A summary of every "Highlights from the Sequences" post

By Akash @ 2022-07-15T23:05 (+47)

1

I recently finished reading Highlights from the Sequences, 49 essays from The Sequences that were compiled by the LessWrong team. 

Since moving to Berkeley several months ago, I’ve heard many people talking about posts from The Sequences. A lot of my friends and colleagues commonly reference biases, have a respect for Bayes Rule, and say things like “absence of evidence is evidence of absence!”

So, I was impressed that the Highlights were not merely a refresher of things I had already absorbed through the social waters. There was plenty of new material, and there were also plenty of moments when a concept became much crisper in my head. It’s one thing to know that dissent is hard, and it’s another thing to internalize that lonely dissent doesn’t feel like going to school dressed in black— it feels like going to school wearing a clown suit.

2

As I read, I wrote a few sentences summarizing each post. I mostly did this to improve my own comprehension/memory.

You should treat the summaries as "here's what Akash took away from this post" as opposed to "here's an actual summary of what Eliezer said."

Note that the summaries are not meant to replace the posts. Read them here.

3

Here are my notes on each post, in order. I also plan to post a reflection on some of my favorite posts.

Thinking Better on Purpose

The lens that sees its flaws

What do we mean by “Rationality”?

Humans are not automatically strategic

Use the try harder, Luke

Your Strength as a Rationalist

The meditation on curiosity

The importance of saying “Oops”

The marital art of rationality

The twelve virtues of rationality

Pitfalls of Human Cognition

The Bottom Line

Rationalization

You can Face Reality

Is that your true rejection?

Avoiding your beliefs’ real weak points

Belief as Attire

Dark side epistemology

Cached Thoughts

The Fallacy of Gray

Lonely Dissent

Positive Bias: Look into the Dark

Knowing about biases can hurt people

The Laws Governing Belief

Making beliefs pay (in anticipated experiences)

What is evidence?

Scientific Evidence, Legal Evidence, Rational Evidence

How much evidence does it take?

Absence of Evidence is Evidence of Absence

Conservation of Expected Evidence

Argument Screens Off Authority

An Intuitive Explanation of Bayes’s Theorem Bayes Rule Guide

The Second Law of Thermodynamics, and Engines of Cognition

  1. There is a relationship between information-processing (your certainty about the state of a system) and thermodynamic entropy (the movement of particles). Entropy must be preserved: If information-theoretic entropy decreases by X, then thermodynamic entropy must increase by X.
  2. If you knew a cup of water was 72 degrees, and then you learned the positions and velocities of the particles, that would decrease the thermodynamic entropy of the water. So the fact that we learned about the water makes the water colder. What???
  3. Also if we could do this, we could make different types of refrigerators & convert warm water into ice cubes by removing electricity. Huh?

Toolbox-thinking and Law-thinking

Local validity as a key to sanity and civilization

Science Isn't Enough

Hindsight devalues science

Science doesn’t trust your rationality

When science can’t help

No safe defense, not even science

Connecting Words to Reality

Taboo your words

Dissolving the question

Say not “complexity”

Mind projection fallacy

How an algorithm works from the inside

37 ways that words can be wrong

Expecting short inferential distances

Illusion of transparency: Why no one understands you

Why We Fight

Something to protect

The gift we give to tomorrow

On Caring

Tsuyoku Naritai! (I Want To Become Stronger)

A sense that more is possible


titotal @ 2022-07-17T09:08 (+11)

Just a sanity check, are there other people here who feel like the sequences, while being fairly good pop science write-ups, are also massively overrated and full of flaws? Especially when it comes to scientific fields, for example it feels like the caricature of scientists in  defy the data was written without once talking to one. 

Hamish Huggard @ 2022-07-17T09:32 (+9)

Full of flaws? Yes. Cringe? Yes. 2-3 times longer than it should be? Yes.

Overrated? Only slightly. There's some great dramatisations of dry academic ideas (similar to Taleb), and the philosophy is plausibly life changing.

Jack R @ 2022-07-16T05:09 (+1)

Thanks for this! I enjoyed the refresher + summaries of some of the posts I hadn't yet read.