Doesn’t seem obvious to me at all. Could you demonstrate? Using real-life evidence? I suspect there is a fair amount of the, ahem, nirvana fallacy happening here.
For example, If I am an AGI researcher and I have a self-referential narrative, that’s distracting me from the process of writing a paper, however its in majority of cases not there when writing, but during downtime.
The nirvana fallacy “The nirvana fallacy is a name given to the informal fallacy of comparing actual things with unrealistic, idealized alternatives. It can also refer to the tendency to assume that there is a perfect solution to a particular problem. A closely related concept is the perfect solution fallacy.”
What constitutes a thing? A paper on AI risk? I didn’t make the argument that the paper is equal to a brain state, the paper still has to be written, but how good is the paper between the default consciousness and the nondual awakened consciousness(the network is called task-positive network)? Paper is only an example, imagine every individual does more good for their role and more.
Perfect solution fallacy “The perfect solution fallacy is a related informal fallacy that occurs when an argument assumes that a perfect solution exists or that a solution should be rejected because some part of the problem would still exist after it were implemented.”
It is the perfect usefulness, in my opinion to existential risk among others. It’s so useful it might as well be the solution in the first place.
Because it’s the first step in a chain for the solution. If eating vegetables is a chain in a solution to AGI risk, it’s not because its the solution, but because its useful.
Why would it be necessary?
It’s the most useful intervention, ever. The expected value is probably not higher for anything else.
Is it an existential problem? Sure doesn’t look like that to me.
No you’re right, but it’s the first thing I could think of that might be correlated with whatever we should call this. However changing ones mind probably is. The excess consumption could be an excessive donation to appropriate scientists, if they chose to do that, because what’s left in bliss but not to help others?
That sentence makes no sense.
http://www.sriramanamaharshi.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/who_am_I.pdf
Here is what I wonder if it’s validated by science to work in the extents in which it is casual to the state which we strive for. Or if it’s correlation with psychometrics, like Hood’s Mysticism Scale and neural correlates after anecdotal report of completion of the state.
Sure, but so what? Lots of things show up on brain scans. The question is whether what you are talking about is meaningfully different from what Hinduism calls moksha and Buddhism calls nirvana.
Well, science is useful and it can probably help by a large degree. I don’t know exactly, but why would it matter? It’s more than just reading, its the direct experience that matters. That’s what all of these writers probably have had.
Nootropics or stimulants are to be re-dosed and used constantly? Many have side-effects in such a manner, subject to dependence and tolerance. If you are able to enter the flow state or a focused one without, why bother, what happens if you combine both anyway, I don’t know?
Besides, the effects of certain stimulants deactivate the default mode and activate the nondual awakened network, like nicotine. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00213-011-2221-8 Although, it is unknown if it also does it during rest.
The median score on the Hood Mysticism scale (a psychometric) is 154.50 https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9IyLjPYAVCYYWViNjc0OGItNzBjMi00OTEyLTg4ZjctZDM2Nzk4YzY3NjJl/view page 65 (78 in google docs)