I’m running more 4-day “Cognitive Bootcamps” over the next couple months (during Lighthaven Eternal September season). DM me if you’re potentially interested (either as an individual, or as a team).
The workshop is most valuable to people who:
control their decisionmaking process (i.e. you decide what projects you or a team work on, rather than working at a day-job on someone else’s vision)
are either a) confused about planmaking / have a vague sense that they aren’t as strategically ambitious as they could be.
and/or, b) are at a place where it’s natural to spend a few days thinking big-picture thoughts before deciding on their next project.
There’s a secondary[1] focus on “practice solving confusing problems”, which IMO is time well spent, but requires more followup practice to pay off.
I wrote about the previous workshop here. Participants said on average they’d have been willing to pay $850 for it, and would have paid $5000 for the ideal, perfectly-tailored-for-them version. My plan is to charge $500/person for the next workshop, and then $1000 for the next one.
I’m most excited to run this for teams, who can develop a shared skillset and accompanying culture. I plan to tailor the workshops for the needs of whichever people show up.
The dates are not scheduled yet (depends somewhat on when a critical mass of participants are available). DM me if you are interested.
The skills being taught will be similar to the sort of thing listed in Skills from a year of Purposeful Rationality Practice and the Feedbackloop-first Rationality sequence. My default curriculum is aiming to teach several interrelated related skills you can practice over four days, that build into a coherent metaskill of “ambitious planning, at multiple timescales.”
I’m likely updating the curriculum from last time, but for reference and a rough idea of what to expect, here was the structure at the previous workshop:
Beforehand:
People sent me a short writeup of their current plans for the next 1-2 weeks, and broader plans for the next 1-6 months.
Day 1: Practice skills on quick-feedback exercises
Everyone installs the fatebook chrome/firefox extension
Solve a puzzle with Dots and a Grid with an unspecified goal
What practices do you hope to still be trying a week, month, or year from now? Do you predict you’ll actually stick with them? Do you endorse that? What can you do to help make things stick.
Interested in Cognitive Bootcamp?
I’m running more 4-day “Cognitive Bootcamps” over the next couple months (during Lighthaven Eternal September season). DM me if you’re potentially interested (either as an individual, or as a team).
The workshop is most valuable to people who:
control their decisionmaking process (i.e. you decide what projects you or a team work on, rather than working at a day-job on someone else’s vision)
are either a) confused about planmaking / have a vague sense that they aren’t as strategically ambitious as they could be.
and/or, b) are at a place where it’s natural to spend a few days thinking big-picture thoughts before deciding on their next project.
There’s a secondary[1] focus on “practice solving confusing problems”, which IMO is time well spent, but requires more followup practice to pay off.
I wrote about the previous workshop here. Participants said on average they’d have been willing to pay $850 for it, and would have paid $5000 for the ideal, perfectly-tailored-for-them version. My plan is to charge $500/person for the next workshop, and then $1000 for the next one.
I’m most excited to run this for teams, who can develop a shared skillset and accompanying culture. I plan to tailor the workshops for the needs of whichever people show up.
The dates are not scheduled yet (depends somewhat on when a critical mass of participants are available). DM me if you are interested.
The skills being taught will be similar to the sort of thing listed in Skills from a year of Purposeful Rationality Practice and the Feedbackloop-first Rationality sequence. My default curriculum is aiming to teach several interrelated related skills you can practice over four days, that build into a coherent metaskill of “ambitious planning, at multiple timescales.”
I’m likely updating the curriculum from last time, but for reference and a rough idea of what to expect, here was the structure at the previous workshop:
I started this project oriented around “find better feedbackloops for solving confusing problems”, and later decided that planmaking was the highest leverage part of the skill tree to focus on.