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Rationality: From AI to Zombies

Chaotic Inversion

10 Mar 2015

Transcription

Full Episode

0.993 - 12.765 Eliezer Yudkowsky

Chaotic inversion. I was recently having a conversation with some friends on the topic of hour-by-hour productivity and willpower maintenance, something I've struggled with my whole life.

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13.906 - 27 Eliezer Yudkowsky

I can avoid running away from a hard problem the first time I see it, perseverance on a timescale of seconds, and I can stick to the same problem for years, but to keep working on a timescale of hours is a constant battle for me.

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27.301 - 46.249 Unknown

It goes without saying that I've already read reams and reams of advice, and the most help I got from it was realizing that a sizable fraction of other creative professionals had the same problem and couldn't beat it either, no matter how reasonable all the advice sounds. What do you do when you can't work, my friends ask me.

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46.79 - 60.821 Eliezer Yudkowsky

Conversation probably not accurate, this is a very loose gist. And I replied that I usually browse random websites or watch a short video. Well, they said, if you know you can't work for a while, you should watch a movie or something.

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62.063 - 83.364 Eliezer Yudkowsky

Unfortunately, I replied, I have to do something whose time comes in short units, like browsing the web or watching short videos, because I might become able to work again at any time and I can't predict when. And then I stopped because I just had a revelation. I'd always thought of my work cycle as something chaotic, something unpredictable.

83.765 - 97.555 Eliezer Yudkowsky

I never used those words, but that was the way I treated it. But here, my friends seemed to be implying, what a strange thought, that other people could predict when they would become able to work again and structure their time accordingly.

98.412 - 122.314 Eliezer Yudkowsky

And it occurred to me for the first time that I might have been committing that damned old chestnut, the mind projection fallacy, right out there in my ordinary everyday life instead of high abstraction. Maybe it wasn't that my productivity was unusually chaotic. Maybe I was just unusually stupid with respect to predicting it. That's what inverted stupidity looks like. Chaos.

123.096 - 146.202 Eliezer Yudkowsky

Something hard to handle, hard to grasp, hard to guess. Something you can't do anything with. It's not just an idiom for high abstract things like artificial intelligence. It can apply in ordinary life too. And the reason we don't think of the alternative explanation, I'm stupid, is not, I suspect, that we think so highly of ourselves. It's just that we don't think of ourselves at all.

146.843 - 168.885 Eliezer Yudkowsky

We just see a chaotic feature of the environment. So now it's occurred to me that my productivity problem may not be chaos, but my own stupidity. And that may or may not help anything. It certainly doesn't fix the problem right away. Saying, I'm ignorant, doesn't make you knowledgeable. But it is at least a different path than saying it's too chaotic.

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