There’s a lot of related scenarios. I’m sure for each one you can explain why it’s ultimately beneficial to have faced the Hard Truth, but that doesn’t change the fact that you will feel like crap for a while, and for most people “not feeling like crap” is a fairly strong component to their utility function.
This doesn’t unpack it enough for me. I think you’re just getting at the problems of bounded rationality—it’s really easy to claim that someone who refuses to believe the bad things about the world is happier. Scott Aaronson is pertinent.
I think I understand how to dissolve this problem—could you describe what things in particular make it worse?
You feel like crap.
There’s a lot of related scenarios. I’m sure for each one you can explain why it’s ultimately beneficial to have faced the Hard Truth, but that doesn’t change the fact that you will feel like crap for a while, and for most people “not feeling like crap” is a fairly strong component to their utility function.
This doesn’t unpack it enough for me. I think you’re just getting at the problems of bounded rationality—it’s really easy to claim that someone who refuses to believe the bad things about the world is happier. Scott Aaronson is pertinent.