David Boree
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It's very normal for cult stuff. She starts reading around this time when she's in college, Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality. This helps to solidify her feelings of her own centrality as a hero figure.
It's very normal for cult stuff. She starts reading around this time when she's in college, Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality. This helps to solidify her feelings of her own centrality as a hero figure.
It's very normal for cult stuff. She starts reading around this time when she's in college, Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality. This helps to solidify her feelings of her own centrality as a hero figure.
In a blog post where she lays out her intellectual journey, she quotes a line from that fanfic of Yudkowsky's that is โ it's essentially about what Yudkowsky calls the hero contract, right? It's essentially about โ This concept called the hero contract, right? And there's this โ this is a psychological concept among academics, right?
In a blog post where she lays out her intellectual journey, she quotes a line from that fanfic of Yudkowsky's that is โ it's essentially about what Yudkowsky calls the hero contract, right? It's essentially about โ This concept called the hero contract, right? And there's this โ this is a psychological concept among academics, right?
In a blog post where she lays out her intellectual journey, she quotes a line from that fanfic of Yudkowsky's that is โ it's essentially about what Yudkowsky calls the hero contract, right? It's essentially about โ This concept called the hero contract, right? And there's this โ this is a psychological concept among academics, right?
And it's about like โ it's about analyzing how we as a โ how we should look at the people who societies declare heroes and the communities that declare them heroes and see them as in a dialogue, right? As in when you're in a country decides this guy's a hero, he is through his actions kind of conversing to them and they are kind of telling him what they expect from him.
And it's about like โ it's about analyzing how we as a โ how we should look at the people who societies declare heroes and the communities that declare them heroes and see them as in a dialogue, right? As in when you're in a country decides this guy's a hero, he is through his actions kind of conversing to them and they are kind of telling him what they expect from him.
And it's about like โ it's about analyzing how we as a โ how we should look at the people who societies declare heroes and the communities that declare them heroes and see them as in a dialogue, right? As in when you're in a country decides this guy's a hero, he is through his actions kind of conversing to them and they are kind of telling him what they expect from him.
But Yudkowsky wrestles with this concept and he comes to some very weird conclusions about it in one of the worst articles that I've ever read. He frames it as hero licensing to refer to the fact that People get angry at you if you're trying to do something and they don't think you have a hero license to do it.
But Yudkowsky wrestles with this concept and he comes to some very weird conclusions about it in one of the worst articles that I've ever read. He frames it as hero licensing to refer to the fact that People get angry at you if you're trying to do something and they don't think you have a hero license to do it.
But Yudkowsky wrestles with this concept and he comes to some very weird conclusions about it in one of the worst articles that I've ever read. He frames it as hero licensing to refer to the fact that People get angry at you if you're trying to do something and they don't think you have a hero license to do it.
In other words, if you're trying to do something that they don't think you're qualified to do, he'll describe that as them not thinking you have a hero license. He writes this annoying article that's like a conversation between him and a person who's supposed to embody the community of people who don't think he should write Harry Potter fan fiction. Yeah. It's all very silly.
In other words, if you're trying to do something that they don't think you're qualified to do, he'll describe that as them not thinking you have a hero license. He writes this annoying article that's like a conversation between him and a person who's supposed to embody the community of people who don't think he should write Harry Potter fan fiction. Yeah. It's all very silly.
In other words, if you're trying to do something that they don't think you're qualified to do, he'll describe that as them not thinking you have a hero license. He writes this annoying article that's like a conversation between him and a person who's supposed to embody the community of people who don't think he should write Harry Potter fan fiction. Yeah. It's all very silly.
Again, all this is ridiculous, but Ziz is very interested in the idea of the hero contract, right? But she comes up with her own spin on it, which she calls the true hero contract, right? And instead of โ again, the academic term is the hero contract means societies and communities pick heroes โ
Again, all this is ridiculous, but Ziz is very interested in the idea of the hero contract, right? But she comes up with her own spin on it, which she calls the true hero contract, right? And instead of โ again, the academic term is the hero contract means societies and communities pick heroes โ
Again, all this is ridiculous, but Ziz is very interested in the idea of the hero contract, right? But she comes up with her own spin on it, which she calls the true hero contract, right? And instead of โ again, the academic term is the hero contract means societies and communities pick heroes โ
And those heroes and the community that they're in are in a constant dialogue with each other about what is heroic and what is expected, right? What the hero needs from the community and vice versa, you know? That's all that that's saying. Ziz says, no, no, no, that's bullshit. The real hero contract is, quote, pour free energy at my direction and it will go into the optimization for good.
And those heroes and the community that they're in are in a constant dialogue with each other about what is heroic and what is expected, right? What the hero needs from the community and vice versa, you know? That's all that that's saying. Ziz says, no, no, no, that's bullshit. The real hero contract is, quote, pour free energy at my direction and it will go into the optimization for good.