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Showing below up to 259 results in range #71 to #329.

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  1. Simple core of consequentialist reasoning‏‎ (19:11, 27 February 2021)
  2. The Uncertain Future‏‎ (19:12, 27 February 2021)
  3. Test‏‎ (19:15, 27 February 2021)
  4. Whole brain emulation‏‎ (19:16, 27 February 2021)
  5. Rapid capability gain vs AGI progress‏‎ (19:17, 27 February 2021)
  6. Selection effect for who builds AGI‏‎ (19:18, 27 February 2021)
  7. Deconfusion‏‎ (19:18, 27 February 2021)
  8. Continuous takeoff‏‎ (22:16, 1 March 2021)
  9. Hyperbolic growth‏‎ (00:07, 2 March 2021)
  10. Soft-hard takeoff‏‎ (01:43, 2 March 2021)
  11. Comparison of AI takeoff scenarios‏‎ (00:50, 5 March 2021)
  12. AI takeoff‏‎ (01:01, 5 March 2021)
  13. Importance of knowing about AI takeoff‏‎ (02:13, 5 March 2021)
  14. Scaling hypothesis‏‎ (00:45, 12 March 2021)
  15. Asymmetric institution‏‎ (21:51, 12 March 2021)
  16. Counterfactual of dropping a seed AI into a world without other capable AI‏‎ (20:51, 15 March 2021)
  17. Main Page‏‎ (21:22, 19 March 2021)
  18. OpenAI‏‎ (19:54, 22 March 2021)
  19. One-sentence summary card‏‎ (21:01, 23 March 2021)
  20. Central node trick for remembering equivalent properties‏‎ (21:04, 23 March 2021)
  21. Steam game buying algorithm‏‎ (23:07, 25 March 2021)
  22. List of timelines for futuristic technologies‏‎ (01:01, 26 March 2021)
  23. List of terms used to describe the intelligence of an agent‏‎ (20:56, 26 March 2021)
  24. Stupid questions‏‎ (20:58, 26 March 2021)
  25. Spaced proof review as a way to understand key insights in a proof‏‎ (23:54, 26 March 2021)
  26. Different mental representations of mathematical objects is a blocker for an exploratory medium of math‏‎ (02:27, 28 March 2021)
  27. AI safety is harder than most things‏‎ (02:28, 28 March 2021)
  28. AI safety is not a community‏‎ (02:28, 28 March 2021)
  29. AI safety lacks a space to ask stupid or ballsy questions‏‎ (02:28, 28 March 2021)
  30. AI safety technical pipeline does not teach how to start having novel thoughts‏‎ (02:28, 28 March 2021)
  31. Add the complete proof on proof cards to reduce friction when reviewing‏‎ (02:29, 28 March 2021)
  32. Corrigibility may be undesirable‏‎ (02:30, 28 March 2021)
  33. Debates shift bystanders' beliefs‏‎ (02:30, 28 March 2021)
  34. Depictions of learning in The Blue Lagoon are awful‏‎ (02:30, 28 March 2021)
  35. Discursive texts are difficult to ankify‏‎ (02:31, 28 March 2021)
  36. Flag things to fix during review‏‎ (02:32, 28 March 2021)
  37. Giving advice in response to generic questions is difficult but important‏‎ (02:32, 28 March 2021)
  38. How doomed are ML safety approaches?‏‎ (02:32, 28 March 2021)
  39. How meta should AI safety be?‏‎ (02:33, 28 March 2021)
  40. Ignore Anki add-ons to focus on fundamentals‏‎ (02:33, 28 March 2021)
  41. Is AI safety no longer a scenius?‏‎ (02:34, 28 March 2021)
  42. It is difficult to find people to bounce ideas off of‏‎ (02:34, 28 March 2021)
  43. It is difficult to get feedback on published work‏‎ (02:34, 28 March 2021)
  44. Make Anki cards based on feedback you receive‏‎ (02:34, 28 March 2021)
  45. Mass shift to technical AI safety research is suspicious‏‎ (02:35, 28 March 2021)
  46. Newcomers in AI safety are silent about their struggles‏‎ (02:35, 28 March 2021)
  47. Nobody understands what makes people snap into AI safety‏‎ (02:35, 28 March 2021)
  48. Ongoing friendship and collaboration is important‏‎ (02:35, 28 March 2021)
  49. Online question-answering services are unreliable‏‎ (02:36, 28 March 2021)
  50. Spaced repetition prevents unrecalled unrecallables‏‎ (02:37, 28 March 2021)
  51. Stream of low effort questions helps with popularity‏‎ (02:38, 28 March 2021)
  52. There is pressure to rush into a technical agenda‏‎ (02:38, 28 March 2021)
  53. Unreliability of online question-answering services makes it emotionally taxing to write up questions‏‎ (02:39, 28 March 2021)
  54. Use paper during spaced repetition reviews‏‎ (02:39, 28 March 2021)
  55. Use temporary separate Anki decks to learn new cards based on priority‏‎ (02:39, 28 March 2021)
  56. Will it be possible for humans to detect an existential win?‏‎ (02:40, 28 March 2021)
  57. Will there be significant changes to the world prior to some critical AI capability threshold being reached?‏‎ (02:40, 28 March 2021)
  58. Existing implementations of card sharing have nontrivial overhead‏‎ (17:21, 29 March 2021)
  59. Value learning‏‎ (04:53, 30 March 2021)
  60. Combinatorial explosion in math‏‎ (20:31, 30 March 2021)
  61. List of technical AI alignment agendas‏‎ (21:29, 2 April 2021)
  62. Simple core‏‎ (21:32, 2 April 2021)
  63. Late singularity‏‎ (21:33, 4 April 2021)
  64. AI timelines‏‎ (01:36, 5 April 2021)
  65. Laplace's rule of succession argument for AI timelines‏‎ (02:04, 5 April 2021)
  66. Statistical analysis of expert timelines argument for AI timelines‏‎ (05:10, 9 April 2021)
  67. Convergent evolution of values‏‎ (17:50, 9 April 2021)
  68. Interacting with copies of myself‏‎ (20:40, 12 April 2021)
  69. Selection effect for successful formalizations‏‎ (20:41, 12 April 2021)
  70. Setting up Windows‏‎ (06:34, 20 April 2021)
  71. The Secret of Psalm 46 outline‏‎ (21:01, 23 April 2021)
  72. If you want to succeed in the video games industry‏‎ (08:37, 29 April 2021)
  73. Spaced repetition world‏‎ (03:07, 3 May 2021)
  74. Potpourri hypothesis for math education‏‎ (21:59, 6 May 2021)
  75. Switching costs of various kinds of software‏‎ (20:37, 8 May 2021)
  76. Anki‏‎ (20:00, 10 May 2021)
  77. Spaced repetition as generator of questions‏‎ (20:02, 10 May 2021)
  78. Add easy problems as cards with large graduating interval‏‎ (19:33, 11 May 2021)
  79. Using Anki for math‏‎ (19:34, 11 May 2021)
  80. Cognitive biases that are opposites of each other‏‎ (01:14, 12 May 2021)
  81. SuperMemo‏‎ (23:48, 12 May 2021)
  82. Are due counts harmful?‏‎ (06:31, 13 May 2021)
  83. Encoding dependence problem‏‎ (20:02, 14 May 2021)
  84. Iteration cadence for spaced repetition experiments‏‎ (07:49, 19 May 2021)
  85. Spaced repetition allows graceful deprecation of experiments‏‎ (07:51, 19 May 2021)
  86. Secret sauce for intelligence‏‎ (23:45, 19 May 2021)
  87. Evolution‏‎ (23:46, 19 May 2021)
  88. Incremental reading‏‎ (19:51, 22 May 2021)
  89. Explosive aftermath‏‎ (23:22, 25 May 2021)
  90. Sudden emergence‏‎ (23:23, 25 May 2021)
  91. List of critiques of iterated amplification‏‎ (19:55, 31 May 2021)
  92. Science argument‏‎ (07:09, 15 June 2021)
  93. Textbook test for AI theory‏‎ (23:32, 18 June 2021)
  94. Robin Hanson‏‎ (23:33, 18 June 2021)
  95. My beginner incremental reading questions‏‎ (01:15, 21 June 2021)
  96. AI will solve everything argument against AI safety‏‎ (20:02, 23 June 2021)
  97. Politicization of AI‏‎ (22:06, 11 July 2021)
  98. Reference class forecasting on human achievements argument for AI timelines‏‎ (00:14, 12 July 2021)
  99. Fractional progress argument for AI timelines‏‎ (00:19, 12 July 2021)
  100. Hardware argument for AI timelines‏‎ (00:24, 12 July 2021)
  101. SuperMemo shortcuts‏‎ (01:45, 12 July 2021)
  102. Word explanations are already great‏‎ (00:49, 16 July 2021)
  103. We still don't know how to systematically write great word explanations‏‎ (00:53, 16 July 2021)
  104. Distillation is not enough‏‎ (01:27, 16 July 2021)
  105. List of experiments with Anki‏‎ (01:46, 16 July 2021)
  106. Medium that reveals flaws‏‎ (04:09, 16 July 2021)
  107. Exhaustive quizzing allows impatient learners to skip the reading‏‎ (04:20, 16 July 2021)
  108. Learning-complete‏‎ (05:02, 16 July 2021)
  109. Unbounded working memory assumption in explanations‏‎ (00:40, 17 July 2021)
  110. List of techniques for managing working memory in explanations‏‎ (00:40, 17 July 2021)
  111. Tinkering in math requires loading the situation into working memory‏‎ (00:40, 17 July 2021)
  112. Video games comparison to math‏‎ (00:42, 17 July 2021)
  113. Braid for math‏‎ (00:43, 17 July 2021)
  114. Live math video‏‎ (00:46, 17 July 2021)
  115. Finiteness assumption in explorable media‏‎ (00:46, 17 July 2021)
  116. Representing impossibilities‏‎ (00:51, 17 July 2021)
  117. Probability and statistics as fields with an exploratory medium‏‎ (00:51, 17 July 2021)
  118. The Witness‏‎ (00:51, 17 July 2021)
  119. Jonathan Blow‏‎ (00:51, 17 July 2021)
  120. Improvement curve for good people‏‎ (00:51, 17 July 2021)
  121. People watching‏‎ (00:52, 17 July 2021)
  122. Inter-personal comparison test‏‎ (00:52, 17 July 2021)
  123. Spaced repetition‏‎ (00:52, 17 July 2021)
  124. Expert response heuristic for prompt writing‏‎ (00:52, 17 July 2021)
  125. List of techniques for making small cards‏‎ (00:53, 17 July 2021)
  126. Self-graded prompts made for others must provide guidance for grading‏‎ (00:54, 17 July 2021)
  127. Card sharing‏‎ (00:54, 17 July 2021)
  128. Booster card‏‎ (00:57, 17 July 2021)
  129. Optimal unlocking mechanism for booster cards is unclear‏‎ (00:57, 17 July 2021)
  130. Should booster cards be marked as new?‏‎ (00:57, 17 July 2021)
  131. Spaced repetition is useful because most knowledge is sparsely applicable‏‎ (00:59, 17 July 2021)
  132. What would a vow of silence look like for math?‏‎ (01:00, 17 July 2021)
  133. Vow of silence‏‎ (01:01, 17 July 2021)
  134. Jelly no Puzzle‏‎ (01:01, 17 July 2021)
  135. Video games allow immediate exploration‏‎ (01:02, 17 July 2021)
  136. The mathematics community has no clear standards for what a mathematician should know‏‎ (01:03, 17 July 2021)
  137. Spaced proof review is not about memorizing proofs‏‎ (01:04, 17 July 2021)
  138. Linked list proof card‏‎ (01:06, 17 July 2021)
  139. Spaced proof review routine‏‎ (01:08, 17 July 2021)
  140. Deck options for proof cards‏‎ (01:09, 17 July 2021)
  141. Anki deck options‏‎ (01:09, 17 July 2021)
  142. Incremental reading in Anki‏‎ (01:10, 17 July 2021)
  143. Large graduating interval as substitute for putting effort into making atomic cards‏‎ (01:10, 17 July 2021)
  144. Large graduating interval as a way to prevent pattern-matching‏‎ (01:10, 17 July 2021)
  145. Spaced repetition as soft alarm clock‏‎ (01:11, 17 July 2021)
  146. Spaced writing inbox‏‎ (01:13, 17 July 2021)
  147. Spaced inbox ideas‏‎ (01:17, 17 July 2021)
  148. Dual ratings for spaced inbox‏‎ (01:17, 17 July 2021)
  149. Spaced everything‏‎ (01:18, 17 July 2021)
  150. Snoozing epicycle‏‎ (18:19, 18 July 2021)
  151. Busy life periods and spaced inbox‏‎ (18:19, 18 July 2021)
  152. Mapping mental motions to parts of a spaced repetition algorithm‏‎ (18:19, 18 July 2021)
  153. Soren Bjornstad‏‎ (18:21, 18 July 2021)
  154. Piotr Wozniak‏‎ (18:21, 18 July 2021)
  155. Emotional difficulties of spaced repetition‏‎ (18:21, 18 July 2021)
  156. Feeling like a perpetual student in a subject due to spaced repetition‏‎ (18:22, 18 July 2021)
  157. Spaced repetition constantly reminds one of inadequacies‏‎ (18:22, 18 July 2021)
  158. Duolingo does repetition at the lesson level‏‎ (18:22, 18 July 2021)
  159. Repetition granularity‏‎ (18:22, 18 July 2021)
  160. Small card‏‎ (18:22, 18 July 2021)
  161. Do an empty review of proof cards immediately after adding to prevent backlog‏‎ (18:23, 18 July 2021)
  162. Empty review‏‎ (18:23, 18 July 2021)
  163. Maintaining habits is hard, and spaced repetition is a habit‏‎ (18:25, 18 July 2021)
  164. Emotional difficulties of AI safety research‏‎ (18:25, 18 July 2021)
  165. The Sequences vs evergreen notes‏‎ (18:25, 18 July 2021)
  166. Uninsightful articles can seem insightful due to unintentional spaced repetition‏‎ (18:26, 18 July 2021)
  167. Open-ended questions are common in real life‏‎ (18:28, 18 July 2021)
  168. Integration card‏‎ (18:28, 18 July 2021)
  169. Tutoring heuristic for prompt writing‏‎ (18:29, 18 July 2021)
  170. Proof card‏‎ (18:29, 18 July 2021)
  171. Physical vs digital clutter‏‎ (18:29, 18 July 2021)
  172. Spaced repetition and cleaning one's room‏‎ (18:30, 18 July 2021)
  173. There is room for something like RAISE‏‎ (18:34, 18 July 2021)
  174. List of people who have thought a lot about spaced repetition‏‎ (18:35, 18 July 2021)
  175. Hnous927‏‎ (18:35, 18 July 2021)
  176. Big card‏‎ (01:39, 23 July 2021)
  177. Spaced proof review as a way to invent novel proofs‏‎ (01:44, 23 July 2021)
  178. Big cards can be good for mathematical discovery‏‎ (02:44, 23 July 2021)
  179. Page template‏‎ (20:15, 24 July 2021)
  180. Desiderata for dissolving the question‏‎ (21:06, 30 July 2021)
  181. Spaced proof review‏‎ (00:01, 2 August 2021)
  182. List of men by number of sons, daughters, and wives‏‎ (17:21, 2 August 2021)
  183. Anki reviews are more fun on mobile‏‎ (18:43, 11 August 2021)
  184. Single-architecture generality‏‎ (20:18, 11 August 2021)
  185. Single-model generality‏‎ (20:19, 11 August 2021)
  186. AlphaGo‏‎ (20:19, 11 August 2021)
  187. Bury effortful cards to speed up review‏‎ (20:22, 11 August 2021)
  188. Wei Dai‏‎ (20:47, 11 August 2021)
  189. Tao Analysis I exercise count‏‎ (21:59, 11 August 2021)
  190. Creative forgetting‏‎ (00:15, 12 August 2021)
  191. Duolingo‏‎ (23:48, 13 August 2021)
  192. Definitions last‏‎ (21:20, 15 August 2021)
  193. Fake motivation‏‎ (21:28, 15 August 2021)
  194. You don't need to eat your own dogfood in explanation science‏‎ (00:24, 20 August 2021)
  195. Changing selection pressures argument‏‎ (04:17, 30 August 2021)
  196. Task-dependent diversity‏‎ (20:52, 15 September 2021)
  197. List of reasons something isn't popular or successful‏‎ (08:03, 24 September 2021)
  198. Fractally misfit‏‎ (08:04, 24 September 2021)
  199. List of interesting search engines‏‎ (05:58, 27 September 2021)
  200. Tao Analysis Flashcards‏‎ (20:00, 29 September 2021)
  201. Asynchronous support‏‎ (19:28, 3 October 2021)
  202. The Secret of Psalm 46‏‎ (05:38, 6 October 2021)
  203. Can the behavior of approval-direction be undefined or random?‏‎ (17:24, 15 October 2021)
  204. Credit card research 2021‏‎ (21:11, 23 October 2021)
  205. Feynman technique fails when existing explanations are bad‏‎ (20:27, 24 October 2021)
  206. Deliberate practice for learning proof-based math‏‎ (18:37, 25 October 2021)
  207. Narrow vs broad cognitive augmentation‏‎ (19:56, 5 November 2021)
  208. Tricky examples in basic probability‏‎ (20:05, 5 November 2021)
  209. Unintended consequences of AI safety advocacy argument against AI safety‏‎ (21:23, 6 November 2021)
  210. Duolingo for math‏‎ (04:11, 8 November 2021)
  211. Thinking Mathematics‏‎ (04:13, 8 November 2021)
  212. Corrigibility‏‎ (23:29, 8 November 2021)
  213. Number of relevant actors around the time of creation of AGI‏‎ (23:37, 8 November 2021)
  214. Weird recursion‏‎ (23:38, 8 November 2021)
  215. Braid‏‎ (04:06, 9 November 2021)
  216. Human safety problem‏‎ (20:36, 11 November 2021)
  217. List of AI safety projects I could work on‏‎ (14:25, 4 February 2022)
  218. Instruction manuals vs giving the answers‏‎ (11:21, 6 February 2022)
  219. 3Blue1Brown‏‎ (12:43, 7 February 2022)
  220. Scenius‏‎ (12:44, 7 February 2022)
  221. Explanation science‏‎ (11:06, 8 February 2022)
  222. Philosophical difficulty‏‎ (10:59, 26 February 2022)
  223. List of disagreements in AI safety‏‎ (11:00, 26 February 2022)
  224. Difficulty of AI alignment‏‎ (11:10, 26 February 2022)
  225. Aligning smart AI using slightly less smart AI‏‎ (11:21, 26 February 2022)
  226. Minimal AGI‏‎ (14:42, 26 February 2022)
  227. Pivotal act‏‎ (15:15, 26 February 2022)
  228. Doomer argument against AI safety‏‎ (20:55, 18 March 2022)
  229. Application of functional updateless timeless decision theory to everyday life‏‎ (19:53, 1 April 2022)
  230. How similar are human brains to chimpanzee brains?‏‎ (22:25, 12 April 2022)
  231. Discovery fiction‏‎ (07:05, 23 June 2022)
  232. Explorable explanation‏‎ (19:00, 3 July 2022)
  233. Comparison of pedagogical scenes‏‎ (19:28, 4 July 2022)
  234. List of arguments against working on AI safety‏‎ (00:29, 24 July 2022)
  235. Late 2021 MIRI conversations‏‎ (21:27, 1 August 2022)
  236. AlphaGo as evidence of discontinuous takeoff‏‎ (23:35, 2 August 2022)
  237. AI prepping‏‎ (04:20, 26 November 2022)
  238. UDASSA‏‎ (09:13, 8 January 2023)
  239. What counts as good motivation?‏‎ (19:36, 20 January 2023)
  240. Interaction reversal between knowledge-to-be-memorized and ideas-to-be-developed‏‎ (23:04, 3 February 2023)
  241. Finding the right primitives for spaced repetition responses‏‎ (23:23, 3 February 2023)
  242. Spaced repetition response as chat message or chat reaction‏‎ (23:26, 3 February 2023)
  243. Spaced inbox review should not be completionist or obligatory‏‎ (08:53, 14 February 2023)
  244. What makes a word explanation good?‏‎ (20:46, 9 May 2023)
  245. Anki deck philosophy‏‎ (18:19, 8 June 2023)
  246. Cards created by oneself can be scheduled more aggressively‏‎ (22:45, 16 July 2023)
  247. Dealing with bad problems in spaced proof review‏‎ (18:26, 2 August 2023)
  248. Continually make new cards‏‎ (18:26, 2 August 2023)
  249. Make new cards when you get stuck‏‎ (18:27, 2 August 2023)
  250. Andy Matuschak‏‎ (18:28, 2 August 2023)
  251. Michael Nielsen‏‎ (18:28, 2 August 2023)
  252. Tips for reviving a spaced repetition practice‏‎ (20:01, 2 August 2023)
  253. Can spaced repetition interfere with internal sense of relevance?‏‎ (01:54, 16 August 2023)
  254. Add all permutations of a card to prevent pattern-matching‏‎ (07:26, 18 August 2023)
  255. Equivalence classes of prompts‏‎ (00:29, 19 August 2023)
  256. Card sharing allows less valuable cards to be created‏‎ (00:29, 19 August 2023)
  257. Reverse side card for everything‏‎ (00:41, 19 August 2023)
  258. Spaced repetition is not about memorization‏‎ (01:24, 21 August 2023)
  259. Deck options for small cards‏‎ (20:27, 25 November 2023)

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