Giving a speech whose goal is to call people to action towards a difficult goal
Yes, yes, yes, and… mmm… no? But something about the phrasing strikes me oddly and I can’t put my finger on it...
Having some meetups featuring group activities that some portion of the potential community won’t enjoy (examples include music, as well as strategy games, presentation on material you don’t care about) Having some group activities that some portion of the potential community actively dislikes
These things don’t trigger revulsion, especially not the first (one would have to be truly unreasonable to object to that!), but of course I don’t like it when groups that I’m a member in have activities that I don’t like. (Isn’t that almost tautological?)
Deliberately provoking emotional responses (without attempting to build group cohesion or call to action)
Somewhat. I’m very wary of this sort of thing, but I don’t think I find it inherently objectionable.
I find your analogy about the sports game and stripclub pretty useful. I think that’s a very reasonable comparison.
I am interested in the notion that you object to provoking emotion on purpose objectionable. Does this apply to art in general? (On a similar note—do you go to movies or see plays? Do you go ever dim lights for romantic purposes?)
(The above sentence may sound like it’s trying to set up a gotcha, but I am mostly just clarifying that you are someone who likes to explore and engage intellectually, but not emotionally)
but of course I don’t like it when groups that I’m a member in have activities that I don’t like. (Isn’t that almost tautological?)
If a group is meeting regularly, doing things you like, does it make your world worse if they start meeting additional times, doing things that you don’t like?
I am interested in the notion that you object to provoking emotion on purpose objectionable.
That conclusion about my general preferences does not follow from my stated specific preferences.
Does this apply to art in general?
Not… in general, no. I do strongly dislike it when authors/directors/etc. provoke emotion in a deliberate attempt to misdirect the reader/viewer/etc. from considering what is going on in the work. That is, when there is an attempt to provoke emotion directly, rather than as a result of seeing/reading/otherwise apprehending the content. I will attempt to provide examples when I think of some.
(On a similar note—do you go to movies or see plays? Do you go ever dim lights for romantic purposes?)
I do go to movies, and even Broadway shows, though not plays, and do on occasion dim lights for romantic purposes (or, to be more precise, locate intended-to-be-romantic activities in locations with suitable light levels… which phrasing makes it sound rather unromantic, I suppose… ah well).
I am mostly just clarifying that you are someone who likes to explore and engage intellectually, but not emotionally
I don’t actually think this is a fair characterization. As I said to Kaj_Sotala here, it’s the collectivization of emotion, and of the emotion of sacredness in this case, that I object to.
If a group is meeting regularly, doing things you like, does it make your world worse if they start meeting additional times, doing things that you don’t like?
Maybe. It depends on the relative extent to which the activites I like and the activities I dislike contribute to the group’s identity and cohesiveness.
That conclusion about my general preferences does not follow from my stated specific preferences.
I may have worded it more strongly than you intended, but I thought you said:
deliberately provoking emotional responses (without attempting to build group cohesion or call to action)
Somewhat. I’m very wary of this sort of thing, but I don’t think I find it inherently objectionable.
In any case, I think I have at least a reasonable understanding of where you’re coming from. That’s all I have to say for now, although if you are able to articulate some of the other concerns you mentioned better that’d be appreciated.
There will be one more post which is something of an “emotional explanation of why I’m doing what I’m doing,” which is intended to be evocative but grounded in something very real. That will probably go up tomorrow. A few days later I’ll write up a more expansive post about where the idea of ritual and less wrong might or might not go, and what concerns I have about that.
I think this wonderfully evokes a point which may be off the radar, namely, that ‘ritual’ or whatever you call it (the possibility for group aesthetic experiences) is all around us in society. It permeates everything, it is all pervasive. I think that is true.
Choose the ritual that is right for you… not because it is most moving or pretty, but because it is the most true as far as you can discern.
A tangential point: It seems to me that aesthetic questions, questions of art, beauty, poetry, and the place of literature while occasionally mentioned are Less Wrong’s greatest blind spot. To recall Hamlet, it seems to me that there are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your rationality. Perhaps there are questions which we are not ready to discuss, which is fine. We don’t necessarily need to attack the immense, perhaps incommensurable, differences between the aesthetic morality of people-who-think-they-think-rationally, us.
I considered not posting this comment, because it seems like you guys (and Raemon especially) have put a lot of effort into this, but I do want to sort out my response to this whole thing. Please don’t take this as judgment; I’d really like to hear input about whether my reaction is wholly unwarranted, and why or why not.
When I read about this event (and I had a similar reaction to reading about last year’s one, too), I get a strong sense of “ick”; a deep and profound feeling of being creeped out. I mean, you’re designing and instituting a ritual. Intentionally. Why on earth would you do something like that?
From Yvain’s review:
Whyyyyyyyy????
Why not just get together and hang out and… I don’t know. Play party games? Talk? Watch movies? Why a ritual?
Ok, I thought I knew what a Schelling Point is, but this usage puzzles me a bit. If I’m interpreting it right, though, my question is… why do this?
Is it because some (most?) of the people involved come from religious backgrounds, and miss the holiday rituals that took place in their families?
By the way, what happens if people present don’t want to participate in the songs? Is there social pressure? I know I’d feel pretty darn uncomfortable if I was at a gathering and everyone started a collective sing-along.
Separately and unrelatedly, I really feel rather unsettled by the fact that you’re using Eliezer’s writings as a kind of… I don’t know, mass? Sermon? It seems to me like that’s taking entirely the wrong message away from all of it… to actually enshrine it as a sacred tradition or ritual of some sort.
I lurk on the OB/LW NYC mailing list, and you guys seem like pretty interesting people (I’ve been to one or two of the “public” meetups that were like… 1-2 years ago, now?); once in a while I think that maybe I should try and come to some of your meetups on occasion.
Stuff like this pushes me away. That’s probably unfortunate, so if someone from the group (or whoever, really) could explain this whole ritual business to me, I would appreciate it.
Because humans experience an emotion of “sacredness” (in scare quotes because although the feeling is commonly associated with religion, it doesn’t need to be), which many people think is fantastic. This blogger puts it pretty well:
Your reaction seems to be “this ritual stuff smacks of religion, and I don’t want to get involved with any of that!”. My response would be, roughly, “Humans have this awesome in-built feeling that makes things feel beautiful and great and fantastic and helps us give moments of respite in the middle of all or other worries, and religion has made this land-grab and laid unfair claim on the whole experience. Well, why the hell should we put up with that? Why should the whole thing be labelled ‘religious’, when it’s a basic emotion of human beings that doesn’t require being religious in the first place? Religion has done a lot of harm already, and if we begin cutting off valuable and important parts of ourselves simply because we feel those parts are associated with an enemy tribe, we’re voluntarily letting religion do more damage. I say we stop that shit right here.”
That’s not my response at all. I’m afraid you seem to be reading things into my response that are simply not there. There seems to be some sort of misunderstanding here that’s causing you to set up (what is from my perspective) a straw man about objections to religion and then extensively knocking it down with arguments that have little bearing on what I’ve said.
I don’t know why that is; perhaps I’ve been unclear; perhaps you are rounding to the nearest common objection? In any case, my objection has nothing directly to do with these rituals “smacking of religion”. I do think, as I’ve mentioned in a previous post, that the desire for such rituals is stronger in people who come from a religious background and are used to such things from their youth. (I also have to wonder — and this is a bit of an aside — why we should use rituals that draw so directly from religion in form: someone (juliawise?) mentioned saying grace at the meal, and that strikes me as incredibly unlikely to be something an entirely non-religious person would come up with if given the task of “think of some cool and effective rituals”.)
I do experience the emotion of sacredness. What I find extremely offputting and downright scary is the collectivization of that emotion. I don’t like spectator sports, protests, and other mass actions for the same reason (substitute pride, righteous anger, or whatever other appropriate emotion for sacredness in those examples). I have absolutely no desire to subordinate my feelings of exaltation and transcendence to a group. While I can’t say that triggering sacredness in a collective “secular” context is as bad as triggering it in a collective religious context, the fundamental problem is the same.
I think grace is underrated. As I said, I’m used to silent grace about three breaths long. It gives you fifteen seconds to relax your body, look around at who is gathered, and think “We are about to sit down and eat together. It’s nice to be here.”
As has been extensively pointed out in Eliezer’s writings and elsewhere on this site, you can come up with a reasonable-sounding justification for just about anything; if you start with your bottom line filled in, the rest of the page is easy to write.
Here’s a question. You’re saying that the value of grace at a meal is that it gives you, personally, some time to whatever (relax, look around, think, etc.). You would therefore be perfectly ok with being the only one at the table participating in this silent grace ritual, or being one of only some participants, while the others merrily dug in and proceeded with conversation — yes?
I sometimes do it alone if no one else is doing it, yes. Or two of us may do it if the others in the family don’t want to. But I enjoy it more if we all do it at once. This seems to set off some kind of alarm bell with you, and I’m not sure there’s a good reason it should or shouldn’t set off alarms other than some kind of aesthetic preference.
Would you be able to explain why that is?
Indeed it does. Because it’s a short step from there to social pressure on people who wouldn’t otherwise have any interest or motivation whatsoever in participating.
And here’s the thing: it’s a different sort of social pressure than the sort experienced by e.g. someone who doesn’t feel like playing a board game that everyone else at the party is playing, or someone who isn’t hungry when everyone else is deciding whether to go to a restaurant for dinner. It’s not “everyone else is doing it; join in, it’ll be fun!”; it’s not “your abstention is making the situation less convenient for everyone else”; it’s “you’re offending the group by not participating”.
I’m not saying that you apply such social pressure on people, only explaining the reason for the alarm bells.
I like the feeling of doing things together. We can probably both think of evolutionary and neurological reasons why humans enjoy group activities. Ultimately, like I said, I think it boils down to an aesthetic preference that isn’t right or wrong.
I see your point about not letting this become a social pressure on people who don’t want to participate, and I’ll try to be mindful of this.
Yes, at this point I’d have to agree that it’s an aesthetic preference, neither right nor wrong, though I think it’s a preference with potential dangerous consequences, on which point it seems we’ve also come to some sort of agreement. That said, I appreciate that you’ve given my view consideration; some of my comments may have come off as less tactful than I intended, and you and other commenters have been quite patient.
By the way, thank you for the link; as it happens, reading the post and some of the comments has cemented my views on rituals and group bonding. I think this comment by JenniferRM (and her longer comment just downthread) is very insightful and quite appropriate to the current discussion.
ETA: Another data point for the “some people don’t like this sort of thing” claim.
My family has a similar tradition of silence before meals. It provides a moment to relax and change mindset to meal time. It says that this is a time to spend together, and not just another thing to be rushed through. It’s nice if everyone participates, because that provides a pause in conversation and makes it easier to stop and relax.
I think before meals is not that unlikely a time working from a blank slate. There is something powerful about sharing food. It’s a bonding ritual. Using that same time to reflect and relax makes the moment of silence, grace, etc. more effective.
Agreed. As I mentioned at the last meetup, saying grace is a form of negative visualization, which allows you to gain more satisfaction from your meal than you otherwise would. It works by using framing-effects to change your “default” mindset from having the meal to not having it.
That was more of a joke. This is what was said: “To all whom it may concern, thanks.”
My apologies, then. I read this part:
as being motivated by a dislike of religious ritual, as it explicitly mentioned “mass” and “sermon” as examples of things to avoid. But upon a re-reading, I can see that you were rather worried about Eliezer’s writings being promoted to a status where they wouldn’t be questioned.
Also, I might have somewhat used your comment as an excuse to make a general point I’d been wanting to make for a while. Sorry about that. But also thank you, for giving me an excuse to make it. ;)
All of that said, I can understand having a dislike of the collectivization of sacredness, I just don’t share it myself.
Heh, no worries. Rereading that quoted bit of mine, I can see the source of the confusion. Your revised interpretation of my intent is correct.
Incidentally, the term “sermon” as applied in this context is from Yvain’s linked review.
Hah. Glad to provide, I suppose. ;)
In Japan, it is customary to say “itadakimasu” before eating, which is a sort of grace, and which is not seen as religious at all.
My dad has a gracelike ritual which he has carried on despite having been an atheist for decades (people lean over to kiss those sitting next to them) which my mom and many others have been very happy with.
Many languages have equivalents of bon appétit. That’s like “cheers!” but for food instead of drinks. (In English there’s “enjoy your meal” but IME IIRC it’s very uncommon among native speakers in non-formal situations.)
Can you explain what you did to experience it? (Sorry to go off on a tangent, but I’m curious what it feels like.)
Hmm. Well, first of all, I don’t guarantee that what I’m thinking of is the same (or analogous) emotion as what everyone else here is talking about; after all, if I don’t experience it in the same way, or in the same condition, who’s to say it’s even the same thing at all? But to pursue that line of reasoning is to get into the problem of other minds, and that’s probably an unnecessary tangent. (Although this may be empirically investigated; perhaps check to see whether the same parts of my brain and e.g. Raemon’s brain trigger in situations we would both describe as being consistent with emotional responses to sacredness, etc.)
Anyway, to your question: the most recent thing I can think of was watching Cosmos (as in the Carl Sagan series, and yes, I really hadn’t ever seen it before this year). Some parts of Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality trigger a similar feeling.
As an aside, I think sacredness is not the most apt term for this emotion; I think a better word might be exaltation.
I think of sacredness and exaltation as overlapping circles in a ven diagram. The parts of HP:MoR that I assume you’re talking to are both exalting and sacred to me. They’re specifically about humanity rising up and conquering a powerful challenge.
Wandering out into the night and looking at the stars gives me a sense of sacredness that is not inherently about exaltation—My connotation of exaltation is a sort of power, and the stars make me feel simultaneously big and small, but in such a way that power is almost irrelevant. I’m just experiencing being this small but meaningful part of the universe. I’m not sure if my use of the words here is common though.
Mmm… I sort of see what you mean. What I meant was that “sacredness” does not feel grammatically appropriate to be naming an emotion. Also, “sacredness” in the moral-philosophy sense in which I’ve seen it used refers to an infinite value, something which may not be traded off. I wouldn’t apply the term to stars (don’t get me wrong, contemplating the cosmos does trigger in me that-emotion-to-which-I-think-we’re-both-referring, I just don’t think they have infinite value; to the extent that I think anything could sensibly be construed to have infinite value, stars just don’t qualify).
As someone who enjoyed the Solstice a great deal, I’d like to throw a data point out there:
my family doesn’t have a religious or spiritual background of any kind, so I didn’t experience rituals as a child. I still enjoy spiritual / religious singing in groups, both in languages I understand and don’t, and usually don’t take the lyrics seriously. I find most of the value in the feeling of bonding / appreciation.
The event felt more playful than solemn, and certainly not authoritative. People seemed to be taking it with a grain of salt, it was like a social experiment of sorts. I felt perfectly comfortable with not singing along for some of the time, and this didn’t feel alienating or disengaging.
That said, I think I do understand your revulsion towards rituals, and your view about collectivization of emotional experience is an interesting point that hasn’t occurred to me.
I’ve never been to any LW meetup, but I wouldn’t surprise me if such reports sound creepier than the actual rituals were due to their, er, literary genre.
Thank you for writing this. My reaction has been pretty much the same. I’m guessing that people are just wired differently, a lot of people seem to be feeling like they’d like to participate in something like this.
Some people are interested, some people aren’t. There have been comments on every post related to the Solstice celebrations by someone creeped out by the idea, but generally people creeped out by the idea don’t comment (or only comment once) and people enthused by the idea do comment (and often repeatedly).
Well, yeah. The whole point of rituals like this in religion is to switch off thinking and get people going with the flow. The epistemic danger should be pretty obvious. Ritual = irrational.
I’d like to say that I have similar feeling concerning this.
Even if I wouldn’t probably feel bad participating in any ritual, the described things (candles, people crying, reciting texts by Yudkowsky) are completely incompatible with my taste. Perhaps it is the apparent absolute lack of humor and the exalted seriousness which is most off-putting for me.
There really wasn’t a lack of humor, it just doesn’t translate very well into a blog post. In person, my natural demeanor is high energy and silly, most of the time. When writing, for some reason it comes much easier to write seriously. Writing comedically is something I need to work on.
It may be that this would feel less offputting to some people if I had done emphasized other parts of the ceremony more. However, part of the biggest selling point of the night is that we (the NY group, and most other LW folk I’ve met), are generally pretty fun, often funny in self-depreciating ways. So having a night that starts with that, yes, but which also builds to something powerful and profound is a novel, interesting experience. People came from across state lines to experience something that isn’t normally a part of their lives at all.
Yvain touched on this elsewhere—we (the broader American western culture, in general) are really good at being ironic and silly and fun. We’re not really good at taking serious, important things seriously. I set this in motion because I thought it was something I didn’t get nearly enough of, that I wanted and that other people seemed to want too.
Since you mention that you had the same reaction last year, I assume that you’ve read the discussion that took place then that covers this issue, yes?
You are talking as if a required ritual was sprung on unsuspecting meetup participants. This is obviously not true. Both Raemon’s and my rituals were advertised specifically as such. If you don’t want to participate in a ritual don’t go to one. There are plenty of non-ritual meetups that go on year round. I know Raemon even made the solstice event a two-day event. One day was ritual, and the other was just a regular get-together. So if you wanted to meet everyone without taking part in the ritual you could just go to the second day. In Columbus we didn’t have to do that, because it wasn’t open invite, and everyone in our group wanted to do the ritual (plus we have regular get-togethers all the time anyways).
For us (Columbus), our goal was to increase group bonding and cohesion. We find the people in our group to be worthwhile individuals, and want to increase positive affect between group members. Rituals and traditions are a good way to strengthen group ties, and when we were building our ritual we were specifically looking for ways to hack ourselves into feeling closer to the people we want to feel closer to. (i.e. doing things in unison, affirmations, etc)
Again, this is a good route towards consensual group/self-hacking. It is one thing to read something and rationally think “yes, this is a good idea/this is true.” It is quite another thing to actually change your daily thoughts and actions to fall into line with what you rationally think is true (think of the difficulties people have battling akrasia, for example). In order to do this, you need to get those beneficial thoughts and ideas deep inside your intuition/system 1 reasoning. Ritual is one way to hack yourself to do this.
The things that we recited were the Litany of Gendlin and the Litany of Tarski. The ideas they represent (I value the truth, and want to believe only what is true. What is true is already so, and my belief-state doesn’t change that, etc) are ideas that I very much WANT to be put as deep into my psyche as I can get them.
If you want to change your daily thoughts and actions, you need to change your elephant. Not just your rider.
Rituals and traditions are powerful things to our primitive monkey brains. We are purposefully, and with the full knowledge and consent of every participant, using it to engage in group self-hacking.
Uh… maybe? I don’t remember, honestly. Link?
Well, yes, obviously. I didn’t mean to imply that anything was sprung on anyone, just saying that yes, I wouldn’t go to such a thing. The issue for me is that this (for any value of “this”; the NYC LW group, for instance) is a group that does this sort of thing.
How can something be consensual if you enshrine it as a ritual? Once it’s ritualized, it stops being consensual, except insofar as you can choose whether to go along with it or leave the group. Not participating is inherently alienating.
Really? I rather think I want these things as deep in my psyche as is warranted by how true/useful I judge them to be, and absolutely no deeper than that.
In any case, it… doesn’t seem like this is the only purpose of these rituals — and quite unlikely that it’s the only effect.
I… don’t understand this sentiment at all. That is, I don’t understand what you mean by this (and consequently don’t understand why it’s something you’d want). Clarification would be much appreciated.
From a comment on Yvain’s review:
Seems like about what I would expect.
It makes sense that some people might be turned off by ritual. I hope those people went to one of the several other New York Less Wrong megameetups, or to the designated ritual-free day Sunday, or even on Saturday for the two hours before the ritual started. If they come to an event that has “RITUAL” in big letters all over it on the day when the ritual is scheduled to occur then I don’t think you can fairly accuse it of being inflicted on them without such a sweeping redefinition of “consent” that it becomes impossible to ever do anything that doesn’t exactly conform to social norms.
A lot of the above criticisms act like the ritual ruined a perfectly good meetup, but I think without the ritual this meetup would not have occurred. I went there all the way from Maryland because I wanted to see the ritual after reading about it last year. I dragged a friend who was also there because she loved rituals. Many people there weren’t even in the LW community at all and came only because they wanted to see what the ritual was about. Quite a few people organized cross-continental flights from California because they wanted to participate in the ritual. If Raemon had said “Okay everyone, let’s have yet another meetup and talk about Bayes for a few hours”, there simply wouldn’t have been a meetup of this size.
So on utilitarian grounds, I think it is a pure loss to take dozens of people for whom this is one of the highlights of their year, and hold them hostage to the purely theoretical possibility that there might be someone who wants to go to a megameetup, refuses to go to any of the many non-ritual megameetups, mysteriously hates ritual despite her insistence on only going to the megameetup with “ritual” in the name, refuses to go on the designated non-ritual day, refuses to leave or even go upstairs when the ritual starts, and is such a utility monster that her needs outweigh those of everyone else.
And knowing what the ritual was like, it’s also hard for me to take the idea of exclusion seriously. I understand why people who came on the second day might feel like they missed something, but the same would be true if we’d all gone out to watch a movie Saturday night and they hadn’t seen it. But other than that? We sung silly songs from Portal and Firefly together for a while. Now we are closer far than brothers, and shall never again feel respect or human feeling for anyone outside our sacred circle.
No, seriously, I do understand the idea of the Dark Arts (I coined our community’s use of the term). But I think there’s a difference between brainwashing and inspiration. Brainwashing changes your beliefs, inspiration helps you live up to them. I don’t know if it’s possible to do inspiration without even the slightest chance of brainwashing, but I’d rather not ban all inspirational activities until we prove it.
If it helps, think of this less as people in robes chanting in a dead language and more as our version of a school graduation (which, uh, also involves people in robes chanting in a dead language, but you get the picture). At a school graduation they sing songs, somebody talks about the values of the school and the importance of learning, and then everyone goes forth psyched about their future and has fond memories later. The same is true of weddings, funerals, the Fourth of July, birthday parties, summer camps. To excise all of those things from our lives because we can’t prove they don’t cause some residual brainwashing would make the world less than it was.
As a secular Jew, I grew up treating Passover and even my Bar Mitzvah in about the same way I treated birthday parties and summer camps; a fun time to get together and sing and appreciate family and friends, a marking of life transitions and the passing of time. But it grew harder and harder for me to appreciate them when I realized that I didn’t really approve of celebrating the deaths of the Egyptian first-born, or that chanting the Torah and drawing moral lessons from it felt kind of like BSing in front of everyone. Even school graduations got to feel a little like “go forth and be a cog in a slightly more complex machine than the one you are currently a cog in.”
In New York, I was able to have a good time and sing and meet people and mark the passings of the seasons, and for one of the first times affirm values that I really believed in. When Raemon got up there and started talking about how each year the sun went dark, and each year people died during the winter, but each year the sun came back—and when he went onto how each year we humans added a little bit more of our own light, and one day we would conquer the darkness entirely and no one would have to die anymore—well, it was a beautiful experience. Not life altering, not rationality-maximizing, but beautiful. And to be terribly clinical, the person I was before the ritual would have approved of everything that went on, which is not a test simple brainwashing can pass.
I agree that experiencing the sacred can be done individually. So can sex. It’s not the same, though, in either case. Ever since the days of lighting fires and chanting about the gods, we’ve been doing our sacredness in groups. Even the ancients who took “sacred” totally literally knew you needed a minyan. It just works better. It’s something I feel a need for. And I’d only fulfill that need in a group I completely trust, because of the brainwashing and awkwardness concerns you mentioned. And this was it. I don’t think I took it seriously on an intellectual level, and I didn’t have the same feelings as the people above who said it helped cement concepts into their mind. But I felt catharsis afterwards. I smiled a lot and sang a lot and it was good.
A commenter downstream said that his worry here “has to do with seriousness and how much I value banter and puncturing self-importance”. I think we already have too much self-importance puncturing; too much irony. I think on the scales of “funny things should be taken lightly, solemn things should be taken with solemnity”, we are too good at the former and too worried about social stigma to do the latter. In fact, of everything I’m impressed with Raemon for, the thing that impressed me most was his ability to take himself seriously, to resist the overpowering urge to say “Ha ha guys, I don’t really think I’m cool enough to have strong feelings and officiate a celebration of the seasons, it’s all just ironic, I’m not silly or something.”
Except when it was silly. Raemon had the rare skill to design a night for us that was both funny and solemn at once, in exactly the right places, and to the exact degree that each idea required. I appreciate the humor but I think it was the solemnity that was beautiful.
I don’t think I’m worrying about brainwashing concerns or failing the social proof respectability checks.
I’m seeing a community cementing thing that I see no intrinsic fun in and a lot of other people seem to be seeing intrinsic fun in, which is tripping my “pretend to be like the normals and make the extra effort to participate in the unfun thing that is actually fun for them because they are not like you and then they might be less likely to kill you” instinct.
What if next year’s ritual includes chanting thrice unto the heavens a solemn vow not to kill the people who don’t go to next year’s ritual?
...nah, I don’t think anyone wants to to kill or even shun people who don’t go to the ritual. Of the top ten LW contributors on the table on the right, only two of them (me and Alicorn) attended, and for me it was a last-second sort of thing. Eliezer didn’t go. It would be kind of hard to shun Eliezer and 80% of the top contributors, even if people wanted to. Only a tiny proportion of the community went to the ritual and those who chose not to were in good company.
More philosophically, wouldn’t the same complaint apply to having real-life meetups at all (wouldn’t it exclude people who prefer to just talk via the Internet?) or writing HPMoR (now non-readers feel left out of a lot of discussions and don’t get in-jokes, so they might feel pressure to read it) or CFAR minicamps (people who don’t get selected to go might feel like they’re less a part of the community). And I know one commenter above managed to find some trivial differences between board game night and ritual night, but the fundamental problem of “What if I don’t enjoy this but I feel like I have to go anyway?” remains sound.
I think the road of not doing fun things that most people want because someone who doesn’t want to do it might feel left out leads to sitting quietly in a dark room. And the road of never doing community cementing things because people might be outside them leads to never trying to cement the community. And I think that the ritual, in this case, is being held to a much higher standard than any other activity of this sort just because it sounds kind of weird.
The particular problem with the ritual is that unlike the other things, it seems to exist only for the purpose of community-building. Opting out of the other activities makes your cognitive dissonance module say “well, maybe I don’t like fanfiction / board games / decision theory that much”, which isn’t that bad. Opting out of the ritual makes the cognitive dissonance module say “well, maybe I don’t care that much for being a community member”, which is a bit more unfortunate.
Then there’s also the small thing where the nonsensical community forming rituals have popped up in every human culture everywhere as far back as we know anything about human cultures, and always tend to develop the side effect of the socially gelled people favoring each other a bit more over the boring people who don’t bother to play along with the rituals. This is what the social instinct response is about, not paranoia about hooded murderers going about stabbing people one night. Traditional societies seem to end up with all members participating in whatever the local ritual is, because that’s the guarantee for belonging in the in-group and the other in-group members having your back. If you don’t see the point in the ritual, tough. The social cohesion mechanism wasn’t built for you, just smile and play-act along for the bit of extra guarantee that someone might have food to spare for you as well on the next famine year.
I think that people’s response to ritual is hard to explain. I have trouble explaining it. “Community-building” is sort of the default explanation. In the same way, if there were a real-life meetup, “getting to know people better”, which is almost a synonym for “community building”, is a default explanation because it’s hard to explain why we like meeting people face to face when online conversation is so much easier.
I think you make a good point that presenting it as “community building” might sound exclusionary, and I will stop using that justification. But in the end I don’t think it is any more about community building than meetups or board games or anything like that—only harder to explain, so that that explanation becomes more salient. Maybe we should just bill it as “Come and sing and feel emotions.”
Sure, but this is in the same sense that it’s hard to explain why we perceive three-dimensional objects when the input we’re getting is two-dimensional arrays. It took a lot of smart people paying attention to unravel that particular puzzle, but there’s nothing fundamentally mysterious about it.
There’s a lot of stuff going on in face to face interactions that isn’t present in online conversation, and it evidently includes things that many of us find gratifying.
Which things those are is worth knowing (not least because we can use that knowledge to build more gratifying telepresence rigs) but not knowing it doesn’t preclude being gratified by them, any more than not knowing how to derive 3D models from 2D images precludes perceiving 3D objects.
Not that you’re saying otherwise, granted. I suspect I’m just responding emotionally to the idea of demanding an explanation before it’s OK to value something.
I agree with this sentiment in general, but in cases where the “something” that’s being valued is valued only by some people, rather than all (here I am referring to rituals, rather than just “meeting people face to face”), seeking an explanation is more important.
(blink)
That is, if I value two practices P1 and P2, and 95% of the population values P1 and only 5% values P2, you’re saying it’s more important to seek an explanation for valuing P2 than an explanation for valuing P1… yes?
Can you expand on why you believe that?
… what?
I’m not sure how you got what you said from what I said; I surmise that I was much less clear than I thought, or that I am not understanding you. Attempt #2, in the hope that it’s the former:
If everyone likes a thing, then asking “why do we like that thing” is of academic interest.
If some people like a thing but other people don’t like that thing, then asking “why do some people like that thing” has practical use. Maybe we can bring the naysayers around. Maybe we will discover that the advocates’ reasons for liking the thing are bad reasons. Maybe we’ll discover something about the underlying preferences that will allow the pro-thingers and the anti-thingers to get along better. In any case we’ll very likely come to understand each other better, and will be less likely to think that people of the other preference type are abnormal; at the most basic level, we’ll do better at keeping in mind that people of the opposite preferences exist at all. That’s a good thing.
The relevance to the discussion of rituals has to do with the fact that some participants and pro-ritual commenters have expressed sentiments such as “humans need ritual” or “people like ritual” or “people have a need for experiences of sacredness” or other things along those lines. My motivation for commenting has been largely to point out that such comments are sorely in need of having the word “some” (or, at best, “most”, conditional on at least some data supporting such a claim) inserted into them.
And given that that’s the situation — that some people like rituals, but some clearly do not — the question of “why do some people like ritual” acquires a more than academic interest, for the reasons I outlined above.
Sorry about the failure of communication, but as it happens you answered my question. Thank you.
To my mind, asking why everyone likes a thing that everyone likes has practical use. If we can answer that question, we can understand how we make that judgment, we can understand how we make related judgments. That’s a good thing. (I do agree that it’s of academic interest, though. Like many things of academic interest, it has practical use.)
That aside, though… sure, if your motivation is largely to point out that some people don’t need ritual, like ritual, or need experiences of sacredness, I expect that’s true.
Right. I probably am going for a bit of a selective reduction here with my kneejerk reactions. There’s all sorts of quite strange when you think about it stuff going on with playing board games too, for instance, which I’m not being concerned about.
Still, I think we have a mutual appreciation here that rituals are powerful stuff. I worry a bit when I see a not that broad culture (compared to society at large, or the academia as a whole, for example) like LW picking up on a ritual and taking it up as its own, and thinking about what role rituals end up having everywhere in human history. I’m seeing things getting on a path to ending up as something like Freemasonry (assuming for the moment that they’re more secular than they are), where there might be an understanding that the rituals are just a formality, but participating in the culture without participating in the rituals still basically doesn’t work.
I might also notice that all the subcultures that stick around for more than a generation or two seem to come with rituals running the show. It might be that the actual problem I’m pattern matching isn’t about adopting rituals at all, but about subcultures sticking around past their expiration date instead. Subcultures that go bad quickly tend to have more overt badness indicators.
“Come join the Solstice Ritual” sounds like just people being silly to me, while this sounds like something from a Grant Morrison comic book that will end with someone’s head being carved open by robed creatures with giant insect heads.
Hmm… although I’ve never been to any of these rituals, but from reading the descriptions, it hasn’t been my impression that it would exist only for community-building. For example, I found the description of the 2011 ritual touching on an emotional level even though I was reading it all alone at home, and I expect that the rituals would also have given me a strong emotional kick that wasn’t directly related to the group bonding aspect. Going out to a movie with friends would probably be a good analogy: being in a group does enhance the experience, and the group bonding is a plus, but the main reason we go there is the movie itself.
The social bonding and getting to meet new folks was not what gave me a strong feeling of “man, I want to participate in that” when I read the description of the original ritual. In fact, all of the social bonding stuff was just extra: a nice plus, but hardly the point. What attracted me was, well, the ritual itself: the feeling that it could give me a deep, lasting emotional experience that’d move me to the core, a faint echo of which I felt while reading the post. That would ultimately be a solitary and personal experience, even if I needed the presence of a group to help me achieve it.
This isn’t at all unlike what I imagine the ingroup-strengthening response to ritual to feel from the inside.
What I was trying to say was that I don’t think that its level of “(only community building)-ness” is much higher than that of board games or fan fiction. A little higher, maybe, but not that much. I don’t know if I’d feel differently if I’d actually participated in such a ritual, though.
But I don’t want to sit quietly in a dark room. If that’s our new thing I’ll feel left out!
I mean, that actually was sort of the central point of the event (which I know you had to miss out on!) so I’m not entirely sure what Yvain’s point was :P
(Actually come to think of it you may well have been sitting in a dark room at the time)
When you say “see no intrinsic fun in” do you mean “this doesn’t sound like fun” or do you mean “I have tried this, it wasn’t fun, and I don’t anticipate rationalists being able to do it in a way that would make it fun”? If the former, do you think actually trying it would be valuable in the name of gathering more information? In general, what are your thoughts on comfort zone expansion?
The latter. I’ve been through all sorts of community forming rituals, and always found them nonsensical and mostly unfun. Comfort zone expansion is good, but if a tried thing is not working out, it’s not working out.
It was not my intention to accuse the ritual of being inflicted on anyone; I didn’t think I said or implied such a thing, but if so, let me assure you that I quite realize that attendance was voluntary. As for the other megameetups, I will try to attend the next time a non-ritual one happens. I was sadly unable to make it on that Sunday. They seem to happen about once a year, yes?
Your other comments seem to suggest that you think that I am worried about brainwashing, or what have you; that’s just not the issue here. So your comments such as
miss the mark a bit. Like Risto_Saarelma, I just dislike rituals (fairly strongly). From your comment, and others in this thread, I’ve discovered that some (most?) people do like them, and like them enough to serve as motivation for traveling some distance, or at least for attending an event they’d otherwise skip. All I can say is: mind = blown. I really, genuinely did not expect this to be such a prevalent preference in the rationalist community.
I’m sorry, I may have either rounded you to the nearest cliche or lumped my responses to other people’s comments into my response to yours.
Your comments about “social pressure” and “how can something be consensual if you enshrine it as a ritual” did make me think there was a consent aspect to it, and your comment about “using ritual to insert things deep into your psyche is something that I think is just bad” was where I got the feeling of brainwashing from, but I can see how I might’ve been misunderstanding them.
So you’re saying you have such strong anti-ritual preferences that you assumed people must have been awkwardly attending something they didn’t like in order to fit in? Hm. That makes sense.
I guess what I’ve learned from this is that I still can’t describe the reasons for why I like things. “Community bonding” sounds good, but when you press me on it I admit it’s kind of dumb and the ritual wasn’t really about that at all. “Sense of the sacred” sounds good but there were a lot of other easier ways to get that feeling I didn’t go for. I’m just going to say I have an unexplained preference for rituals of about the same magnitude as an unexplained preference for playing fantasy role-playing games, and although I can come up with just-so stories for it (“group bonding”, “search for meaning”, whatever) I can’t explain it but would like to keep doing it anyway.
I… suppose. Sort of.
Reading the OP made me immediately update to a realization that at least some people really liked this sort of thing; I assumed the other attendees had their own reasons for attending (which may not have just boiled down to peer pressure); I didn’t expect to subsequently learn that a preference for rituals is a) apparently everyone’s reason for coming, and b) much more common in the rationalist community than I thought. My own concerns about consent and social pressure are part of my reaction, though not, as I’ve said, the entirety.
For what it’s worth, I, too, have a pretty strong preference for playing fantasy role-playing games (especially of the tabletop variety), so your analogy hits close to home. I am trying to imagine what it would be like to have a strong “ick” reaction to tabletop RPGs such that I couldn’t understand why anyone would do it and would avoid a group that engaged in this activity, and I think I am succeeding, at least partly. (Of course, what I can’t do is verbalize any reason why I’d have such a reaction, which I definitely can for my objections to rituals.) Putting myself back in my own shoes, my response to such a person would be a lack of comprehension of what it was they found so objectionable; I guess I wouldn’t have much to say in response other than a shrug and “well, RPGs are awesome and we like playing them and it doesn’t hurt anyone”. I surmise from your comment that your response to my feelings about rituals can be summed up similarly?
I always refer to this chapter on ritual from the book Secular Wholeness.
Which assumptions generated the incorrect predictions? Are you pulling your Bayesian updates backwards through the belief-propogation network given this new evidence? (In other words: updating on a small probability event should change your mind about a whole host of related beliefs.)
I think it was some variant of the Typical Mind Fallacy, albeit one based not only on my own preferences but on those of my friends (though of course you’d expect that I’d associate with people who have preferences similar to mine, so this does not make the fallacy much more excusable).
I think the main belief I’ve updated based on this is my estimate on the prevalence of my sort of individualistic, suspicious-of-groups, allergic-to-crowds, solitude-valuing outlook in the Less Wrong community, which I have adjusted strongly downward (although that adjustment has been tempered by the suspicion, confirmed by a couple of comments on this post, that people who object to things such as rituals etc. often simply don’t speak up).
I have also been reminded of something I guess I knew but hadn’t quite absorbed, which is that, apparently, many people in aspiring rationalist communities come from religious backgrounds. This of course makes sense given the base rates. What I didn’t expect is that people would value the ritual trappings of their religious upbringing, and value them enough to construct new rituals with similar forms.
I will also add that despite this evidence that way more people like rituals than I’d have expected, and my adjustment of my beliefs about this, I am still unable to alieve it. Liking ritual, experiencing a need for and enjoyment of collectivized sacredness, is completely alien to me to the point where I am unable to imagine it.
For epistemology’s sake I’ll speak up so you may be more confident in the suspicion...
I find these rituals, as described, to be completely uninteresting as social activities, and have a visceral negative reaction to imagining people doing this, even semi-seriously. “Group self-hacking for cohesion and bonding” is the...sort-of good way to put it I guess, because I would rather describe it as “optimistically wielding double-edged daggers forged from the Dark Arts”.
Thank you for posting, I really do appreciate it.
I do want to note that, for at least one proponent of the ritual (Yvain, see here), the “cohesion and bonding” turned out not to be the underlying motivation. This makes sense to me, and I am very suspicious about any claims such as “research indicates that group bonding increases happiness, so I choose to do this thing that I believe will generate group bonding”, or “group cohesiveness is beneficial, so we should have rituals because they promote group cohesiveness”. They just don’t ring true; I have a hard time believing that people think that way. It seems to me that some people just really like and enjoy rituals. I don’t really understand why, of course, but that’s just because my preference skews in the opposite direction. The stuff about bonding and cohesion seems like rationalization, or, at best, an attempt to describe one’s bare preference, rather than an explanation of what actually motivated a choice.
That having been said, I quite agree that rituals are forged from the Dark Arts. This contributes to, though does not constitute, my dislike of them.
Thanks! You have already updated, so I’m not sure if you want to update further, but I’m wondering if you had read Why our kind can’t cooperate, and what your reaction to that was?
I have indeed read it; I’ve even linked it to other people on this site myself, and taken explicit steps to counteract the effect; see e.g. this post.
I have no problem saying “I agree; you are right and/or this is awesome”. This happens to be a topic to which my reaction is otherwise. I think it’s especially important to speak up in cases where I disagree and where I think a number of other people also disagree but hesitate to speak.
Sorry, that’s not the context at which I meant it—I’m sure you’re as willing to admit you were wrong as the next rationalist. I mean it in the context of “Barbarians vs. Rationalists”—if group cohesion is increased by ritual, and group cohesion is useful to the rationality movement, than ritual could be useful. Wanting to dissociate ourselves from the trappings of religion seems like a case of “reversed stupidity” to me...
Yes, and if that were the reason behind my dislike of ritual, that would be an apropos comment; but as I explained, that’s not the case.
(I apologize for the harsh tone there, but I am failing to think of a way to express that response with a suitable level of tact, maybe because it’s 2 AM here. Sorry. :\ )
As for the larger “Barbarians vs. Rationalists” point, I have two responses.
One: I really don’t think that “rituals generate group cohesion, and group cohesion is useful” is actually anyone’s true motivation here. I think people just like rituals. Which… is fine (with some caveats), even if I dislike it. But I don’t think we should be putting forth rationalizations as true motivations.
Two: I don’t think we should look at everything solely through the lens of “is this useful to the rationality movement”. If doing things that are “useful to the rationality movement” causes us to systematically do things we don’t actually like doing, or want to do, then I think we’ve rather missed the point. Now you might respond: “But Said, we do like this thing! We do want to do it!” Well, ok. Then do it. But then, as the mathematicians say, this reduces to the earlier argument.
I don’t understand this. How does a ritual differ from any other social event in this regard? I mean, if the group decides that some folks want to have a rationality discussion or a board game evening, then you also have a choice of attending or not, and a decision not to attend can also be interpreted as alienating.
The difference is that if we decide to play some board games once, all potential participants have input on whether or not to do it, and if the activity takes place, anyone who didn’t want to do it can abstain.
The next time the suggestion is brought up, the process repeats, with no decrease in consensualness.
With a ritual, once it’s instituted, when the time comes to do it again, there is not a repeat of the discussion wherein we decide whether to do it, and if so, how. Now it’s “well of course we’re going to do it, this is the ritual that we do”. AND it’s now tied to your group’s identity. Not only is there no longer anywhere near the same possibility of saying “eh, on second thought, forget that, let’s do something else”, but people who abstain aren’t just deciding not to do this one particular thing, they’re now abstaining from something which defines the group, and therefore mark themselves as Not Part Of The Group.
You seem to essentially be drawing a distinction between 1) events that are negotiated separately each time, and 2) ones which have become established and are held repeatedly with no negotiation. But board game evenings can also become so popular that they become traditional and are held at regular intervals with no express negotiation, and rituals can also fail to draw an audience and so never become a tradition in the first place.
This doesn’t make sense. Either a ritual is qualitatively different than a board game night and saying it’s pretty much the same thing and therefore just as harmless is false, or it’s basically the same thing, in which case why do you want to do it so much?
I wasn’t saying that there’s no qualitative difference between board games and ritual. I was saying that I don’t see a difference with regard to the specific aspect that SaidAchmiz was bringing up.
Last time I kept telling people “I’m eventually going to respond to this” and people were sort of annoyed (until I eventually did respond to it).
I’m going to be doing that again, and apologize, but it’s easier to address all the concerns at once.
I would, however, recommend that you attempt to revisit that paragraph, steelman your opposition a bit, and see if you can think of some ways in which rituals might be qualitatively different than board games in some ways, but not in others.
My comment was more an invitation for Kaj to steelman his own point than an objection, but I see what you’re getting at.
Key differences:
1: weirdness: A Boardgame night is extremely normal. Tons of normal people and nerds have variations on the concept. A Ritual night is very odd, and therefore automatically screens out outsiders.
Exclusionary: Indeed, the entire point of Rituals is to draw a line between them and us. This is off-putting to anyone who does not want to put themselves into the “us”. A new person can happily join in and enjoy the familiarity of playing boardgames and not feel like they’re being indoctrinated. They can get to know and bond with strangers over something familar. This is basically what Said earlier in this thread.
Room for individuality/nonparticipation: Boardgame night does not consist of the same thing each time. Maybe some nights we play Resistance, maybe other nights we play Dominion, and maybe different subsets of boardgame night play different games. A ritual not only makes everyone do the same thing, it makes them do it all at once. No one really cares if you overhear “I’ve got wood for sheep!” while you’re playing Ascension, or just having a conversation, but it would certainly ruin the mood of a ritual. The only polite responses to Ritual are participation, silence, or leaving.
There’s some more I feel I can say on this but I can’t yet articulate it appropriately. It has to do with seriousness and how much I value banter and puncturing self-importance.
I endorse this response as sufficiently representative of my own views also, especially the 2nd and 3rd bullet points (the first slightly less because I am not terribly concerned about being “normal” as such).
I tend to be pro-weirdness in general, but trying to emulate religion feels like weirdness (in the positive sense) trying to emulate normalcy, which feels (negatively)weird to me.
That reminds me of this: since where I am most people my age are non-religious (and often take the piss out of practising Catholics), being a practising Catholic strongly feels to me like meta-contrarianism (both when I was one—though I didn’t know that word—and now that I’m not).
Upvoting for… well, for sounding weird, actually.
Regarding the point about “us vs them”, I agree that some traditional rituals have this issue, but I can’t think of anyone who would fill the role of “them” in the case of the Solstice celebration. The event was mostly about humanity as a whole prevailing over darkness / death / ignorance / etc. This seems much less problematic than ritualistic bonding over being different from some particular group of people.
That is indeed a much better answer. Thank you. (It actually does update me slightly away from ritual-use, although I wasn’t planning on doing the things that I’d have avoided after updating)
I used to have a group of friends (some closer than others), and we would all get together and play Settlers of Catan a given day of the week (~4 years ago, I don’t remember which day it was). It consisted of the “same thing” (obviously the game turned out differently every week, but still) every week. There was not really room for “nonparticipation” in the sense that if you wanted to hang out with these people that day, you played Catan. Would it upset you if you learned that there was a regular meetup of Catan LW enthusiasts who meet once a week to play?
Some of my closest friends are from the Israeli filking community. There’s no “ritual” per se, but we know and love the same songs, we sing them together and not-singing is kinda frowned upon. It’s certainly “weird”, and even somewhat exclusionary (helped by a bit of justified feeling of persecution from the rest of SF fandom). Would it upset you if you learned that there was a regular meetup of Filk LW enthusiasts who meet once a week to sing together?
I’m really asking these questions (in the sense that I do not find myself certain either way for what your answer will be, although I assign >.5 that it will be “no” on both).
If it is a “no”, then it seems these are not your true rejections.
If it is a “yes”, you seem to have a wide brush to paint “things I do not want LWers to do.”
Basically, rituals force themselves to be identity components more than other activities. I can play catan or not without feeling like I’m a cataner or not. I don’t want there to be rituals that make you feel like an lwer or not.
Whatever happened to keeping identities small?
It would upset me if either of those were primary activities of the lw group in the place I was in.
There is a rather enormous difference between things I care whether lwers do and things I care whether lw does. Some lwers somewhere having rituals doesn’t bother me, every lw group deciding rituals are a good idea and adopting them would. I don’t think this is actually a big risk but I think it’s worth pointing out especially since the context is the especially influential NYLW group.
Also, the less strict something is the less I care whether it’s a ritualized regular occurrence. I would much rather come to a song night than to a night for the same specific songs each time, and I would basically never go to catan night.
I feel the same way, and this is a large part of my motivation for posting my objections in this thread.
I’m trying to steelman your arguments as much as I can, but I find myself confused. The best I can do is: “I’m worried that people would find LW communities unwelcoming if they do not go to rituals. Further, I’m worried that rituals are a slippery-slope: once we start having rituals, they might start being the primary activity of LW and make the experience unwelcoming even if non-ritual activities are explicitly open, because it feels more like ’a Church group that occasionally has secular activities. I’m worried that this will divide people into those who properly mark themselves as “LWers” and those who don’t, thus starting our entropic decay into a cult.”
So far, your objections seem to be to this being the primary activity of the LW group, which—honestly—I would join you. But if a regularly meeting LW group also had a Catan night once a week (for Catan enthusiasts, obviously—if you don’t like Catan don’t come) and a Filk night once a month (for filk enthusiasts, again), I am not sure this would hasten a descent into a Catan-only or filk-only group. Similarly, if a LW group has a ritual once a year (or even if every LW group has a ritual, and even it’s the same ritual), it doesn’t seem likely rituals will become the primary thing the group does.
“There is a rather enormous difference between things I care whether lwers do and things I care whether lw does.”
I notice I am confused. LessWrong is a web site, and to some extent a community of people, which I tend to refer to as “Less Wrongers”. If you mean these words the same as I do, then I do not understand—“LW does something” means “the community does something” which means “many members do something”. I’m not really sure how LW does something is distinguished from LWers doing it...
If I join a golf club where all its members apart from me also happen to be in the bowling club, I’m still not joining the bowling club. I don’t care if “Golfers” go bowling, but it would be really annoying if “gold club” became about bowling, or if I showed up to golf club and all the golfers spend the day talking about that awesome bowling experience they had over the weekend. I never wanted to be parted of a rituals club and wouldn’t have joined a “Have debates/hangouts about AI, epistemology, rationality, morality, meta-ethics, and logic with interesting people and do rituals with them club.”
Basically, I agree with Said’s answer to Raemon’s answer to you.
Insofar as the rituals are something fun people want to do, I don’t mind. Insofar as the rituals are presented as “This is something objectively awesome that you should rationally want for your own LW group!” I do.
This actually makes a fair amount of sense to me. There’s a few ways to interpret it. The most obvious one to me is “Less Wrong has a reputation, built into its mission statement, about caring about rationality, winning at life, etc. I value those things.” Depending on how collectivist you are, you might either care that people can look at you, say “That person is a LWer,” and then correctly infer that you care about rationality and winning at life.
Or, more collectivist-y (which ordinarily I’d give higher likelihood to but maybe not in this case), one might enjoy feeling an identity as a Less Wronger, which includes, built into that identity, caring about epistemic truth and instrumental victory.
I can definitely see it unpleasant if “being a Less Wronger” came to be known, both among the community’s allies and enemies, as (insert arbitrary thing you don’t like here)
For example, I’m not a Objectivist, but Less Wrong terminology shares some common ancestry with Objectivism. So when I’m explaining LW to new people (especially more liberal people), I often get “wait, so is this an Objectivism thing?” which is annoying to me, not just because they are drawing false conclusions about me which I have to correct—but also because I don’t really like Objectivism and it leaves an icky (irrational) feeling just to feel connected to that movement.
There’s another interpretation, which is “the sorts of things that LW groups do affects whether I participate in LW communities [in the sense of particular local groups] and thereby the extent to which I participate in the greater LW community [in the larger sense of “people who identify as ‘LWers’ and do things collectively on that basis]”.
After all, if I want to engage with the larger LW community, the most direct (and one of the most feasible by far) ways to do so is to participate in your local LW community, should such exist. One can hardly choose to participate in some other local LW community that is located in Whatevertown, Distantstate.
I’m very unfamiliar with Objectivism, and this comment made me curious: what terminology do we share with that movement?
I think it’s quite unlikely for this ritual to become tied to the group’s identity, let alone define the group. There are a lot of people strongly involved in the community who don’t participate (as Yvain said), and a number of people who explicitly voice objections against it. Also, the event only happens once a year, there’s nothing as pervasive as e.g. a ritual component in every meetup, so the influence on the whole group’s mentality is probably minimal.
I agree that this is likely to happen, since holding the ritual and organizing “something else” are not mutually exclusive. Are you also concerned about opportunity cost?
What?! The winter solstice ritual is already tied to the OB/LW NYC group’s identity — or at least it very much seems that way from the outside, and it certainly looks like (at least some of) the group’s members are actively working to both make that be the case, and to promote that image of the event to the rest of LW.
Sorry, I misunderstood, I do agree that the ritual is connected to the group identity. Do you expect it to have significant effects on the LW group identity besides increasing the sense of community?
I think that opting out of a component of the group identity doesn’t necessarily lead to alienation. For example, caring about FAI is a significant part of the LW group identity, but people who care about FAI much less than, say, building rationality skills (like myself) are still welcome and included.
Do you mean signaling that you’re not part of the group, or feeling that you’re not part of the group, or both?
This is true, but a ritual designed explicitly as a group-bonding exercise (and, it seems, the most prominent such exercise) is more likely to be something opting out of which contributes to alienation than, say, caring about FAI.
Both. Although I didn’t so much mean “signaling that you’re not part of the group” as “doing something which is interpreted by other group members as an indication that you’re not part of the group”, but the difference is of emphasis at best.
On the subject of making up your own rituals, I can’t resist sharing these two links from Wondermark.
Update: The new tradition of the Hanukkah Duck develops further.
… hah.
… are those ducks purchasable? I’m asking for.… a friend.
I stole that usage from (I think) Marcello. The idea is that people come together to be thankful and have fun and celebrate in one specific place and time and manner, and that makes it a unifying event that everyone enjoys more.
Yeah, that makes sense.
My question then is: why make it a ritual rather than just a holiday party? Why not: “Every year, we [my friends/this meetup group/whoever] get together on December the whateverth and have a holiday party! It’s tradition! Yay!”? That works as a Schelling Point too, no?
Of course, at this point, “why” is partly rhetorical, as daenerys and Raemon have more or less responded.
First off, I upvoted your post. I probably should edit something to this effect in the main post—I value this kind of feedback very much. I think ritual is valuable, but I acknowledge that it has some important costs, most notably in the form of visceral reactions among both existing important members of the community, and potential newcomers who might be turned off.
Daenerys covered a lot of the important points. I’ll be addressing some additional points in a later post. Most of what I had to say about this is covered in my post from last year, The Value (and Danger) of Ritual
Thank you; I appreciate your response. Based on what daenerys wrote, I think that my response breaks down as follows:
Using ritual to insert things deep into your psyche is something that I think is just bad. Using writings on rationality as sermons, reciting litanies about truth by candelight, etc., misses the point and is dangerous because it attaches you to the views and propositions in question too closely.
Using ritual as group bonding… I don’t understand the motivation, to be honest. I acknowledge that it probably works, I just can’t understand why you’d want to do it. This is, of course, a personal preference, not any kind of criticism per se.
The above two points notwithstanding, I find rituals very icky and offputting (especially, upon reflection, when they have an (explicitly?) religious feel to them!). This is the case regardless of whether the purpose is worthwhile and whether the ritual effectively serves the purpose.
From your linked post:
This describes me. Not literally; I never (well, almost never) had any mindless rituals forced upon me, but I don’t like mindless ritual and enjoy the rationalist perspective for absence thereof.
I haven’t tuned out, but I do find it offputting, as I mentioned.
I find this view unfortunate. Not just for the personal reason that you’re describing my reaction as an acceptable cost (which I can understand, even if it makes me somewhat sad), but because I don’t agree with your framing. I don’t think I’m a cynic. I consider myself rather idealistic. I’m not sure why you think only cynics would be turned off by such things.
The rest of your post largely doesn’t address my concerns, I’m afraid. bryjnar’s comment here is fairly close to my own views, and the responses don’t seem at all satisfactory to me.
I am beginning to suspect that this may be a fairly fundamental difference in preferences.
Happiness research is pretty clear that better social connections make us happier. There’s a reason that church-goers are happier than non-attenders. Ritual is good at facilitating group bonding, and group bonding is good for people. (Provided it doesn’t lead you to do stupid stuff.)
I fear that part of my comment was not entirely clear...
Let me ask you this: do you actually want to group bond? This is quite a separate question from “based on research, I believe group bonding will make me happier”.
For myself, I sometimes think: “Hm, I like this person/these people; they are cool and interesting. I enjoy hanging out with them, and intend to continue doing so in the future.”
I can’t imagine myself thinking “Hm, I want to group bond with some people/these people. What can I do that will have that effect?”
That is, group bonding seems to be the goal here. Is it actually something that you directly want, or is this a case of “research says that it will make me happier, and I want to be happier, so I will do this”?
P.S. As for the church goers… yes, I can believe that they are happier (although that’s “happier on average”, right?). I don’t think we should therefore conclude that they have the right idea about this whole ritual-as-group-bonding thing.
Yes, group bonding is something I directly want, because I’ve enjoyed it in other contexts before. For one thing, I’m not that good at making casual friendships, and given a casual social setting, I won’t get very close to people. I wouldn’t have traveled to New York just to hang out. Participating in a more structured group activity makes people more likely to actually get together and connect with each other. Also, ritual is good for bringing up topics (death, hope) that are hard to bring up in casual conversation. Once introduced in a structured way like a ritual, the topics are easier to address afterwards in unstructured conversation.
Also, I think community support is a good thing that most of us don’t have enough of. Group bonding helps produce a norm of helping each other, even if we’re not especially interested in every group member as an individual.
I imagine group bonding is valuable because of reasons like “I want to adapt those values and behaviors, because they seem useful, but I can’t individually self-modify—I should find a group that follows these behaviors/values, so that I can adapt them via peer pressure.” At least, that’s my perspective.
That is almost certainly what it is. I am going to unpack some things in an upcoming post and possibly explain what I mean better, but in the end, you won’t say “oh, now that you cleared that up I agree with you,” it’ll be more “now I understand why we disagree on this.”
For the time being—taboo the word ritual. What is it that we did that is different from a “holiday party?” Be specific.
I’ll be addressing in more detail in an upcoming post, but it’d be helpful to know what exactly you’re concerned about. To the extent that you think this has negative consequences beyond ostracizing people who find in aesthetically distasteful (which I agree is a non-trivial consequence), could you also elaborate on why it is bad to use ritual to hack your psyche? Is it also bad to use positive reinforcement to hack your psyche? What consequences do you anticipate?
These are good questions, and I ask that you bear with me as I try to verbalize my gut-level response.
For one thing, you sang songs. Together. Songs intended to trigger emotional responses both by their content and by the fact that they were being sung as a group.
You recited litanies — again, together (right? please correct me if I’m misunderstanding any of the details here!) — and read “sermons” (of rationality content, albeit excellently written, of course; I certainly don’t deny that Eliezer’s writing is evocative), in a candle-lit room (with intentionally decreasing candlelight? I’m going by Yvain’s description here), again, in an atmosphere designed to evoke emotional responses.
If any of my friends suggested doing any of this at any holiday party I’ve been to, I (and most other people present) would look at them as if they had spontaneously gone stark raving mad. If the host of the party were the one suggesting this, and if they managed to make it happen, I would seriously consider never attending any of their holiday parties again.
There was apparently an altar? I understand this to be a metaphor for… something — a place for some prop(s) used in the ceremony? Heck, the fact that there WAS a ceremony at all, of any kind, is part of what I’m talking about.
As for the rest of your questions, I will have to give them a bit more thought before posting a reply. For now, I will emphasize that yes, ostracizing people who find this aesthetically unpleasant is indeed a non-trivial consequence, to say the least. Not the only consequence, but a serious one.
In the meantime, please clarify something: what exactly do you mean by “hack your psyche”? I think I understand the phrase as you’re using it, but it would help if I were sure.
“Hack your psyche” was Daenerys’ phrasing, but I’d approximately endorse it. Basically, there are ways that are brain works, badly. For example, we tend to want to shy away from harsh truths, and look for excuses not to do a lot of work. Reading Litanies of Tarski is explicitly supposed to build into yourself the idea that you are a person who IS capable of re-evalulating beliefs, regardless of how comfortable they are. Reciting the litany may or may not actually be useful for this, especially in group settings. I actually lean towards it NOT being that useful, but being harmless and fun. (More on this later)
In “The Value and Danger of Ritual” I go into how I used the ritual-development process to make myself the sort of person who cared about the world and was willing to work to improve it, even if it meant accepting math that felt intuitively wrong to me.
I do understand your visceral response to this (I can easily imagine similar visceral responses of my own to things that are only slightly different), but you make a leap from “the host does this thing which I am not used to” to “the host appears stark raving mad.” There’s a big gap there where I think you think something actually bad happened, but which you haven’t articulated any negative consequences beyond your instinctive aversion.
I recognize that this is asking a fairly hard question, and don’t feel obligated to respond right away. But I’d like to you to articulate, if you can, which of the following, you feel revulsion to:
Singing songs
Singing songs about things you believe strongly in
Singing or reciting things in groups
Making any deliberate effort to build group cohesion and signal tribal loyalty
Having candles
Deliberately lighting and extinguishing candles to produce an effect
Deliberately manipulating lighting to produce an emotional effect
Reading excerpts from authors you like
Reading excerpts from authors you respect a lot and who have shaped your worldview
Reading excerpts from only one particular author you respect (I share this concern, I’ll address it in an upcoming post)
Giving a speech in deliberately manipulated lightning (taboo “sermon”)
Giving a speech in to an audience whose emotional state has been deliberately altered
Giving a speech whose goal is to build group unity
Giving a speech whose goal is to call people to action towards a difficult goal
Having some meetups featuring group activities that some portion of the potential community won’t enjoy (examples include music, as well as strategy games, presentation on material you don’t care about)
Having some group activities that some portion of the potential community actively dislikes
Deliberately provoking emotional responses (without attempting to build group cohesion or call to action)
Do any of those trigger a response individually? Can you identify which ones either cause a visceral response, or you feel would cause a negative consequence to occur? Either individually, or collectively?
I thought the Litany worked really well as a running gag, especially with the addition of the meta-litany as a punchline.
If reciting the Litany of Tarski in a group setting is valuable, I desire to BELIEVE that reciting the Litany of Tarski in a group setting is valuable. If reciting the Litany of Tarski in a group setting is NOT valuable, I desire to believe that reciting the Litany of Tarski in a group setting is NOT valuable. Let me not become too attached to beliefs I may not want.
Oh I thought it was fun and funny and worth including on those grounds, but I don’t think it caused most people to actually reflect on anything useful in the long term.
Mmm… no, I don’t think there’s actually a leap here. You should understand that by “stark raving mad” I didn’t actually mean anything like “I am seriously considering the possibility that my friend has had a sudden onset of severe, debilitating mental illness, and I should contact the nearest hospital forthwith”. I meant something more like “my friend has suggested an activity which I find aesthetically objectionable, though I don’t necessarily have any moral objections to it, and I am aware that some people out there do this and enjoy it, and that’s fine. I am surprised to hear my friend suggest it, because I did not think he/she was the kind of person who enjoyed it, and am additionally surprised that he/she would think that I or any of our other friends would enjoy it, as that conflicts with what we all know about each other’s personalities and preferences.” As an example, if I were at a party and one of my friends said: “Hey, let’s go to a strip club, and then a football game!” My reaction would be similar. I don’t think there’s anything morally wrong with strip clubs or football games (not inherently, anyway), but if one of my friends suggested that we go do this, I would be unpleasantly surprised, to say the least.
Of course there was also a strong element of, as you say, visceral response.
I will attempt to respond to your questions on visceral responses; I have to demur for now on negative consequences, though I will give it some thought and attempt a coherent reply soon.
Do I feel revulsion to:
Yes (somewhat), … (am having trouble coming up with any examples and therefore no response for now; can you provide any?), yes (strongly).
Yes (strongly), no (unless they’re scented, in which case yes, blegh), yes, yes.
Depends on the context. Are we holding an excerpt-reading-aloud party? (Is that a thing? It should be a thing, I think. Like a poetry reading, only… reading cool stuff other people wrote aloud. I’d participate maybe.) Then no, no objection. Are we doing it because this excerpt(s) triggered an emotional response and that’s what we’re going for overall? Then yes, strongly object.
My objection in this case is affected by whether we’re reading the thing with the intention of thinking and discussing it, in a casual atmosphere, or with the intention of not discussing it but instead just using it to generate emotions.
As for reading excerpts from only one particular author… I mean, I agree that it’s a concern… but I admit that it’s hard to get around the fact that Eliezer’s writing is exceptionally excellent. This, however, is really not the biggest problem in the whole enterprise.
Yes, yes, yes, and… mmm… no? But something about the phrasing strikes me oddly and I can’t put my finger on it...
These things don’t trigger revulsion, especially not the first (one would have to be truly unreasonable to object to that!), but of course I don’t like it when groups that I’m a member in have activities that I don’t like. (Isn’t that almost tautological?)
Somewhat. I’m very wary of this sort of thing, but I don’t think I find it inherently objectionable.
Hm.
I find your analogy about the sports game and stripclub pretty useful. I think that’s a very reasonable comparison.
I am interested in the notion that you object to provoking emotion on purpose objectionable. Does this apply to art in general? (On a similar note—do you go to movies or see plays? Do you go ever dim lights for romantic purposes?)
(The above sentence may sound like it’s trying to set up a gotcha, but I am mostly just clarifying that you are someone who likes to explore and engage intellectually, but not emotionally)
If a group is meeting regularly, doing things you like, does it make your world worse if they start meeting additional times, doing things that you don’t like?
I would say no, but the exigences of reality mean that extra activities tend to replace rather than simply add to prior ones.
That is fair.
That conclusion about my general preferences does not follow from my stated specific preferences.
Not… in general, no. I do strongly dislike it when authors/directors/etc. provoke emotion in a deliberate attempt to misdirect the reader/viewer/etc. from considering what is going on in the work. That is, when there is an attempt to provoke emotion directly, rather than as a result of seeing/reading/otherwise apprehending the content. I will attempt to provide examples when I think of some.
I do go to movies, and even Broadway shows, though not plays, and do on occasion dim lights for romantic purposes (or, to be more precise, locate intended-to-be-romantic activities in locations with suitable light levels… which phrasing makes it sound rather unromantic, I suppose… ah well).
I don’t actually think this is a fair characterization. As I said to Kaj_Sotala here, it’s the collectivization of emotion, and of the emotion of sacredness in this case, that I object to.
Maybe. It depends on the relative extent to which the activites I like and the activities I dislike contribute to the group’s identity and cohesiveness.
I may have worded it more strongly than you intended, but I thought you said:
In any case, I think I have at least a reasonable understanding of where you’re coming from. That’s all I have to say for now, although if you are able to articulate some of the other concerns you mentioned better that’d be appreciated.
There will be one more post which is something of an “emotional explanation of why I’m doing what I’m doing,” which is intended to be evocative but grounded in something very real. That will probably go up tomorrow. A few days later I’ll write up a more expansive post about where the idea of ritual and less wrong might or might not go, and what concerns I have about that.
I think this wonderfully evokes a point which may be off the radar, namely, that ‘ritual’ or whatever you call it (the possibility for group aesthetic experiences) is all around us in society. It permeates everything, it is all pervasive. I think that is true.
Choose the ritual that is right for you… not because it is most moving or pretty, but because it is the most true as far as you can discern.
A tangential point: It seems to me that aesthetic questions, questions of art, beauty, poetry, and the place of literature while occasionally mentioned are Less Wrong’s greatest blind spot. To recall Hamlet, it seems to me that there are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your rationality. Perhaps there are questions which we are not ready to discuss, which is fine. We don’t necessarily need to attack the immense, perhaps incommensurable, differences between the aesthetic morality of people-who-think-they-think-rationally, us.
Bad as in morally wrong, epistemically wrong, or instrumentally wrong?
Instrumentally wrong.
Thanks for clarifying.
Rereading your statement, the word “insert” jumps out at me. Would you endorse this modified statement?
Or would the badness depend on which things you’re preserving?