Out of curiosity, does the glossary include terms that aren’t particularly rationality-related, but which may not be familiar to less-scientifically-interested readers? (Examples: light cones, configuration space).
Yep! It doesn’t try to include literally every term or reference someone might want to google, but it includes terms like a priori, bit, deontology, directed acyclic graph, Everett branch, normative, and orthogonality, in addition to more rationality-specific terms. The kinds of terms we leave out are ones like “IRC” where some people might need to google the term, but it’s not really important enough to warrant a glossary entry.
That sounds great.
Out of curiosity, does the glossary include terms that aren’t particularly rationality-related, but which may not be familiar to less-scientifically-interested readers? (Examples: light cones, configuration space).
Yep! It doesn’t try to include literally every term or reference someone might want to google, but it includes terms like a priori, bit, deontology, directed acyclic graph, Everett branch, normative, and orthogonality, in addition to more rationality-specific terms. The kinds of terms we leave out are ones like “IRC” where some people might need to google the term, but it’s not really important enough to warrant a glossary entry.