and imaginary friends can be useful for e.g. people who are lonely.
The instrumentally rational thing to do, when faced with loneliness, is to figure out how to be with real people. No evidence was presented in the original post that suggests that tulpas mitigate the very real risk factors associated with social isolation. Loneliness is actually a very serious problem, considering most of the research seems to indicate that the best way to be happy is to have meaningful social interactions. Proposing this as a viable alternative would require a very high amount of evidence. A post presenting that evidence would be something that belongs here.
Proposing this as a viable alternative would require a very high amount of evidence.
I don’t see where you got the idea that it’s supposed to be an alternative.
If I’m less clingy because I have a Tupla and thus no fear of being alone I have an easier time interacting with other people.
Proposing this as a viable alternative would require a very high amount of evidence.
There are much bigger claims on this side with much less evidence. Just look into discussions of uploading and AGI.
Nobody hear advocates that it should be standard procedure to train every lonely person who seeks help to have a tulpa.
I know a couple of people who feel like their tulpas reduce their feelings of loneliness. Not sure of how you could get any stronger evidence than that at this stage, there not being any studies focusing specifically on tulpas. That said, I don’t see any a priori reason for why you couldn’t get meaningful social interactions from tulpas, so not sure for why you’d require an exceptionally high standard of evidence in the first place.
They don’t provide it to the system as a whole, but providing it to the subprocess constituting the normal personality is another matter. Author are often surprised by their characters, who may reveal having unexpected personality traits as well as doing things that the author would never have anticipated before. (Sometimes causing major headaches to the authors, as this ruins the original story that they’d planned out when the character decides to do something completely different.)
Also, “having a tulpa” and “figuring out how to be with real people” are not mutually exclusive. Lonely people may often have extra difficulties establishing meaningful relationships (romantic or otherwise), because the loneliness makes them desperate, clingy, etc. which are all behaviors that other people find off-putting. People who already have some meaningful relationships are likely to have a much easier time in establishing more.
The instrumentally rational thing to do, when faced with loneliness, is to figure out how to be with real people. No evidence was presented in the original post that suggests that tulpas mitigate the very real risk factors associated with social isolation. Loneliness is actually a very serious problem, considering most of the research seems to indicate that the best way to be happy is to have meaningful social interactions. Proposing this as a viable alternative would require a very high amount of evidence. A post presenting that evidence would be something that belongs here.
I don’t see where you got the idea that it’s supposed to be an alternative. If I’m less clingy because I have a Tupla and thus no fear of being alone I have an easier time interacting with other people.
There are much bigger claims on this side with much less evidence. Just look into discussions of uploading and AGI.
Nobody hear advocates that it should be standard procedure to train every lonely person who seeks help to have a tulpa.
I know a couple of people who feel like their tulpas reduce their feelings of loneliness. Not sure of how you could get any stronger evidence than that at this stage, there not being any studies focusing specifically on tulpas. That said, I don’t see any a priori reason for why you couldn’t get meaningful social interactions from tulpas, so not sure for why you’d require an exceptionally high standard of evidence in the first place.
Tulpa don’t provide outside entropy.
They don’t provide it to the system as a whole, but providing it to the subprocess constituting the normal personality is another matter. Author are often surprised by their characters, who may reveal having unexpected personality traits as well as doing things that the author would never have anticipated before. (Sometimes causing major headaches to the authors, as this ruins the original story that they’d planned out when the character decides to do something completely different.)
Also, “having a tulpa” and “figuring out how to be with real people” are not mutually exclusive. Lonely people may often have extra difficulties establishing meaningful relationships (romantic or otherwise), because the loneliness makes them desperate, clingy, etc. which are all behaviors that other people find off-putting. People who already have some meaningful relationships are likely to have a much easier time in establishing more.