Back in the nineties, a teenage supergenius joined a mailing list. That odd seed led, via Harry Potter, to today's Effective Altruism and AI Risk movements; bizarre cults; and the birth of Bitcoin. This is the surreal saga of Extropia's Children.
there were bits and pieces that made me feel like Jon Evans was being a tad too sympathetic to Elizer and others whose track record really should warrant a somewhat greater degree of scepticism than he shows, but i had to tap out at this paragraph from chapter 6:
Scott Alexander is a Bay Area psychiatrist and a writer capable of absolutely magnificent, incisive, soulwrenching work … with whom I often strongly disagree. Some of his arguments are truly illuminatory; some betray the intellectual side-stepping of a very smart person engaged in rationalization and/or unwillingness to accept the rest of the world will not adopt their worldview. (Many of his critics, unfortunately, are inferior writers who misunderstand his work, and furthermore suggest it’s written in bad faith, which I think is wholly incorrect.) But in fairness 90+% of humanity engages in such rationalization without even worrying about it. Alexander does, and challenges his own beliefs more than most.
the fact that Jon praises Scott’s half-baked, anecdote-riddled, Red/Blue/Gray trichotomy as “incisive” (for playing the hits to his audience), and his appraisal of the meandering transhumanist non-sequitur reading of Allen Ginsberg’s Howl as “soulwrenching” really threw me for a loop.
and then the later description of that ultimately rather banal New York Times piece as “long and bad” (a hilariously hypocritical set of adjectives for a self-proclaimed fan of some of Scott’s work to use), and the slamming of Elizabeth Sandifer as being a “inferior writer who misunderstands Scott’s work”, for uh, correctly analyzing Scott’s tendencies to espouse and enable white supremacist and sexist rhetoric… yeah it pretty much tanks my ability to take what Jon is writing at face value.
i don’t get how after so many words being gentle but firm about Elizer’s (lack of) accomplishments does he put out such a full-throated defense of Scott Alexander (and the subsequent smearing of his “”“enemies”“”). of all people, why him?
“Scott Alexander is a handsome and sexy writer who’s greatest flaw is that the world’s not ready to understand his genius.”
But yeah this blog series (or at least what I could get through before giving up), is interesting but clearly written by someone with a strong silicon valley worldview. Burning Man and AI generated header images and all.
Meditations on Moloch is “soul-wrenching”, apparently. Jesus fucking Christ.
In what world do these people grow up? “Oh my God, conflict exists between interests and values, things are hard, not every problem is tractable”.
There used to be a refrain that “Moloch” is effectively Siskind’s word for capitalism, because he can’t bring his libertarian heart to name what everybody understands. But that’s wrong, because Siskind’s view is no more than the shallowest Burkeanism. And the worst thing about every single anti-Utopian is that they all assume everybody else feels as mugged by imperfection as they do.
there were bits and pieces that made me feel like Jon Evans was being a tad too sympathetic to Elizer and others whose track record really should warrant a somewhat greater degree of scepticism than he shows, but i had to tap out at this paragraph from chapter 6:
the fact that Jon praises Scott’s half-baked, anecdote-riddled, Red/Blue/Gray trichotomy as “incisive” (for playing the hits to his audience), and his appraisal of the meandering transhumanist non-sequitur reading of Allen Ginsberg’s Howl as “soulwrenching” really threw me for a loop.
and then the later description of that ultimately rather banal New York Times piece as “long and bad” (a hilariously hypocritical set of adjectives for a self-proclaimed fan of some of Scott’s work to use), and the slamming of Elizabeth Sandifer as being a “inferior writer who misunderstands Scott’s work”, for uh, correctly analyzing Scott’s tendencies to espouse and enable white supremacist and sexist rhetoric… yeah it pretty much tanks my ability to take what Jon is writing at face value.
i don’t get how after so many words being gentle but firm about Elizer’s (lack of) accomplishments does he put out such a full-throated defense of Scott Alexander (and the subsequent smearing of his “”“enemies”“”). of all people, why him?
“Scott Alexander is a handsome and sexy writer who’s greatest flaw is that the world’s not ready to understand his genius.”
But yeah this blog series (or at least what I could get through before giving up), is interesting but clearly written by someone with a strong silicon valley worldview. Burning Man and AI generated header images and all.
Meditations on Moloch is “soul-wrenching”, apparently. Jesus fucking Christ.
In what world do these people grow up? “Oh my God, conflict exists between interests and values, things are hard, not every problem is tractable”.
There used to be a refrain that “Moloch” is effectively Siskind’s word for capitalism, because he can’t bring his libertarian heart to name what everybody understands. But that’s wrong, because Siskind’s view is no more than the shallowest Burkeanism. And the worst thing about every single anti-Utopian is that they all assume everybody else feels as mugged by imperfection as they do.