Positive Directions

post by G Wood (geoffrey-wood) · 2025-02-11T00:00:11.426Z · LW · GW · 0 comments

Contents

  Let's set the scene - Nihilism
  Well, you're here, alive, what to do, what to do?
  Generalized non-exhaustive Utility categories
    Epistemic Accuracy / Sanity
    Health
    Social Capital
    Time
    Skills / Knowledge
    Wealth
    Preference fulfilment
  Nirvana
    Random Ideas to get you started
  Additional notes:
    Network effects in social capital
    Compound returns: 
    Threshold effects: 
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Let's set the scene - Nihilism

We are chunks of self important jelly staggering about on the surface of a tiny nugget of rock in a second rate solar system.

Sol's system is ~ four billion years old

We have been “Ourselves” (Anatomically modern) for ~200,000 years

Countless people have lived and died, and you are but one member of our endless shoals.

When you die, that's it, no second chances, no refunds.

 

Well, you're here, alive, what to do, what to do?

There doesn't really seem to be any objective final point to it all. However there are definitely better and worse outcomes and journeys.

Let's try to define a positive direction to travel

Be aware that the more positive you are in a category the easier it is to maintain or improve your position and that the reverse is also true.

 

Generalized non-exhaustive Utility categories

In rough order of importance with a rough descriptor 

  1. Epistemic Accuracy / Sanity - How well your map of reality corresponds with reality
  2. Physical / Mental Capacity - How well is your body and mind able to function compared to “best performance”
  3. Social Capital - the degree to which those you find worthy to love, love you back (See Social Status: Down the Rabbit Hole | Melting Asphalt)
  4. Time - measured in seconds not currently allocated or used well
  5. Skills / Knowledge - how far you are along the S curve of mastery for a specific skill or subject
  6. Wealth - Ownership of material assets, tools, currency, food, clothing, land, storage/working space, you know, stuff.
  7. Preference fulfilment - the degree to which reality matches your preferences

The only goal is of course Maximize your utility:

To do this make positive trade-offs between utility categories, ideally trading away surplus.

As a rough set of examples:

Epistemic Accuracy / Sanity

Health

Social Capital

Demonstrate your ability to provide utility to others, bonus points if you can consistently do so.

The more social capital you have with a person, the more likely they will do things for / with you. Ideas to increase social capital:

Time

Skills / Knowledge

Wealth

Preference fulfilment

Nirvana

So yeah, you have obtained all the utility you desire in all categories defined above?

Well done! You have reached Nirvana.

 

Warning, due the unstable nature of utility you will not stay satisfied without continued effort!

  1. Your map of reality needs to be guarded from pernicious and false memes
  2. Your body and mind constantly change in what is required to maintain health
  3. People forget their love for you over time, die, change or move away
  4. Time drains away like the sand in the hourglass, one day it will run out.
  5. If it's not used, it will be lost, get rusty or simply become redundant 
  6. Wealth inflates away, rots, rusts, gets lost, stolen or traded badly
  7. Preferences evolve with time and events; other people can persuade you or you may just change your mind.

Welcome to the eternal fight, the war to beat the final enemy, the struggle against entropy.

The struggle to get what you want and keep it. It's not a zero sum game, enjoy the journey.

That should keep you busy! ;)

 

Random Ideas to get you started

Eat a good lunch, grow a carrot, have a good conversation, make a baby laugh, go for a cold shower, splash about in a pool, write down your thoughts on paper, walk a comfortable distance, try a new food, try to eat the same food for as long as you can, cook something, learn something, read a book, play a game.

Hunt down Eudaimonia, help many others a little, help one or two people a lot, make a thing, make a system, start a business, get involved with some hedonism, serve a cause. 

 

Additional notes:

Network effects in social capital

Social capital exhibits powerful network effects. Each connection potentially links you to their entire network. High social capital in one relationship often makes building capital in others easier - people trust their friends' friends. The value of your network grows non-linearly with its size and the strength of connections within it. However, maintaining these connections requires ongoing investment that scales with network size.

Compound returns: 

Improvements in one category often automatically generate gains in others. Better epistemic accuracy leads to better decisions across all categories. Improved health provides more time and energy for everything else. Skills stack and combine in unexpected ways. This creates compound returns - gains that generate more gains. The challenge is identifying and investing in these self-reinforcing cycles.

Threshold effects: 

Many utility improvements exhibit threshold effects - points where gains become self-sustaining or even self-amplifying. Enough wealth eliminates financial stress, freeing mental resources (improving mental health). Sufficient skill level makes further improvement enjoyable rather than tedious. Adequate social capital creates opportunities without active seeking. Reaching these thresholds can shift you from scarcity spirals to abundance loops."

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