Heh, yes, that too. My free time is too valuable to me to sell to employers for anything they’d be willing to pay. ;)
On the other hand, I am willing to spend time bargain-hunting on the Internet in order to make the most of my finite savings. Am I being inconsistent here? If I simply said that I place an extremely large positive value on freedom from employment, would that make my behavior consistent?
I tell my employed friends that clearly my time is simply worth a lot more than theirs. :)
If I simply said that I place an extremely large positive value on freedom from employment, would that make my behavior consistent?
If this were true, it would, but just saying it doesn’t change anything, and it sounds a bit like an ad hoc rationalisation; though having read your comments elsewhere it may well not be.
That phrasing certainly sounds like ad hoc rationalization. The rational (rationalist?*) way to go about that would be to… recognize that you attach value to some things associated with freedom from employment, try to figure out what exactly that is and quantify it while ignoring what your current actions are, and then determine whether your current actions are consistent with that, and change them if not. If you determine your values based on what your current actions are, there’s no point in being rational.
I have a vague feeling like “rational” should mean “the way a hypothetical rational actor, such as an AI built for rationality, would act”, and “rationalist” would mean “the way a human who recognizes that their brain is not built for rationality and actively tries to overcome thing would act”. An AI built to be rational would never need to do this because their behavior would already* follow logically from their values. I don’t remember why I put in this note, but it’s an interesting thing about this site generally.
Surely your hourly wage is infinity? :)
Heh, yes, that too. My free time is too valuable to me to sell to employers for anything they’d be willing to pay. ;)
On the other hand, I am willing to spend time bargain-hunting on the Internet in order to make the most of my finite savings. Am I being inconsistent here? If I simply said that I place an extremely large positive value on freedom from employment, would that make my behavior consistent?
I tell my employed friends that clearly my time is simply worth a lot more than theirs. :)
If this were true, it would, but just saying it doesn’t change anything, and it sounds a bit like an ad hoc rationalisation; though having read your comments elsewhere it may well not be.
That phrasing certainly sounds like ad hoc rationalization. The rational (rationalist?*) way to go about that would be to… recognize that you attach value to some things associated with freedom from employment, try to figure out what exactly that is and quantify it while ignoring what your current actions are, and then determine whether your current actions are consistent with that, and change them if not. If you determine your values based on what your current actions are, there’s no point in being rational.
I have a vague feeling like “rational” should mean “the way a hypothetical rational actor, such as an AI built for rationality, would act”, and “rationalist” would mean “the way a human who recognizes that their brain is not built for rationality and actively tries to overcome thing would act”. An AI built to be rational would never need to do this because their behavior would already* follow logically from their values. I don’t remember why I put in this note, but it’s an interesting thing about this site generally.
Good point. CronoDAS’s other comments suggest a desire to be free from commitments in general.
Also, welcome to LessWrong!