I really like learning new things!
Jacob G-W
This is my favorite passage from the book (added: major spoilers for the ending):
“Indeed. Before becoming a truly terrible Dark Lord for David Monroe to fight, I first created for practice the persona of a Dark Lord with glowing red eyes, pointlessly cruel to his underlings, pursuing a political agenda of naked personal ambition combined with blood purism as argued by drunks in Knockturn Alley. My first underlings were hired in a tavern, given cloaks and skull masks, and told to introduce themselves as Death Eaters.”
The sick sense of understanding deepened, in the pit of Harry’s stomach. “And you called yourself Voldemort.”
“Just so, General Chaos.” Professor Quirrell was grinning, from where he stood by the cauldron. “I wanted it to be an anagram of my name, but that would only have worked if I’d conveniently been given the middle name of ‘Marvolo’, and then it would have been a stretch. Our actual middle name is Morfin, if you’re curious. But I digress. I thought Voldemort’s career would last only a few months, a year at the longest, before the Aurors brought down his underlings and the disposable Dark Lord vanished. As you perceive, I had vastly overestimated my competition. And I could not quite bring myself to torture my underlings when they brought me bad news, no matter what Dark Lords did in plays. I could not quite manage to argue the tenets of blood purism as incoherently as if I were a drunk in Knockturn Alley. I was not trying to be clever when I sent my underlings on their missions, but neither did I give them entirely pointless orders—” Professor Quirrell gave a rueful grin that, in another context, might have been called charming. “One month after that, Bellatrix Black prostrated herself before me, and after three months Lucius Malfoy was negotiating with me over glasses of expensive Firewhiskey. I sighed, gave up all hope for wizardkind, and began as David Monroe to oppose this fearsome Lord Voldemort.”
“And then what happened—”
A snarl contorted Professor Quirrell’s face. “The absolute inadequacy of every single institution in the civilization of magical Britain is what happened! You cannot comprehend it, boy! I cannot comprehend it! It has to be seen and even then it cannot be believed! You will have observed, perhaps, that of your fellow students who speak of their family’s occupations, three in four seem to mention jobs in some part or another of the Ministry. You will wonder how a country can manage to employ three of its four citizens in bureaucracy. The answer is that if they did not all prevent each other from doing their jobs, none of them would have any work left to do! The Aurors were competent as individual fighters, they did fight Dark Wizards and only the best survived to train new recruits, but their leadership was in absolute disarray. The Ministry was so busy routing papers that the country had no effective opposition to Voldemort’s attacks except myself, Dumbledore, and a handful of untrained irregulars. A shiftless, incompetent, cowardly layabout, Mundungus Fletcher, was considered a key asset in the Order of the Phoenix—because, being otherwise unemployed, he did not need to juggle another job! I tried weakening Voldemort’s attacks, to see if it was possible for him to lose; at once the Ministry committed fewer Aurors to oppose me! I had read Mao’s Little Red Book, I had trained my Death Eaters in guerilla tactics—for nothing! For nothing! I was attacking all of magical Britain and in every engagement my forces outnumbered their opposition! In desperation, I ordered my Death Eaters to systematically assassinate every single incompetent managing the Department of Magical Law Enforcement. One paper-pusher after another volunteered to accept higher positions despite the fate of their predecessors, gleefully rubbing their hands at the prospect of promotion. Every one of them thought they would cut a deal with Lord Voldemort on the side. It took seven months to murder our way through them all, and not a single Death Eater asked why we were bothering. And then, even with Bartemius Crouch risen to Director and Amelia Bones as Head Auror, it was still too little. I could have done better fighting alone. Dumbledore’s aid was not worth his moral restraints, and Crouch’s aid was not worth his respect for the law.” Professor Quirrell turned up the fire beneath the potion.
“And eventually,” Harry said through the heart-sickness, “you realized you were just having more fun as Voldemort.”
“It is the least annoying role I have ever played. If Lord Voldemort says that something is to be done, people obey him and do not argue. I did not have to suppress my impulse to Cruciate people being idiots; for once it was all part of the role. If someone was making the game less pleasant for me, I just said Avadakedavra regardless of whether that was strategically wise, and they never bothered me again.” Professor Quirrell casually chopped a small worm into bits. “But my true epiphany came on a certain day when David Monroe was trying to get an entry permit for an Asian instructor in combat tactics, and a Ministry clerk denied it, smiling smugly. I asked the Ministry clerk if he understood that this measure was meant to save his life and the Ministry clerk only smiled more. Then in fury I threw aside masks and caution, I used my Legilimency, I dipped my fingers into the cesspit of his stupidity and tore out the truth from his mind. I did not understand and I wanted to understand. With my command of Legilimency I forced his tiny clerk-brain to live out alternatives, seeing what his clerk-brain would think of Lucius Malfoy, or Lord Voldemort, or Dumbledore standing in my place.” Professor Quirrell’s hands had slowed, as he delicately peeled bits and small strips from a chunk of candle-wax. “What I finally realized that day is complicated, boy, which is why I did not understand it earlier in life. To you I shall try to describe it anyway. Today I know that Dumbledore does not stand at the top of the world, for all that he is the Supreme Mugwump of the International Confederation. People speak ill of Dumbledore openly, they criticize him proudly and to his face, in a way they would not dare stand up to Lucius Malfoy. You have acted disrespectfully toward Dumbledore, boy, do you know why you did so?”
Sounds good. Yes I think the LW people would probably be credible enough if it works. I’d prefer if they provided confirmation (not you) just so not all the data is coming from one person.
Feel free to ping me to resolve no.
I made a manifold market for if this will replicate: https://manifold.markets/g_w1/will-george3d6s-increasing-iq-is-tr I’m not really sure what the resolution criteria should be, so I just made some that sounded reasonable, but feel free to give suggestions.
Do you think this is permanent? Or will you have to keep up all of the interventions for it to stay +13points indefinitely?
I don’t know or think set theory is special. I just wanted to start at the very beginning. Another reason why I chose to start at set theory is because that is what Soares and Turntrout did and I just wanted somewhere to start (and I needed an easy-ish environment to level up in proofs). The foundations of math seemed like a good place. I plan to do linear algebra next because I think I need better linear algebra intuition for pretty much everything. It seems like it helps with a lot.
After thinking more about it, I think I understand your thought process. I agree that set theory has lots of pathological stuff (the book even points out that is quite pathological). However, it seems to me that similar to how you should understand how a Turing machine like brainfuck works before doing advanced programming, you should understand how the foundations of math work before doing advanced math. This is the main reason why I am studying set theory (and will do real analysis soon enough).
Interestingly, there are also multiple formulations of computing, some more popular than others. The languages that I like to use are mainly based on Turing machines (c, zig, etc), but some others (javascript) are a mix and can be formulated like a lambda calculus if you really want. Yet it seems to me that since Turing machines are the most popular formulations of computing, we should learn them (even if we like to use lambda calculus later on). From what I’ve read, it seems that real analysis is also based upon sets. Actually, after looking this up, it seems you can do analysis in type theory, but that this is off the beaten path. So maybe I should learn set theory because it is the most popular but keep in mind that type theory might be more elegant.
Thank you! When I finish learning set theory and linear algebra, I’ll look into type theory. Do you have any recommendations for resources to learn it from?
In set theory, everything is a set
I really enjoyed this post. Thank you for writing it!
I also have no clue what is going to happen. I predict that it will be wild, and I also predict that it will happen in <=10 years. Let’s fight for the future we want!
Hmm the meanings are not perfectly identical. For some things, like “believe in the environment” vs “I value the environment” they pretty much are.
But for things like “I believe in you,” it does not mean the same thing as “I value you.” It implies “I value you,” but it means something more. It is meant to signal something to the other person.
Could you not just replace “I believe in” with “I value”? What would be different about the meaning? If I value something, I would also invest in it. What am I not seeing?
Once you have this information, what should you do with it if you think it’s a positive?
I really want a brain computer interface that is incredibly transformative and will allow me to write in my head and scaffold my thinking.
[linkpost] Self-Rewarding Language Models
Even more awesome examples! Amazing!
This seems really insightful:
Have you done the exercise of watching your internal monologue for a day and noting every time you think you “can’t” do something, and then transforming those into “prefer not to” by identifying some ways you could accomplish it but choose not to because the tradeoffs aren’t worth it.
I think I’ve started to do a bit without really knowing that I’m doing it. Just like I cringe (and have cringed even before I read the Sequences) when someone says “I’ll try to do [something],” I’ve started to develop a slight revulsion to “I can’t.” This instinct not nearly as strong as I want it to be and I don’t think of all the possibilities that could happen.
Thanks! These kind of things are what I’m looking for. I appreciate the maker perspective.
I’ve fixed multiple appliances with some good old copper wire (dishwasher and toilet).
[Question] Concrete examples of doing agentic things?
@lsusr recently did a video about this. Interestingly, he thought that the hardest people to love were not actually the Hitler type (they are still hard), but the people that you are actively hurting.
Oh sorry! I didn’t think of that, thanks!