I’ve already seen plenty of comment here on just how awkward this post is to be so early in the Sequences, and how it would turn people off, so I won’t comment on that.
However: Seeing this post, early in the sequences, led me to revise my general opinion of Eliezer down just enough that I managed to catch myself before I turned specific admiration into hero-worship (my early, personal term for the halo effect).
I seriously, seriously doubt that’s the purpose of this article, mainly because if Eliezer wanted to deliberately prevent himself from being affective-death-spiraled this article would read more subtly.
That said, if it is agreed that it would be good for a post like this to exist early in the Sequences (that’s a pretty big if), I would hope that it could be written to invite fewer pattern-matches to the stereotype of “socially-oblivious, obsessed-with-narrow-intellectual-interest geek/nerd/dork”.
I’ve already seen plenty of comment here on just how awkward this post is to be so early in the Sequences, and how it would turn people off, so I won’t comment on that.
So early in the sequences? It would seem to be worse later in what we now call the sequences. At the time this was written it was just a casual post on a blog Eliezer had only recently started posting on. Perhaps the main error is that somehow someone included it in an index when they were dividing the stream of blog posts into ‘sequences’ for reference.
Nah, didn’t happen. The essay reports an adolescent fantasy featuring martial invincibility. I’m sure the author has grown up by now.
I would hope that it could be written to invite fewer pattern-matches to the stereotype of “socially-oblivious, obsessed-with-narrow-intellectual-interest geek/nerd/dork
I’ve already seen plenty of comment here on just how awkward this post is to be so early in the Sequences, and how it would turn people off, so I won’t comment on that.
However: Seeing this post, early in the sequences, led me to revise my general opinion of Eliezer down just enough that I managed to catch myself before I turned specific admiration into hero-worship (my early, personal term for the halo effect).
I seriously, seriously doubt that’s the purpose of this article, mainly because if Eliezer wanted to deliberately prevent himself from being affective-death-spiraled this article would read more subtly.
That said, if it is agreed that it would be good for a post like this to exist early in the Sequences (that’s a pretty big if), I would hope that it could be written to invite fewer pattern-matches to the stereotype of “socially-oblivious, obsessed-with-narrow-intellectual-interest geek/nerd/dork”.
So early in the sequences? It would seem to be worse later in what we now call the sequences. At the time this was written it was just a casual post on a blog Eliezer had only recently started posting on. Perhaps the main error is that somehow someone included it in an index when they were dividing the stream of blog posts into ‘sequences’ for reference.
Nah, didn’t happen. The essay reports an adolescent fantasy featuring martial invincibility. I’m sure the author has grown up by now.