I strongly agree with you on points one and two, though I’m not super confident on three. For me the biggest takeaway is we should be putting more effort into attempts to instill “false” beliefs which are safety-promoting and self-stable.
I could see this backfiring. What if insilling false beliefs just later led to the meta-belief that deception is useful for control?
that’s a fair point, I’m reconsidering my original take.
Current theme: default
Less Wrong (text)
Less Wrong (link)
Arrow keys: Next/previous image
Escape or click: Hide zoomed image
Space bar: Reset image size & position
Scroll to zoom in/out
(When zoomed in, drag to pan; double-click to close)
Keys shown in yellow (e.g., ]) are accesskeys, and require a browser-specific modifier key (or keys).
]
Keys shown in grey (e.g., ?) do not require any modifier keys.
?
Esc
h
f
a
m
v
c
r
q
t
u
o
,
.
/
s
n
e
;
Enter
[
\
k
i
l
=
-
0
′
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
→
↓
←
↑
Space
x
z
`
g
I strongly agree with you on points one and two, though I’m not super confident on three. For me the biggest takeaway is we should be putting more effort into attempts to instill “false” beliefs which are safety-promoting and self-stable.
I could see this backfiring. What if insilling false beliefs just later led to the meta-belief that deception is useful for control?
that’s a fair point, I’m reconsidering my original take.