“No, I did not go through the traditional apprenticeship. But when I look back, and see what Eliezer18 did wrong, I see plenty of modern scientists making the same mistakes. I cannot detect any sign that they were better warned than myself.”
It seems like a viable means of propagating education about such mistakes—or the mistakes of aspiring rationalists in general—would be to set up (relatively) straightforward scientific experiments that purposefully make a given mistake and then allow students to perform the experiment unsuccessfully. The postmortem for each class/lab would review what went wrong, what wrong looked like, why things went wrong, and so forth. Sort of a “no, seriously, learn from the past” symposium.
Do any of you know of any such existing educational structures in the Bay Area?
It seems like a viable means of propagating education about such mistakes—or the mistakes of aspiring rationalists in general—would be to set up (relatively) straightforward scientific experiments that purposefully make a given mistake and then allow students to perform the experiment unsuccessfully. The postmortem for each class/lab would review what went wrong, what wrong looked like, why things went wrong, and so forth. Sort of a “no, seriously, learn from the past” symposium.
Do any of you know of any such existing educational structures in the Bay Area?