I mostly see where you’re coming from, but I think the reasonable answer to “point 1 or 2 is a false dichotomy” is this classic, uh, tumblr quote (from memory):
“People cannot just. At no time in the history of the human species has any person or group ever just. If your plan relies on people to just, then your plan will fail.”
This goes especially if the thing that comes after “just” is “just precommit.”
My expectation is that interaction with Vassar is that the people who espouse 1 or 2 expect that the people interacting are incapable of precommitting to the required strength. I don’t know if they’re correct, but I’d expect them to be, because I think people are just really bad at precommitting in general. If precommitting was easy, I think we’d all be a lot more fit and get a lot more done. Also, Beeminder would be bankrupt.
This is a very good criticism! I think you are right about people not being able to “just.”
My original point with those strategies was to illustrate an instance of motivated stopping about people in the community who have negative psychological effects, or criticize popular institutions. Perhaps it is the case that people genuinely tried to make a strategy but automatically rejected my toy strategies as false. I do not think it is, based on “vibe” and on the arguments that people are making, such as “argument from cult.”
I think you are actually completely correct about those strategies being bad. Instead, I failed to point out that I expect a certain level of mental robustness-to-nonsanity from people literally called “rationalists.” This comes off as sarcastic but I mean it completely literally.
Precommitting isn’t easy, but rationality is about solving hard problems. When I think of actual rationality, I think of practices such as “five minutes of actually trying” and alkjash’s “Hammertime.” Humans have a small component of behavior that is agentic, and a huge component of behavior that is non-agentic and installed by vaguely agentic processes (simple conditioning, mimicry, social learning.) Many problems are solved immediately and almost effortlessly by just giving the reins to the small part.
Relatedly, to address one of your examples, I expect at least one of the following things to be true about any given competent rationalist.
They have a physiological problem.
They don’t believe becoming fit to be worth their time, and have a good reason to go against the naive first-order model of “exercise increases energy and happiness set point.”
They are fit.
Hypocritically, I fail all three of these criterion. I take full blame for this failure and plan on ameliorating it. (You don’t have to take Heroic Responsibility for the world, but you have to take it about yourself.)
A trope-y way of thinking about it is: “We’re supposed to be the good guys!” Good guys don’t have to be heroes, but they have to be at least somewhat competent, and they have to, as a strong default, treat potential enemies like their equals.
I mostly see where you’re coming from, but I think the reasonable answer to “point 1 or 2 is a false dichotomy” is this classic, uh, tumblr quote (from memory):
“People cannot just. At no time in the history of the human species has any person or group ever just. If your plan relies on people to just, then your plan will fail.”
This goes especially if the thing that comes after “just” is “just precommit.”
My expectation is that interaction with Vassar is that the people who espouse 1 or 2 expect that the people interacting are incapable of precommitting to the required strength. I don’t know if they’re correct, but I’d expect them to be, because I think people are just really bad at precommitting in general. If precommitting was easy, I think we’d all be a lot more fit and get a lot more done. Also, Beeminder would be bankrupt.
This is a very good criticism! I think you are right about people not being able to “just.”
My original point with those strategies was to illustrate an instance of motivated stopping about people in the community who have negative psychological effects, or criticize popular institutions. Perhaps it is the case that people genuinely tried to make a strategy but automatically rejected my toy strategies as false. I do not think it is, based on “vibe” and on the arguments that people are making, such as “argument from cult.”
I think you are actually completely correct about those strategies being bad. Instead, I failed to point out that I expect a certain level of mental robustness-to-nonsanity from people literally called “rationalists.” This comes off as sarcastic but I mean it completely literally.
Precommitting isn’t easy, but rationality is about solving hard problems. When I think of actual rationality, I think of practices such as “five minutes of actually trying” and alkjash’s “Hammertime.” Humans have a small component of behavior that is agentic, and a huge component of behavior that is non-agentic and installed by vaguely agentic processes (simple conditioning, mimicry, social learning.) Many problems are solved immediately and almost effortlessly by just giving the reins to the small part.
Relatedly, to address one of your examples, I expect at least one of the following things to be true about any given competent rationalist.
They have a physiological problem.
They don’t believe becoming fit to be worth their time, and have a good reason to go against the naive first-order model of “exercise increases energy and happiness set point.”
They are fit.
Hypocritically, I fail all three of these criterion. I take full blame for this failure and plan on ameliorating it. (You don’t have to take Heroic Responsibility for the world, but you have to take it about yourself.)
A trope-y way of thinking about it is: “We’re supposed to be the good guys!” Good guys don’t have to be heroes, but they have to be at least somewhat competent, and they have to, as a strong default, treat potential enemies like their equals.