My name is Aaron. I’m a college junior on the tail end of the cycle of Bar Mitzvah to New Atheist to info-omnivorous psychology geek to attempted systems thinker. Prospective Psychology/Cognitive Science major at Yale, very interested in meeting other rationalists in the New Haven area. I’m on the board of the Yale Humanist Community, I’m a research assistant in a neuroscience lab, and I do a lot of writing.
Big problems I’ve been thinking a lot about: Why are most people wildly irrational in the amount of time they’re willing to devote to information search (that is, reducing uncertainty around uncertain decisions)? How can humanists and rationalists build a compelling community that serves adults of all ages as well as children? What sorts of media tend to encourage the “shift” from bad thinking to good thinking, and/or passive to active thinking (NPC vs. hero mindset, sort of—this one is complicated), and how can we get that media in the hands of more people?
I read HPMoR without really noticing Less Wrong, but have been linked to a few posts over the years. Last spring, I found “Privileging the Question”, which rang so true that I went on to read the Sequences and much of the rest. I was never very certain in my philosophy before finding the site, but now I’m pretty sure I at least know how to think about philosophy, which is nice.
The next few years hopefully involve me getting a job out of college that will allow me to build savings while donating plenty, while aligning me to take a position in some high-upside sector of tech or in the rationalist arena, but a lot of people say that, and I’m very unsure about what will actually happen if I flunk my case interviews. Still, the future will be better than the past regardless, and that thought keeps me going (as does knowing how many people are out there working to avoid future-is-worse-than-past scenarios).
Salutations!
My name is Aaron. I’m a college junior on the tail end of the cycle of Bar Mitzvah to New Atheist to info-omnivorous psychology geek to attempted systems thinker. Prospective Psychology/Cognitive Science major at Yale, very interested in meeting other rationalists in the New Haven area. I’m on the board of the Yale Humanist Community, I’m a research assistant in a neuroscience lab, and I do a lot of writing.
Big problems I’ve been thinking a lot about: Why are most people wildly irrational in the amount of time they’re willing to devote to information search (that is, reducing uncertainty around uncertain decisions)? How can humanists and rationalists build a compelling community that serves adults of all ages as well as children? What sorts of media tend to encourage the “shift” from bad thinking to good thinking, and/or passive to active thinking (NPC vs. hero mindset, sort of—this one is complicated), and how can we get that media in the hands of more people?
I read HPMoR without really noticing Less Wrong, but have been linked to a few posts over the years. Last spring, I found “Privileging the Question”, which rang so true that I went on to read the Sequences and much of the rest. I was never very certain in my philosophy before finding the site, but now I’m pretty sure I at least know how to think about philosophy, which is nice.
The next few years hopefully involve me getting a job out of college that will allow me to build savings while donating plenty, while aligning me to take a position in some high-upside sector of tech or in the rationalist arena, but a lot of people say that, and I’m very unsure about what will actually happen if I flunk my case interviews. Still, the future will be better than the past regardless, and that thought keeps me going (as does knowing how many people are out there working to avoid future-is-worse-than-past scenarios).