I recommend the preface because it tells you [some] issues [that the author noticed] with the work. (It doesn’t mention ‘this research is no longer up to date/etc.’, but it does mention some other things:)
It was a mistake that I didn’t write my two years of blog posts with the intention of helping people do better in their everyday lives. I wrote it with the intention of helping people solve big, difficult, important problems, and I chose impressive-sounding, abstract problems as my examples.
In retrospect, this was the second-largest mistake in my approach. It ties in to the first-largest mistake in my writing, which was that I didn’t realize that the big problem in learning this valuable way of thinking was figuring out how to practice it, not knowing the theory. I didn’t realize that part was the priority; and regarding this I can only say “Oops” and “Duh.”
...
A third huge mistake I made was to focus too much on rational belief, too little on rational action.
The fourth-largest mistake I made was that I should have better organized the content I was presenting in the sequences. In particular, I should have created a wiki much earlier, and made it easier to read the posts in sequence.
That mistake at least is correctable. In the present work Rob Bensinger has reordered the posts and reorganized them as much as he can without trying to rewrite all the actual material (though he’s rewritten a bit of it).
...
My fifth huge mistake was that I—as I saw it—tried to speak plainly about the stupidity of what appeared to me to be stupid ideas.
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To be able to look backwards and say that you’ve “failed” implies that you had goals. So what was it that I was trying to do?
...
In spite of how large my mistakes were, those two years of blog posting appeared to help a surprising number of people a surprising amount. It didn’t work reliably, but it worked sometimes. In modern society so little is taught of the skills of rational belief and decision-making, so little of the mathematics and sciences underlying them… that it turns out that just reading through a massive brain-dump full of problems in philosophy and science can, yes, be surprisingly good for you. Walking through all of that, from a dozen different angles, can sometimes convey a glimpse of the central rhythm.
Because it is all, in the end, one thing. I talked about big important distant problems and neglected immediate life, but the laws governing them aren’t actually different. There are huge gaps in which parts I focused on, and I picked all the wrong examples; but it is all in the end one thing. I am proud to look back and say that, even after all the mistakes I made, and all the other times I said “Oops”…
Even five years later, it still appears to me that this is better than nothing.
...-2015
There’s been some comments (or at least a post I think) on what that ‘book’/he had to say about Neural Networks. Understandability has been mentioned as an issue today, and I think that’s more of a problem where it’s less clear how to evaluate ‘ability’ or ‘performance’.
ETA:
1)
Added the [bracketed text] on the line duplicated below:
‘I recommend the preface because it tells you [some] issues [that the author noticed] with the work. ’
https://www.readthesequences.com
https://www.readthesequences.com/#preface
I recommend the preface because it tells you [some] issues [that the author noticed] with the work. (It doesn’t mention ‘this research is no longer up to date/etc.’, but it does mention some other things:)
There’s been some comments (or at least a post I think) on what that ‘book’/he had to say about Neural Networks. Understandability has been mentioned as an issue today, and I think that’s more of a problem where it’s less clear how to evaluate ‘ability’ or ‘performance’.
ETA:
1)
Added the [bracketed text] on the line duplicated below:
‘I recommend the preface because it tells you [some] issues [that the author noticed] with the work. ’