• You would have thought I had learned this earlier. (Sorry it’s so big, click the link below or scroll to the right) Artifact: https://claude.ai/public/artifacts/c2212195-e786-4608-9f9a-707eb6dfc912 Code (mermaid) I used AI to generate the flowchart quickly, the ideas and wording are my own.

    Read more →

  • This is a quick post to let you know about my new project https://www.millionyearview.com/ I’ll be helping you understand the latest research on questions like: If you have liked my writing in the past, please check it out. It’s a small project and I’d love your support. I’ll be keeping this blog for my personal…

    Read more →

  • Recently, I was reading David Thorstad’s new paper “Existential risk pessimism and the time of perils”. In it, he models the value of reducing existential risk on a range of different assumptions. The headline result is that 1) most plausibly, existential risk reduction is not overwhelmingly valuable–though it may still be quite valuable, it doesn’t…

    Read more →

  • “Are we living at the Hinge of History” summarised in four quotes

    Our money goes further in the future, giving us an initial reason to invest to spend later. Unless we live at an especially important time.

    Read more →

  • I’ve Changed My Mind About Nuclear Power

    In certain circles, nuclear is seen as one of the best options for powering the world. For many years I too was pro nuclear. This is an important update because it changes what policies I think are best.

    Read more →

  • The Chaotic Approach to Learning

    I’ve been thinking about a new approach to learning which I haven’t seen anywhere else, here’s a bare bones sketch. I’ll tell you why it’s exciting at the end because I want to tell you what it is first.

    Read more →

  • Can We Ditch the Myth of Language Fluency?

    Imagine someone taking their friends out in Japan, comfortably conversing and joking with the waiter before ordering for everyone. Are they ‘fluent’? Their friends think so, and perhaps they are until they walk outside to the street and realise, they don’t know how to ask for directions.

    Read more →

  • How has therapy changed my personality?

    Last year I took a personality test called the IPIP-NEO test. It’s like the “Big-5” but with lots of subcategories. For example, you might have average “openness to experience” by having low imagination, emotionality, and artistic interests, but high adventurousness, intellect, and liberalism. The breakdown seems more interesting than the average. Importantly, this test gives…

    Read more →

  • Exercise you need

    Exercise you need

    If you want to get fit, try to find exercise that will blend into the background. For me it’s my morning commute. My bike is faster than the bus and doesn’t only go every now and then. My bike is an easy hour of exercise, that doesn’t take willpower because it’s genuinely the best option.…

    Read more →

  • Exercise you love

    Exercise you love

    If you want to get fit, try to find exercise that is fun. For me, it’s climbing. I want to go because I love it. If you don’t have something that is fun, be a scientist. Try things until you find something you love. Each experiment will teach you something (even if it’s just what…

    Read more →