Probably the first, as much as this is the “wrong” answer to your question for the LessWrong crowd.
I would be pretty pissed off if my proposed solution to the alignment problem was attributed to someone who hasn’t gone through what I went through in order to derive it. Especially if that solution ended up being close enough to correct to form a cornerstone of future approaches to the problem.
I’m going to continue to present my ideas in the most appealing package I can devise for them, but I don’t regret posting them to LessWrong in the chaotic fashion that I did.
If you want your proposed solution attributed to you, writing it in a style that people actually want to engage with instead of “your personal voice”, would be the straightforward choice.
Larry McEnerney is great at explaining what writing is about.
Well, perhaps we can ask, what is reading about? Surely it involves reading through clearly presented arguments and trying to understand the process that generated them, and not presupposing any particular resolution to the question “is this person crazy” beyond the inevitable and unenviable limits imposed by our finite time on Earth.
There’s a lot of material to read. Part of being good at reading is spending one’s attention in the most effective way and not wasting it with low-value content.
That’s fair, and I need to do a better job of building on-ramps for different readers. My most recent shortform is an attempt to build such an on-ramp for the LessWrong memeplex.
Probably the first, as much as this is the “wrong” answer to your question for the LessWrong crowd.
I would be pretty pissed off if my proposed solution to the alignment problem was attributed to someone who hasn’t gone through what I went through in order to derive it. Especially if that solution ended up being close enough to correct to form a cornerstone of future approaches to the problem.
I’m going to continue to present my ideas in the most appealing package I can devise for them, but I don’t regret posting them to LessWrong in the chaotic fashion that I did.
If you want your proposed solution attributed to you, writing it in a style that people actually want to engage with instead of “your personal voice”, would be the straightforward choice.
Larry McEnerney is great at explaining what writing is about.
Well, perhaps we can ask, what is reading about? Surely it involves reading through clearly presented arguments and trying to understand the process that generated them, and not presupposing any particular resolution to the question “is this person crazy” beyond the inevitable and unenviable limits imposed by our finite time on Earth.
There’s a lot of material to read. Part of being good at reading is spending one’s attention in the most effective way and not wasting it with low-value content.
That’s fair, and I need to do a better job of building on-ramps for different readers. My most recent shortform is an attempt to build such an on-ramp for the LessWrong memeplex.