Meetup : West LA - Randomness: Why We Want It, How We Get It
post by Scott Garrabrant · 2013-07-01T20:08:40.764Z · LW · GW · Legacy · 3 commentsContents
Discussion article for the meetup : West LA - Randomness: Why We Want It, How We Get It Discussion article for the meetup : West LA - Randomness: Why We Want It, How We Get It None 3 comments
Discussion article for the meetup : West LA - Randomness: Why We Want It, How We Get It
When: 7:00pm Wednesday, July 3rd.
Where: The Westside Tavern in the upstairs Wine Bar (all ages welcome), located inside the Westside Pavillion on the second floor, right by the movie theaters. The entrance sign says "Lounge".
Parking is free for 3 hours.
Discussion: I will present many uses for random or pseudo-random numbers, both for algorithms and for humans. There will be applications to: Game Theory, Complexity Theory, Cryptography, and Fair Division. Then I will open the discussion to how we as humans can generate pseudo-random numbers. I encourage everyone to think about how they would attempt to generate an unpredictable string of random numbers, and share their results. (Imagine you are playing Rock-Paper-Scissors with an Omega-like AI which is very good at learning from patterns and predicting human behavior. How would you stop it from beating you.) Finally, there will probably be some philosophical discussion on the difference between randomness and pseudo-randomness, and whether or not randomness is achievable or even well defined.
No prior knowledge of or exposure to Less Wrong is necessary; this will be generally accessible and useful to everyone who values thinking for themselves. There will be open general conversation until 7:30, and that's always a lot of good, fun, intelligent discussion!
There will be a probably whiteboard with Bayes' Theorem written on it.
Discussion article for the meetup : West LA - Randomness: Why We Want It, How We Get It
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comment by Alexandus · 2013-07-01T22:14:43.935Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
This sounds fascinating - if possible, could part of this be recorded/transcribed for those of us whose schedules and locations don't permit us to attend in person? Thanks, -Alex
Replies from: Scott Garrabrant↑ comment by Scott Garrabrant · 2013-07-01T23:02:50.574Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
I doubt it would be helpful to record it, but I can probably make Less Wrong post afterwords with the same content, and with some of the ideas we come up with. Hopefully that will spark more discussion, and we can come up with even better cognitive algorithms.