Where to Start Research?

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/e2M7BNG2oGJbwvTPy/where-to-start-research

Link post When I began what I called the knowledge bootstrapping project, my ultimate goal was "Learn how to learn a subject from scratch, without deference to credentialed authorities". That was too large and unpredictable for a single grant, so when I applied to LTFF, my stated goal was "learn how to study a single book", on the theory that books are the natural subcomponents of learning (discounting papers because they’re too small). This turned out to have a flawed assumption baked into it. As will be described in a forthcoming post, the method I eventually landed upon involves starting with a question, not a book. If I start with a book and investigate the questions it brings up (you know, like I’ve been doing for the last 3-6 years), the book is controlling which questions get brought up. That’s a lot of power to give to something I have explicitly decided not to trust yet. Examples:

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/e2M7BNG2oGJbwvTPy/where-to-start-research?commentId=qoQ8ZL4mzrx2Fcywj

very short list of authors who’d made it onto my trust list A pretty late question, but would you mind sharing(/​linking to a previously shared copy of) this list?

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/e2M7BNG2oGJbwvTPy/where-to-start-research?commentId=A7J7uHbZr68JuRzj4

This post makes me think about Non-Expert Explanation. The point being made in Non-Expert Explanation is that sometimes a random person’s explanation of something will be what makes it click for you, and so it’s useful to have different people explain a given thing, even if some of those people aren’t experts. I agree with that idea and I’ve found it useful when I’m learning something to start off skimming through a bunch of different resources: blog posts, forum discussions, YouTube videos, etc., and then dive more deeply for the ones that clicked for me.

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/e2M7BNG2oGJbwvTPy/where-to-start-research?commentId=j6YZfBNxKFMnsDroi

I think epistemic spot checks prevent building gears-level models. And so does reading only small parts of books. The reasons why I think so are obvious. What’s your take on this problem?

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/e2M7BNG2oGJbwvTPy/where-to-start-research?commentId=DPRtZT8b5vup35ggK

I think "prevent" is a strong word but broadly agree that my original approach was not conducive to deep model building. You can read more about how my thoughts have changed over time here.