I’m interested in operationalising your advice. By study rationality, I assume you mean read rationality blogs and try to practice persuasive prescrptions. At the moment I only read Lesswrong regularly, but I try to give the blogs mentioned in the sidebar a go once in a while. Robin Hansin opened my mind in this Youtube interview but I find it hard to understand his blog posts on Overcoming Bias. I thought maybe that’s because the blog posts are very scholastic and I’m not up to date. I don’t find this is the case on SSC, but it is occasionally the case here on Lesswrong. If you could describe the intended readership of each rationality blog in a way for potential audience members to decide which to commit to reading, how would you do it? Could you come up with a scale of academic rigour vs accessibility, or similar?
I’m interested in operationalising your advice. By study rationality, I assume you mean read rationality blogs and try to practice persuasive prescrptions. At the moment I only read Lesswrong regularly, but I try to give the blogs mentioned in the sidebar a go once in a while. Robin Hansin opened my mind in this Youtube interview but I find it hard to understand his blog posts on Overcoming Bias. I thought maybe that’s because the blog posts are very scholastic and I’m not up to date. I don’t find this is the case on SSC, but it is occasionally the case here on Lesswrong. If you could describe the intended readership of each rationality blog in a way for potential audience members to decide which to commit to reading, how would you do it? Could you come up with a scale of academic rigour vs accessibility, or similar?