Responses to Catastrophic AGI Risk: A Survey

Of the (admittedly not many) papers I’ve written so far, this is the one that I’m the proudest of: Responses to Catastrophic AGI Risk: A Survey Abstract: Many researchers have argued that humanity will create artificial general intelligence (AGI) within the next twenty to one hundred years. It has been suggested that AGI may pose a catastrophic risk to humanity. After summarizing the...

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Peter Singer on Effective Altruism

I don’t usually do link posts, but I think that this video on Effective Altruism is one that everyone should watch. Share this:TweetShare on Tumblr

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Jasen Murray on tranquility meditation

Since the page that I previously used to link to for a description of how to do tranquility meditation has died, I’m reposting the instructions here. I found them very useful in getting started with meditation, and they seemed to work better for me than any other instructions. Original credit for writing them goes to Jasen Murray. —- Very brief summary: Use either the breath or metta...

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Dissecting edugames: iCivics.org

The Serious Games Market blog showcases a number of interesting edugames, and I thought that I should try some. One of the posts linked to an interesting-sounding site called iCivics.org, which has a number of educational games that are designed to teach kids about the way the US government works. Some of the games were relatively good. Others were dreadful enough that even with a designed...

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Videogames will revolutionize school (not necessarily the way you think)

A lot of the hype around educational games centers around "gamification", and using game techniques to make the boring drilling of facts into something more fun. Which would be a definite improvement, but I don't think that it's ambitious enough.

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Book review: What Video Games Have to Teach Us about Learning and Literacy

What Video Games Have to Teach Us about Learning and Literacy. James Paul Gee. Palgrave Macmillan. (This review is based on the first edition of the book.) This book was a very nice discussion about video games in light of various academic theories of learning. I particularly liked this point: “The fact that human learning is a practice effect can create a good deal of difficulty for...

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Fan fiction libraries

Today’s analogy: a fan fiction writer sets their story in a world created by someone else, and thus has the opportunity to use both characters and world/story elements that were originally created by others. Especially for novice writers, this can be a boon, as they can focus on some sub-area of fiction writing without needing to create everything from scratch. That experience will help...

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Why I’m considering a career in educational games

Given enough time, we could replace our whole educational system with almost nothing but games.

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Kansalaisaloite on vaaleja luotettavampi tahdonilmaus

Helsingin Sanomat uutisoi eduskunnan pääsihteeri Seppo Tiitisen vähättelevän kansalaisaloitetta: Hänen mukaansa uudella järjestelmällä ei ole tarkoitus muuttaa normaalia käytäntöä, jonka mukaan lainsäädäntöaloite on pääsääntöisesti hallituksella. “Kun aloitteenteko kohdentuu joko marginaalisiin tai muutoin riidanalaisiin asioihin, se ei voi olla se tie, jolla...

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Book review: A Mind Forever Voyaging: A History of Storytelling in Video Games

A Mind Forever Voyaging: A History of Storytelling in Video Games. Dylan Holmes. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. As a form of storytelling, what makes video games distinct from other forms of storytelling, such as movies or books? What are the strengths and weaknesses of this form, what techniques has it borrowed from other media, and what untapped potential does it still have? A...

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Living books

Do you feel like your books are static, passive objects, just sitting on a shelf and waiting for you to turn them alive? Think again. As long as there is a light source in your room, then light is constantly being reflected off any exposed books in the room – from their covers if they’re closed, their pages if they’re open. That light hits the surface of the book, in a constant...

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Book review: Unfit for the Future

Unfit for the Future: The Need for Moral Enhancement. Ingmar Persson & Julian Savulescu. Oxford University Press. The core thesis of Unfit for the Future is that human morality evolved to allow cooperation and altruism in small groups, but that we today face challenges requiring extensive global coordination. Challenges such as weapons of mass destruction and climate change require both...

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Idea Stories

When it comes to “idea” fiction, I think there are three main types of stories: 1. Twist Idea Stories. These have a single idea, which may or may not be hinted at during the story. It’s finally revealed on the last page or so, making for a twist ending. (E.g. many classic sci-fi short stories, from authors such as Asimov and Clarke.) 2. Big Idea Stories. These take a single big...

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Technology will destroy human nature

Human values, and human nature, are grounded in various constraints that keep us stuck in a relatively narrow space of possibilities. Once those constraints are relaxed, it seems likely that humanity will cease to exist.

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Introduction to Connectionist Modelling of Cognitive Processes: a chapter by chapter review

This chapter by chapter review was inspired by Vaniver’s recent chapter by chapter review of Causality on Less Wrong. Like with that review, the intention is not so much to summarize but to help readers determine whether or not they should read the book. Reading the review is in no way a substitute for reading the book. I first read Introduction to Connectionist Modelling of Cognitive...

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Political logic 101

Sometimes, seeing somebody you disagree with make both silly and insightful claims can help reduce your own biases.

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On unhealthy relationships

Clarisse Thorn: How my life wasn’t always Happy Fun Boundaries Are Perfect Land. “Here is the strange part, for me, in remembering him: I don’t think he consciously wanted me to hurt myself like that. If he had been deliberately abusive, if he had really wanted to tear me apart, if he’d been physically abusive […] Maybe then I would never have gotten involved? Maybe then I would...

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Anticipation and meditation

Germund Hesslow’s paper Conscious thought as simulation of behaviour and perception, which I first read maybe three months back, has an interesting discussion about anticipations. I was previously familiar with the idea of conscious thought involving simulation of behavior. Briefly, the idea was that when you plan an action, you are simulating (imagining) various courses of action and...

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New website opened, yay

I revamped my website and finally brought it a little more to the 21st century: no longer handmade HTML for each page! I’ll also be cross-posting my future LJ posts on the site’s blog section in the future, so I now finally have a Real Blog (TM) instead of just a LiveJournal account. Though everything will still be posted to LJ as well, don’t worry. I’ll also be...

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Influences

Obviously, many things have had an influence on my thought. Here are some of the major ones. Unfortunately, the focus is on the most recent ones, since I’ve mostly forgotten many of the earlier works. I expect to add more as I remember them. Books Against Intellectual Monopoly (free online version), by Michele Boldrin and David K. Levine. This book completely changed my thinking on...

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