On Sat, Mar 3, 2018 at 3:17 PM, Elliot Temple
cu...@curi.us
[fallible-ideas] <
fallibl...@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
> On Mar 3, 2018, at 4:54 AM, Anne B <
anne...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 8:37 PM, Elliot Temple
cu...@curi.us
>> [fallible-ideas] <
fallibl...@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
>>
>>> On Feb 28, 2018, at 5:11 PM, Anne B <
anne...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Fri, Feb 23, 2018 at 3:33 PM, Elliot Temple
cu...@curi.us
>>>> [fallible-ideas] <
fallibl...@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On Feb 22, 2018, at 2:08 PM, Elliot Temple <
cu...@curi.us> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> How to get ppl to learn FI? Steps:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 1. Interest
>>>>>> 2. Investment
>>>>>> 3. Guided learning process
>>>>>> 4. Integration
>>>>>> 5. Learn to share, argue and develop the ideas
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Learning FI is a lot, so investment is required before people will do it. People commonly *overreach* and try to go to stage 5 early, with low investment, learning and integration. Most people are more interested in (5) than (3), and they don’t realize how much content/substance/complexity FI has.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> People also try to debate me, about issues where they are massively outclassed, and it’s not an efficient way to teach them. They don’t learn much because learning isn’t their goal, and because they aren’t supplementing the debating with adequate study effort. If it was 4 parts study per 1 part debate, it’d work better.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Existing FI material is oriented to self-starters who will manage their own investment and guide their own learning. It has some weakness at helping with steps 2-4.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Interest is hard because FI says very unpopular things. But FI is controversial and stands out, and my material is very high quality, so getting some interest works OK.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The reason FI is weaker at investment is because investment is normally achieved with social dynamics, not with reason. People are prepared to invest due to certain social dynamics, not because of logical arguments for why something is important. The logical arguments work OK at getting interest, but then people’s behavior is flakey because they aren’t invested. (The long term FI community people are highly invested, but there’s only a few of them.)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The reason FI doesn’t offer a clear, guided learning process is because learners should follow their interests instead of a one-size-fits-all process. And everyone has different questions, confusions, comments, etc, so their learning paths should quickly branch off even if they have the same starting point. The problem is people don’t know how to manage their own learning, so more guidance would help even if it’s not optimal.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Sometimes people read a significant amount of FI material, but then don’t do much. (5) doesn’t happen well. They were interested enough to do it, invested enough to keep going with a significant amount of study, and they went through and learned a lot of the things I write and recommend. And then that’s it, they don’t start asking good questions, creating good criticisms, improving the ideas, making effective material to share the ideas, or effectively arguing the ideas to others. The underlying issue here is inadequate integration: they don’t use the ideas enough in their own life, including, especially, their own thinking... They go through some training, agree with it, but save it in their mind as data instead of executable software. If people learned *and integrated* the ideas enough, then (5) would be easy and kinda automatic. Doesn’t mean they’d know how to get a million fans, but they’d at least regularly do some kinda stuff, like I do, and it’d be pretty good.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> What have I told people to address integration? That they must discuss as they read in order to correct errors. Alone, what inevitably happens is they will misunderstand what they read, and then build up layers and layers of misconceptions. So of course that doesn’t work in their lives.. If they get all their own doubts and confusions sorted out as they went along, that’d help a ton with integrating it into their thinking and action.
>>>>>
>>>>> When people do try to learn and discuss, it’s usually massive overreaching. They don’t start at the start, get the basics really solid, and then build up layers of complexity that have very low error rates. Instead they fudge the foundations and start talking about stuff they find fun and interest, but which they are unable to productively engage with. This is also why I get limited feedback on most of what I write: people don’t know how! I often write about more advanced topics which interest me (and interest others!), but people don’t know how to deal with those topics effectively. What they should do (but don’t) is start approaching the advanced stuff in basic ways: look at what prerequisites they are missing and ask about those.
>>>>
>>>> Can you give some examples of basics we should be working on? Do you
>>>> mean things like reading comprehension and grammar?
>>>
>>> that's one kind of basic. similarly, basic math and logic are important, and speed reading/listening. those are tools that are used to do more complex projects.
>>
>> I have thought I shouldn't learn speed reading/listening because I
>> miss a lot at normal speed so going faster would mean I'd miss even
>> more. But maybe I'm looking at it wrong. Would speed reading/listening
>> help me get more understanding at whatever speed I'm at?
>
> reading/listening takes effort. this is a distraction from learning/thinking about the content.
>
> the worse you are at reading/listening, the more effort you have to put into them, and the more distracting they are.
>
> if you can do reading/listening more efficiently and automatically, then you can focus on the content more.
>
> speed reading is the skill of being able to read with less effort so the thing limiting your reading is your mental understanding of the issues, not your ability to read. you want the actual act of reading/listening to be a minimal issue.
>
> when you do this, people find they can read/listen faster. in other words, they were being held back – by quite a bit – by inadequate skill at reading/listening themselves (as against being limited by their ability to understand concepts).
>
> the same skill of being better at reading itself also lets you read at the same speed with less effort, which is useful for hard content. how much effort it takes you for reading itself is an issue at any speed.
Do you have a suggestion where to go to start learning about speed
reading or speed listening?
>
>>> another kind of basic is getting a basic overall understanding of a subject and what you're doing:
>>>
>>> what do you want to learn? why? what's the point of philosophy? what's the point of more specific subjects? what will you do with whatever you learn? what problems are you trying to solve? why? why do you think those problems are important? how did you choose them over other problems? what are you goals?
>>
>> The big picture is: I want to learn better ideas and spread those
>> ideas and make the world a better place for humanity. The point of
>> philosophy is to make life better.
>>
>> I'm still working out which specific subjects most interest me and
>> have potential to help people.
>
> Sounds altruistic!?
Yes!
What's wrong with wanting to understand things or think of things that
will be an improvement for humanity?
Why do you pursue philosophy?
>
>> Also, I'm not sure that I can get good enough to make much difference.
>
> Read _The Choice_ by Eli Goldratt.
>
>
>>> it's important to do this on multiple levels. people have trouble because the most abstract level is abstract. the answers don't give concrete, practical, direct guidance. that's ok. the most abstract answers can be short and broad. you also need to consider things at other levels of analysis, rather than make the biggest picture stuff complete.
>>>
>>> another level of analysis, for example, is: what's epistemology about? it's about knowledge. how do you create knowledge? what is knowledge? what sort of status do different ideas have and how do you know and what does that mean? how do you find and correct errors? etc. to deal with the field it's really useful to have some idea of what the field is and what it's for. e..g. one of the main problems in the field is that some ideas are good, some are bad, and you want to evaluate which are which. that problem gives you some context in which to use various other epistemology ideas.
>>>
>>> there are more specific fields, e.g. parenting. a way to look at parenting is:
>>>
>>> parents are routinely cruel to their children and fight with their children.. why? and how can you avoid doing that, given that people are often blind to their own mistakes?
>>>
>>> there are other ways to approach parenting too, e.g. via trying to understand the implications of static meme stuff for parenting. or via trying to apply the Popperian theory of how people learn in order to avoid doing ineffective educational methods.
>>>
>>> from these things, you can ask further questions and see where it leads. what do you need to do or know next to make progress on these things? first figure that out without the answers to get a basic overview of what you're doing, then you can try to work on solving it.
>>>
>>>
>>>>> Overall FI presents in a generic way in terms of abstract philosophy. This makes the integration and practical action harder for people. The best way to learn it is for someone to pick a specific topic – e.g. parenting or relationships – to learn and they can use rational methods for learning it and then can learn more theory when they have those examples they’ve already done. A common interest point is politics/economics, but that one is tricky because people treat it as a debating game instead of it affecting their IRL actions. Parenting and relationships relate to their IRL actions. Other things involving concrete action include business management, speed reading/listening, diet, salary negotiation, trying to be great at something (e.g. competitive gaming or speedrunning), not going to a psychiatrist.
>>
>> So for me at this point, would you suggest studying a specific topic
>> now rather than generally studying philosophy? I feel like I need more
>> general study first.
>
> do you think you’re doing effective, purposeful general study? of what, specifically?
Not really. I'm doing ineffective slow study. My overall plan is to
finish Atlas Shrugged and then study The Beginning of Infinity.
>
>>>> I have thought about really studying diet. It's something I'm
>>>> interested in and have read a lot about in the past.
>>>
>>> why?
>>
>> I want to understand the relationship between what I eat and my
>> health. I want to stay healthy. It's not clear to me what the best way
>> to do that is. Maybe instead of diet, I should aim for a broader topic
>> like human health.
>
> it’s pretty simple:
>
> existing advice on this stuff is utter crap.
>
> don’t overeat – don’t eat when you aren’t hungry.
>
> that’s about it.
>
> there are more details about specific ways our culture is stupid about this stuff, but the positive stuff about how to improve health is such bullshit.. you’d have to invent the field instead of learn it.
>
> and anyway your body is very robust, it has very good error correction around what you eat. so what you eat just plain doesn’t matter that much. did you eat enough calories, but not way too many? congratulations, your body can handle that. there are a few edge cases like scurvy but they’re rare today because our food is plenty diverse and healthy. if you’re really worried, take a vitamin pill once a week so you can relax b/c that’s way easier and cheaper than learning about the topic.
One of the interesting things about the topic is that common knowledge
about it is so wrong. If I had a better understanding of how and why
it's wrong I could explain it to people better when the topic comes
up. And I could change my own thinking. I feel like a bad person when
I eat candy. I feel like a bad person when I eat candy.
>
>>>> Books about diet
>>>> contradict each other a lot! I'm wondering if there's any good
>>>> scientific knowledge in the field at all.
>>>
>>> sure, e.g. the concept of a "calorie" is a good idea. that's a scientific kind of measurement thing which allows a meaningful, useful measurement of something notable about many foods.
>>
>> Other specific topics I've thought about studying more:
>>
>> - Politics and values. See my post in the Anti-American thread:
>>
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/25552
>
> this is a field where there are lots of other ppl, alive today, writing good things (as against most of the good material being from death authors, or not existing at all). and tons of ppl are interested. those are some advantages.
>
> one of the problems is ppl are mostly really focused on the politics of *today* – e.g. events from the last month – instead of on concepts, principles, reasoning (political philosophy). ppl often throw in some half-assed political philosophy claims when it’s convenient for their claim about today’s news, rather than discussing it seriously and using it as a starting point (instead of starting with ideas and figuring out the implications, they already have a political position and then biasedly bring up some principles in defense of it). also ppl are known for getting angry, emotional, etc, about politics.
People also tend to pick a side and not be able to explain why they
picked that side, and then cheer or jeer current things in the news
based on who's on what side rather than on any principles.
Yes, people get emotional about this stuff. I know people who do.
>
>> - Psychology. That is, personal psychology: how to deal with unhappy
>> or anxious feelings that you don't know the cause of, how to get along
>> with people better, what advice to give to friends who struggle with
>> this kind of thing.
>
> basically this field sucks and the best way to approach this is with good philosophy.
I want good philosophy.
>
>> - How to teach martial arts to kids. How to effectively teach them
>> martial arts skills. How to help them learn and think well, and to
>> have good values. How to spread better ideas to other martial arts
>> teachers.
>
> teaching is a really bad field too. gotta basically ignore the field and learn and apply Popper.
Teaching would be a place I could integrate what I'm learning here
with something I could actually do.
>
> since your ideas (politics, health, psychology, martial arts teaching) are all over the place, i’m guessing you don’t already have really strong, clear interests to guide you. sound right?
Either that or I have lots of strong clear interests. I'm open to
other suggestions too.
Is it best if I focus on one thing at a time? Or not really?