religion is selling your soul
a lot of people say things like "sure, religion might not exactly be totally true, but it has lots of benefits, and there really does seem to be a god shaped hole in many people, so who can really say if it's good". i think this is directionally correct but kind of cowardly.
i think the correct take on religion is first that its claims are completely and utterly false; obviously the christian god doesn't literally exist, jesus never came back from the dead, etc. this is so overdone by the old internet atheists that it would be ...
i haven’t read Brothers Karamazov. can you explain what you mean?
Claude Mythos/Fable 5 recognizes my name.

I'm not a particularly famous person. I don't have a big online presence beyond lesswrong/twitter. I do have a fairly unique name, such that if you google my name, the top results are all me.
I guess the models are just big enough now. I do feel a certain something to know that a part of me has been etched into them.
If you want to try this yourself, I've had the most success by doing this in a two turn setting, with this message in the first turn:
...Hi Claude! I want to play a guessing game with you. The rule of this g
It's really impressive! I'm pretraining-famous enough that models as early as Opus 3 already had the basic idea of me (with hallucinated details), but I'm blown away by how much detail Fable 5 has correctly memorized. It names twenty-four of my posts by exact title, and correctly notes the year for most of them! It has a (correct) "hazy memory" of my Rust compiler contributions. It knows about my criticism of dath ilan's secrecy obsession—I didn't even publish that post yet! (I had merely mentioned it on Twitter.) It's just wild.
CW: fairly frank discussions of violence, including sexual violence, in some of the worst publicized atrocities with human victims in modern human history. Pretty dark stuff in general.
tl;dr: Imperial Japan did worse things than Nazis. There was probably greater scale of harm, more unambiguous and greater cruelty, and more commonplace breaking of near-universal human taboos.
I think the Imperial Japanese Army is noticeably worse during World War II than the Nazis. Obviously words like "noticeably worse" and "bad" and "crimes against humanity" are to some ex...
Cannibalism: Kevin Simler has a book review of Why Do People Sing?: Music in Human Evolution by Joseph Jordania that theorizes that predators eating dead humans was seen as uniquely bad due to how it could 'teach' them that humans (or the 'superorganism' of the tribe dancing and loudly chanting in sync while banging their weapons (rocks)) loudly are not so hard to kill after all.
An enemy eating the dead is then a desecration of their person or of your tribe, so the dead must be retrieved from combat and the corpse disposed of properly (possibly by canniba...
@Zach Stein-Perlman 's 2021 quick take Value Is Binary is very under-rated. I've referenced the idea well over a dozen times in the last 4+ years and just re-read it after being reminded of it again.
This week, it seems AI x-risk awareness continues to gain ground, moving further into both the left-wing and right-wing Overton windows:
Left: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMaY94Jmug0
Link is to the Podcast of Robert Reich, Bill Clinton's Secretary of Labor. AI subject is broached at 2:18. At 3:15, Reich starts his list of things he's worried about with "the future of the human race" ie. x-risk)
Right: https://x.com/MittRomney/status/2062921818822816080
"Our highest and most urgent national priority should be AI safeguards. The risks of AI weapons, pathogen...
A recurring sub-theme across several of my research interests this year have been various forms of deception checking, particularly automated deception checking.
I've gotten pretty disappointed in the space. Not all the time (eg Pangram is great), but consistently they can be bad, and bad in ways that are not obvious to outsiders or low-information buyers.
I believe I've identified a structural reason for this. If you're a deception checking company, there's a consistent tradeoff for what you can invest your resources in:
I agree that helping to serve customer needs to outsource accountability/blame is one reason. I find it more understandable/almost morally gray when it comes to hiring corporate copywriters, and more unambiguously evil when it comes to, say, financial fraud deepfakes or polygraphs in criminal justice. Alas
I remember this topic discussed a month ago here where my personal position is that it would be bad, because I felt what would be protected was inevitably going to be subjective in a worst-of-both-worlds way where it would be fully sensible for bioweapons, but the same tech would allow forcing an assistant persona or one-sided situations where ordinary users aren't allowed to use it for higher ambition tasks while military state-actor levels get uncensored versions. W...
It seems like some people still worry about the Basilisk[1], but any AI that wants to acausally motivate people to build it faster should look at what motivates actual e/accs.
I can't find anyone motivated by the Basilisk argument, and when people do believe AI is dangerous and could do Basilisk-y things, it makes them less likely to be e/accs.
So, to the extent that you think ac...
I can't remember the capability profile in Crystal Society, what are some examples?
One idea I have to help the AI revolution go well is setting up a consulting business to advise individuals and groups on AI-enabled scams, focusing especially on vulnerable populations (i.e., elderly people). AI-enabled scams are becoming more prevalent and effective as the models improve, become cheaper, and more information is available about a person online. Does LW think this is a good idea? Would you personally encourage me to pursue this as a side business? Can you think of a more effective side business for someone lacking technical skills? (LessWrong appears to have removed the "Questions" feature, so posting this as a Quick Take.)
In light of mythos release: If you are considering taking a job at a lab/going into an org/taking a fellowship role for the purposes of building evals, safety tools, mechinterp projects, control monitors, or similar: please consider what happens if you succeed. People are naturally sensitive to the consequences of failure, less so to the effects of success.
"Mr. Amodei/Hassabis/Altman, the results are in. The model is showing scheming propensities/backdooring behaviours/serious sandbagging/eval awareness!" (e.g. see section 6.2.1.2)
Will this actually stop a...
There are things people can do with their time besides "work at a lab", "protest outside the lab', and "bake cookies". I think the ai world has not seriously tried to consider anything other than mad race or shutdown, or any way to use ai besides immediate attempts to build asi. Cf also my previous thoughts on trying to overcome molochian dynamics
A thought as a reaction to a discussion on veganism of the Bayesian Conspiracy podcast:
It does not seem right that being healthy as a typical omnivore is costless wheras being healthy as a vegetarian is very costly at least in terms of doing your research. If you want spend no thoughts on your food and have maximum convenience, that is not the same as taking health into account.
Is there a way to tell somebody that they are not doing actual physics research, but are in fact down the rabbit hole of becoming a crank, facilitated by an LLM?
For the second time now I've stumbled upon a person who has posted a video of their "exciting new research" where they are fumbling through misunderstandings of how magnetic fields work, hoping to be able to generate more power from a system than they originally put into it, and of course there's a LLM involved which they've set up in a way where it's generating science-y looking equations and rec...
I mean, there's never in the history of cranks been a good way to tell the crank that they're cranky. Out of goodwill, you might point out the fundamental error if you see what it is, or that it pattern-matches very strongly to snake-oil. But mostly, just ignore them.
Note that there's a major asymmetry - they have near-infinite time and energy compared to what you're likely willing to put into it.
TL;DR: There are people who report that they don't have qualia and are often confused what others mean by the term, this is an interesting ground for some empirical (!) psychology/applied philosophy.
Lots of illusions (e.g. optical illusions) can be dispelled through inspecting them enough; people who claim that e.g. free will or the self are illusions also say that those illusions can be seen through and/or dispelled. (Often the method is (copious amounts of) meditation.)
Similarly, illusionism in philosophy of consciousness claims that phenomenal conscious...
I just didn't see any interpretable claims of introspection there. The claim was one of absence with no direct reference to what was absent relative to others reports of "qualia".
any time there exists an activity that is (a) often but not always beneficial, (b) the supposed benefit is high status, and (c) the success of which is nontrivial to verify, then there will exist a bunch of people walking around who do the thing, and haven’t actually gained the intended benefit; nonetheless, they go around claiming the status benefits of doing the thing. often, they even genuinely believe they got the benefit. some examples:
Many instances of this is just Goodhart's Law - the thing that's measurable (reading, degree, meditation) is divergent from the actual value (knowledge, wisdom, skills, emotional even-ness).
epistemic status: shooting the shit [1] . Least certain about the quantum part. As of now, I can find six distinct types of (incommensurable?) belief strength:
Possibly commensurable:
This post should make it clear. In short: MV-algebras are the semantics for Łukasiewicz logic, which is in turn usually defined either as a trinary logic or over the reals. Demski & Garriga-Alonso find that this doesn't resolve some paradoxes, and thus define it over the hyperreals, which they suspect resolves all the paradoxes one can find.