I would say Robin Hanson’s views on status fit quite well into the gap you perceive. I do find it interesting that status isn’t talked about more on Less Wrong.
Maybe I can tie this into what I think about the article. LW’s articles do currently take an individualist stance on rationality (although I doubt objectivism has any role in this). The “refinements” they propose are mostly alterations of cognitive habits, not suggested ways of changing group dynamics. But LW as a whole is not simply a bunch of iconoclasts. Rather, there appears to be a clear attempt to collectively change patterns of thought. People write stuff, get +/- karma, feel good/bad, update their beliefs and try again. So even though the content of LW is individually applicable, posters will naturally develop preferred topics of expertise, subjects on which they know enough to benefit the community by what they write. And developing expertise does benefit from the martial arts analogy.
I would say Robin Hanson’s views on status fit quite well into the gap you perceive. I do find it interesting that status isn’t talked about more on Less Wrong.
Was there a time when we neglected status as a topic? wow. I don’t remember that.
I would say Robin Hanson’s views on status fit quite well into the gap you perceive. I do find it interesting that status isn’t talked about more on Less Wrong.
Maybe I can tie this into what I think about the article. LW’s articles do currently take an individualist stance on rationality (although I doubt objectivism has any role in this). The “refinements” they propose are mostly alterations of cognitive habits, not suggested ways of changing group dynamics. But LW as a whole is not simply a bunch of iconoclasts. Rather, there appears to be a clear attempt to collectively change patterns of thought. People write stuff, get +/- karma, feel good/bad, update their beliefs and try again. So even though the content of LW is individually applicable, posters will naturally develop preferred topics of expertise, subjects on which they know enough to benefit the community by what they write. And developing expertise does benefit from the martial arts analogy.
Was there a time when we neglected status as a topic? wow. I don’t remember that.