Hey Zvi. Love and appreciate your writing. I’ve been an avid reader since the covid posts. I know it’s difficult since your posts are so long, but this one and others could use a proof-reading for typos. I regret that I didn’t write down any particular instances, but there were a number in this post.
That sort of thing doesn’t usually bother me, but your writing is precise and high-entropy to the point where a single mistaken word can make the thought much harder to digest. For example, in the sentence:
If this changes the rule from ‘you can build a house but you owe us $23k’ to ‘you can build a house and pay us $230’ then that is good on the margin.
I wasn’t sure where the $230 number came from. Was it supposed to be $230k, a figure you used later in that section? Or did it follow from something you wrote previously in that section and I just didn’t understand? I just skipped to the next section without trying to resolve my confusion, since I knew that your posts often contain typos and trying to scrutinize the $230 may be futile in the end. If I had confidence that your writings lacked typos I would have spent more time with it
If you’re trying to make the most of your abundant free time then learning Quenya is a mistake. Learning a language nobody speaks seriously is at best a way to signal status to a very specific group of people and at worst a party trick
Some ideas of ways to spend that time that would pay higher dividends over the course of the rest of your life:
learn a musical instrument
become skilled at a competitive game (mtg, poker, rocket league, chess, etc)
practice yoga
personally I’ve found practicing yoga to be the best thing I can do for making me feel good in my body on a daily basis, which I see as a prerequisite for being effective at pursuing other goals
go running
invest in a relationship (call a friend/family member on the phone whom you otherwise wouldn’t)
Here are some of my favorites, in order of the impact they made on my life:
Language in Thought and Action
Yudkowsky’s sequences
Class by Paul Fussel (taken with a large grain of salt. not really rationalist but caused me to update significantly)
Influence: science and practice