Posts

Triangle ACX Meetup 2022-10-06T17:23:27.150Z
Triangle ACX Meetup 2022-10-06T17:18:51.881Z
Petrov Day 2022-09-28T14:30:23.668Z
Triangle ACX Meetup (cancelled) 2022-09-22T06:35:35.560Z
Triangle ACX Meetup 2022-09-22T00:10:49.465Z
Triangle ACX Meetup 2022-09-10T23:40:24.302Z
Triangle ACX Meetup 2022-09-10T23:39:52.565Z
Triangle ACX Meetup [Meetups Everywhere event] 2022-09-08T16:41:49.477Z
Triangle ACX Meetup 2022-09-01T03:54:35.775Z
Triangle ACX Meetup 2022-08-25T16:43:52.599Z
Triangle ACX Meetup 2022-08-18T16:09:01.209Z
Triangle ACX/EA Meetup 2022-08-11T14:49:53.284Z
Triangle ACX Meetup 2022-07-28T18:34:05.010Z
The Solution is Inaction 2020-03-24T18:01:28.863Z

Comments

Comment by Amritam Gamaya on Triangle ACX Meetup (cancelled) · 2022-10-06T17:21:59.083Z · LW · GW

I'm just commenting to make sure the person who RSVP'd is alerted to the cancellation. 

Hope this isn't too inconvenient, and hope to see you next week. (It's possible people are going anyways, maybe check the Discord.)

Comment by Amritam Gamaya on ODE to Joy: Insights from 'A First Course in Ordinary Differential Equations' · 2020-03-26T01:34:35.263Z · LW · GW

The question is ill founded. You can in fact recover all of the information about log x from its Taylor series. I think TurnTrout is confused maybe because the Taylor series only converges on a certain interval, not globally? I'll answer the question assuming that's the confusion.

If you know all the derivatives of log x at x=1, but you know nothing else about log x, then you can find a Taylor series that converges on (0,2). But, given the Taylor series, you now also know all the derivatives at x=1.9. Writing a Taylor series centered at 1.9, you get a series that converges on (0,3.8). Continuing in this fashion, you can find all values of log x, for all positive real inputs, using only the derivatives at x=1. You just need multiple "steps."

That said, there is a fundamental limitation. Consider the functions f(x) = 1/x and g(x) = {1/x if x > 0, 1 + 1/x if x < 0}. For x > 0, f(x) = g(x), but for x<0 they are not equal. Clearly both functions are infinitely differentiable,
but just because you know all the derivatives of f at x=1, doesn't mean you can determine it's value at x=-1.

Okay, so Taylor series allow you to probe all values of a function, but it might take multiple steps, and singularities cause real unfixable problems. The correct way to think about this is that functions aren't just differentiable or not, they are infinitely differentiable *on a set*. For example, 1/x is smooth on (-infinity,0) union (0,infinity), which is a set with two connected components. The Taylor series allows you to probe all of the values on any individual connected component, but it very obviously can't tell you anything about other connected components.

As for why it sometimes takes multiple "steps," like for log x: for reasons, the Taylor series has to converge on a symmetric interval. For log x centered at x=1, it simply can't converge at 3 without also converging at -1, which is obviously impossible since it's outside the connected component where log x is differentiable. The Taylor series converges on the largest interval where it can possibly converge, but it still tells you the values elsewhere (in the connected component) if you're willing to work slightly harder.

Everything I said is true for analytic functions. There is still the issue of infinitely differentiable non-analytic functions as described here. Log x is not an example of such a function, log x is analytic. These counterexamples are much more subtle, but it has to do with the fact that the error in an n-th derivative approximation decays like O(x^n), so even a Taylor series allows for errors like O(e^x) because exponential decay beats any polynomial.

Comment by Amritam Gamaya on The Solution is Inaction · 2020-03-25T17:05:01.392Z · LW · GW

The idea that the landlord has to make payments to the bank (mortgages and debt payments) is ostensibly fixed by lowered interest rates and bailouts, same as any other business who has lost their revenue stream.

The question is whether landlords are considered essential or non-essential businesses. If they are essential, like grocery stores, then we need to make sure they continue to function. If they are non-essential, like barbers, then they should go into stasis and take government money/loans to service any overhead they absolutely can't shut off (like the barbers should be doing). The confusion is because shelter is essential, but landlords don't actually provide shelter (they only steal shelter from those who can't pay). Landlords can go into stasis like a barber and yet keep providing their essential goods like a grocery store. This logic proves too much, since I've never understood why we permit landlords to charge so much money without providing any services that I can discern, so I retreat to Chesterton's Fence.