Still the sort of thing that will send people close to the OCD side of the personality spectrum into a spiral of nightmares, which, please note, has apparently already happened in at least two cases. I’m surprised by this, but accept reality. It’s possible we may have more than the usual number of OCD-side-of-the-spectrum people among us.
So, this is the problem that didn’t occur to me. I assumed implicitly that because such things were easy for me to brush off, the same logic would apply to others. Which is kind of silly, because I knew about one of the previous worriers from Benton House.
I think that the bottom line here is that I need to update in favor of greater general caution surrounding anything to do with the singularity, AGI, etc.
Was the discussion in question epistemologicaly interesting (vs. intellectual masturbation)? If so, how many OCD personalities joining the site would call for closing the thread? I am curious about decision criteria. Thanks.
As an aside, I’ve had some SL-related psychological effects, particularly related to material notion of self: a bit of trouble going to sleep, realizing that logically there is little distinction from death-state. This lasted a short while, but then you just learn to “stop worrying and love the bomb”. Besides “time heals all wounds” certain ideas helped, too. (I actually think this is an important SL, though it does not sit well within the SciFi hierarchy).
This worked for me, but I am generally very low on the OCD scale, and I am still mentally not quite ready for some of the discussions going on here.
I’ve had some SL-related psychological effects, particularly related to material notion of self: a bit of trouble going to sleep, realizing that logically there is little distinction from death-state.
There is an upside to this, though. Timelessly speaking, there is nothing special about the moment of your death, since there are always going to be other yous elsewhere that are alive, and there will always be some continuations of any given experience moment that survive. It is very Zen.
Depressive thinking generally focuses on short term issues or general failure. I’m not sure this reflects that. Frankly, it seems to come across superficially at least more like paranoia, especially of the form that one historically saw (and still sees) in some Christians worrying about hell and whether or not they are saved. The reaction to these threads is making me substantially update my estimates both for LW as a rational community and for our ability to discuss issues in a productive fashion.
Still the sort of thing that will send people close to the OCD side of the personality spectrum into a spiral of nightmares, which, please note, has apparently already happened in at least two cases. I’m surprised by this, but accept reality. It’s possible we may have more than the usual number of OCD-side-of-the-spectrum people among us.
So, this is the problem that didn’t occur to me. I assumed implicitly that because such things were easy for me to brush off, the same logic would apply to others. Which is kind of silly, because I knew about one of the previous worriers from Benton House.
I think that the bottom line here is that I need to update in favor of greater general caution surrounding anything to do with the singularity, AGI, etc.
Was the discussion in question epistemologicaly interesting (vs. intellectual masturbation)? If so, how many OCD personalities joining the site would call for closing the thread? I am curious about decision criteria. Thanks.
As an aside, I’ve had some SL-related psychological effects, particularly related to material notion of self: a bit of trouble going to sleep, realizing that logically there is little distinction from death-state. This lasted a short while, but then you just learn to “stop worrying and love the bomb”. Besides “time heals all wounds” certain ideas helped, too. (I actually think this is an important SL, though it does not sit well within the SciFi hierarchy).
This worked for me, but I am generally very low on the OCD scale, and I am still mentally not quite ready for some of the discussions going on here.
It is impossible to have rules without Mr. Potter exploiting them.
There is an upside to this, though. Timelessly speaking, there is nothing special about the moment of your death, since there are always going to be other yous elsewhere that are alive, and there will always be some continuations of any given experience moment that survive. It is very Zen.
Is it OCD or depression? Depression can include (is defined by?) obsessively thinking about things that make one feel worse.
Depressive thinking generally focuses on short term issues or general failure. I’m not sure this reflects that. Frankly, it seems to come across superficially at least more like paranoia, especially of the form that one historically saw (and still sees) in some Christians worrying about hell and whether or not they are saved. The reaction to these threads is making me substantially update my estimates both for LW as a rational community and for our ability to discuss issues in a productive fashion.