Rationality is all about ‘trusting’ just the right amount.
I think a ‘rationality dojo’ could work fine – certainly (possibly) as well as “a science camp, a programming camp, a math camp, a rhetoric camp [or] a Bible camp”.
If someone paid me (my cheerful price) to start (and presumably run for at least some time) a rationality dojo, I would (without any other requirements or suggestions) not have any fixed curriculum.
For particular content or activities there might be classes, but the core offering would be ‘rationality sparring’. Group sparring sessions would be cheaper per-person; one-on-one would be more expensive.
At the start of each sparring session, I would ask the students “What do you want [from this session]?”. We’d go from there!
(Also, why an AWS Lambda backend? That doesn’t seem likely to teach effective “scalable action”. The hard bits of scaling are often precisely those that can’t be neatly encapsulated into an independent, and very brief, computation per ‘request’.)
Rationality is all about ‘trusting’ just the right amount.
I think a ‘rationality dojo’ could work fine – certainly (possibly) as well as “a science camp, a programming camp, a math camp, a rhetoric camp [or] a Bible camp”.
If someone paid me (my cheerful price) to start (and presumably run for at least some time) a rationality dojo, I would (without any other requirements or suggestions) not have any fixed curriculum.
For particular content or activities there might be classes, but the core offering would be ‘rationality sparring’. Group sparring sessions would be cheaper per-person; one-on-one would be more expensive.
At the start of each sparring session, I would ask the students “What do you want [from this session]?”. We’d go from there!
(Also, why an AWS Lambda backend? That doesn’t seem likely to teach effective “scalable action”. The hard bits of scaling are often precisely those that can’t be neatly encapsulated into an independent, and very brief, computation per ‘request’.)