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Yuye
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2Yuye's Shortform
3mo
2
Yuye's Shortform
Yuye3mo10

I've been wondering how much contraception introduces genetic selection against child abuse tendencies. My tentative belief is "a lot, and so a huge source of suffering is diminishing for future humans". Big if true.

My guess is that child abuse is disproportionately done by people who did not actively prefer to have the child (at all, or at a particular time in their life). Historically there was little selection for the trait of actively wanting children and being interested in their interiority. Now, because having children loads so much on whether it will feel fulfilling to the parent as an individual, and because the standards for the quality of the parent-child relationship are so high, there's probably a lot of selection for this.

(The heritability of fertility behavior is maybe 30%, and maybe more so with contraception.)

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[Book Review] "The Vital Question" by Nick Lane
Yuye1y52

One side of the membrane is exposed to water in contact with the alkali ovaline rock. ... Nick Lane proposes that LUCA was a membrane capped pore in an olavine rock.

 

Correction: Nick Lane never says the vent itself (in which the proto-cell membranes arose) was made of olivine. The olivine is far underground. Sinking seawater reacts with it (serpentinization) and bubbles back up. It precipitates out into the vents (mineralized sponge "chimneys") which itself is not olivine.

Here's what Wikipedia says about Lost City, which Lane gives as an example of a modern alkaline hydrothermal vent:

Once pore waters have permeated the surface and return to the surface, aragonite, brucite, and calcite chimneys are formed as calcium carbonates precipitate out of solution. Younger chimneys are primarily brucite and aragonite, being white and flaky in appearance.

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Fighting in various places for a really long time
Yuye3y210

Agree that the treatment of nihilism is shallow, but it didn't matter to me because it wasn't the heart of the movie at all. The heart is, hmm, being a failure? Letting your relationships decay because you're neglecting them, because you don't have a "show up for my people" attitude about them (maybe because on some level you expect both yourself and them to be better, but you aren't, and this is discouraging)... letting (career, family, time management) problems build up that you dismiss as chronic irritations rather than the defining, central challenges that you have to tackle... and then managing, somehow, to change, to choose love, to choose commitment to your own life.

(stares at that paragraph) Okay, yes. That's it for me. This movie is good because it shows a wreck of a person choosing to commit to their own life. I don't commit enough to my own life, my friends don't commit to their own lives, and it's very potent to watch someone turn around on this! It turns me a bit in the same direction.

I cannot ask for more from art.

Found the movie hilarious and it never crossed my mind that the protagonist being a middle aged immigrant was part of what made it funny, btw.

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MIRI location optimization (and related topics) discussion
Yuye4y100

Have you guys already done a voting survey (with whatever system seems good – STAR voting?) sent out to (1) the population of talent you want to take with you for AI research, (2) rationalists who aren't mission critical but are still valuable as interstitial social elements?

If not – at some point that's going to happen, right? This discussion seems most useful if it exists to inform a large number of people who might move what the options are, so that their preferences can be assessed numerically.

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MIRI location optimization (and related topics) discussion
Yuye4y40

I moved to Seattle from the Bay Area, and while I love the weather and relatively sane rent and general environment around here, I think 14% of the US population having a mild form of SAD should be one of the dominating factors in decisionmaking. I have mild SAD, which I find acceptable because I'm not standing in any civilizational bottlenecks, but I would move if I worked at an EA organization and considered my work very important.

If you guys consider SAD to be a solved problem via more dakka, then I retract this and mostly recommend the area.

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For those who advocate Anki
Yuye5y10

That's what I do.

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For those who advocate Anki
Answer by YuyeJan 31, 202120

My spouse has been learning Korean for two years on Duolingo, which also uses spaced repetition, with approximately no days missed, and learning has been slow. I think Anki is much worse as a primary language learning tool because it doesn't remix particles to give you new sentences to chew on. 

Where I find it shines for me (I review my cards ~2/week):

  • English vocabulary
  • Programming language syntax
  • Concepts that can be distilled into bite sized info chunks -- it doesn't substitute for understanding, but as a person who's better at memorization than concept-processing I find that memorizing the keywords and relations of a topic primes me to take in more when I read an article about how all the concepts hook up together. This works for database concepts but not quantum mechanics.
  • 1~3 sentence text designed to change some thinking pattern (e.g. I have an semi-phobia of insects but have had one really nice experience watching one, so I might have an Anki card prompting me to remember that)
  • Strong preferences my friends have ("Julie really hates spoilers")
  • Helping install TAPs
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Retrospective on a quantitative productivity logging attempt
Yuye6y30

Hmm, I looked you up on Facebook and apparently you sent me a friend request god-knows-when (which I presumably ignored because I didn't know you), which I have just accepted.

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2Yuye's Shortform
3mo
2
2Coordination attempt: Facilitating conversational splinters in Gathertown
5y
1
32Meditation: the screen-and-watcher model of the human mind, and how to use it
5y
12
25Retrospective on a quantitative productivity logging attempt
6y
5