I agree that people that try to self-improve have more potential to be rational, but I don’t think significantly more are in practice. If your goals are misplaced, achieving them could be worse than if you did nothing. On the subject of New Year Resolutions, my parents are apt to make goals like “attend religious services more frequently” and “read scripture more frequently”, and they often succeed.
I agree that people that try to self-improve have more potential to be rational, but I don’t think significantly more are in practice. If your goals are misplaced, achieving them could be worse than if you did nothing. On the subject of New Year Resolutions, my parents are apt to make goals like “attend religious services more frequently” and “read scripture more frequently”, and they often succeed.
You’d want people to estimate the utility of their goals and compare that to a post-goal completion estimate of utility. See here http://lesswrong.com/lw/h/test_your_rationality/dg#comments
That sounds healthy for them. Did they benefit from it?