[Question] What question would you like to collaborate on?

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/oqSMn6WEXPdDEvyyt/what-question-would-you-like-to-collaborate-on

In Why don’t long running conversations happen on LessWrong? adamzerner writes:

Here is how things currently work:

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https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/oqSMn6WEXPdDEvyyt/what-question-would-you-like-to-collaborate-on?commentId=NnZcFQtxDj2MTuy78

For a long time I’ve been very inspired by the fact that Betty Edwards’ book exists. It turns people who have "no drawing talent" into people who can easily draw anything they see, not by strenuous exercise, but by a conceptual shift that can be achieved in a few hours. I’d like to know if such conceptual shifts can be found for math ("math is too abstract"), programming ("I’m not good with computers"), music ("I can’t sing") or other areas. It would be nice to study this collaboratively.

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https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/oqSMn6WEXPdDEvyyt/what-question-would-you-like-to-collaborate-on?commentId=mkYtergbTviuHr65h

For a long time I’ve been very inspired by the fact that Betty Edwards’ book exists. Given that they wrote multiple books, which one do you mean?

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"Drawing on the right side of the brain".

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/oqSMn6WEXPdDEvyyt/what-question-would-you-like-to-collaborate-on?commentId=snnjFX2GLhjA2Pqjw

Thanks for being the first person to submit a question!

It turns people who have "no drawing talent" into people who can easily draw anything they see, not by strenuous exercise, but by a conceptual shift that can be achieved in a few hours. Did that work for you, or do you know of any evidence that that’s the case? I’m skeptical that a few hours can allow anyone to "draw anything they see" but would be happy to change my mind on that. I guess you didn’t say how well they’d be able to draw after just a few hours of "conceptual shift." But I read you as saying anyone can draw very well after just a little effort.I guess I’m not really understanding the question. Is the question something like:"What are some small shifts people can make in their mental model of some skill that would have a very large impact in the skill level of the person making that mental shift?"

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It worked on me. The change was surprisingly fast, in a couple days I went from "no drawing talent, stick figures only" to one-minute sketches similar to this or this (not mine, but should give the idea). Getting to this level doesn’t require any technique, it’s purely a conceptual shift. You learn how to trick your mind into "drawing what you see" instead of "drawing what you think". Betty Edwards describes this shift very clearly and gives a couple counterintuitive exercises for achieving it. I wouldn’t be surprised if some people got it in an hour.

The result isn’t "drawing very well" (which takes more and different kinds of work), but I’m pretty confident that I can look at anything and make a pencil drawing that looks roughly similar. It doesn’t even matter what! When you "draw what you see", you no longer care if it’s a person or tree or car or whatever, it’s all just a bunch of shapes in your visual field that you copy to paper.

In singing, there’s a similar concept of "singing with breath support", which is also a kind of primitive indivisible feeling that good singers have. But as far as I know, nobody has found a description of it that would reliably work on beginners.

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Thanks. The "drawing what you see" vs "drawing what you think" distinction combined with the images helped me understand the idea better.This seems somewhat related to what Scott Alexander called "concept shaped holes." So you’re saying that some people have a "concept of how to draw what you see" shaped hole, and that Edwards has some techniques of helping you fill that gap.Are you specifically looking for conceptual shifts that would allow you to do something better? Or is just being able to understand something you previously didn’t understand enough? Like if someone didn’t "get" jazz and there were some way to help them appreciate it, would that count?

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Specifically looking for conceptual shifts that allow you to do something better.

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/oqSMn6WEXPdDEvyyt/what-question-would-you-like-to-collaborate-on?commentId=NvoxzefABsmQxqEM9

To contribute my data point, it’s something that I could definitely see myself doing, but not at this stage of my life because I have other time commitments. Hm, maybe this is worth exploring more. I suspect a lot of people would give this response. But why not just devote eg. two hours/​week to it? I guess because it feels like that’d be too "diluted", and because I worry about my ability to do time management well. I already struggle to get to all the things I want to get to, so I probably wouldn’t be able to get to a new thing. Maybe I would if there was some sort of time management hack though, like precommitment or something.

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/oqSMn6WEXPdDEvyyt/what-question-would-you-like-to-collaborate-on?commentId=jpgpvrZcAtn4H2uLY

The proposed rules seem reasonable. However, it seems like the sort of thing where it’s hard to get them right upfront and thus would be good to have an attitude of "this is a starting point but we’ll iterate".

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/oqSMn6WEXPdDEvyyt/what-question-would-you-like-to-collaborate-on?commentId=j4Zbh7wnswR8adCpR

Thanks for writing this up! It’s a good idea and a thing worth experimenting with.

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https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/oqSMn6WEXPdDEvyyt/what-question-would-you-like-to-collaborate-on?commentId=KK3cAePfz3G44rEcB

Ya I thought it was worth a try. Looks like exactly one person is putting forward a question so far. Do you have any questions you’d be interested in working on?

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/oqSMn6WEXPdDEvyyt/what-question-would-you-like-to-collaborate-on?commentId=tnGsEZSjkmnHoRQJG

I’m a bit worried that my question will be picked and then I’ll be the only one working on it. So to give this thing a better chance of at least two people collaborating, I’m not submitting a question.