What is this about?
This project seeks to reduce the cognitive complexity involved in self-evaluating moments, goals, habits, and tasks among incarcerated individuals. I propose a discontinuous self-assessment system grounded in a model of eight intersecting identities.
With some parameters he has thus defined probabilistic identities, one can formulate questions for special moments in life to help organize events, routines, and tasks.
This approach approaches the atomic model where, even if we cannot precisely pinpoint an electron’s layer, through specific questions we can predict which area our focus lies in.
The apparent dichotomy serves as an analytical tool rather than an absolute division. In practice, these categories merge.
He starts from the universal objective of combining useful information. He decomposes this “mega-vector” into x/y (input/output) and four areas:
Each area generates two SubVectors: input focus (x) and output focus (y), totaling eight vectors.
Each identity and relationship with a human function in random order combining information.
Relationship to evolutionary psychology:
Each subvector aligns with adaptive modules that evolved to process useful information in different contexts (nutrition, defense, social cooperation, etc.).
For any activity, we ask:
How do we decompose our mega-vector?
We often encounter complex systems (e.g., learning) that cannot be understood simply by examining their parts. This framework uses information theory to provide 4 simple questions for examining our own thinking and behavior.
A linear detailed construction in:
8-probabilistic-skills-a-construction-from-maxent
A specific more application in:
Your feedback is welcome!
If you have suggestions, critiques, or experiences to share, feel free to comment publicly or send me a private message. Every perspective helps refine the tool and make it more useful.
Framework source: P. João’s LessWrong post.