The Dark Miracle of Optics

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zzt448rSfwdydinbZ/the-dark-miracle-of-optics

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But the actually toxic butterflies—the original honest signalers—they can’t go anywhere. They’re just stuck. One might happen to evolve a new phenotype, but that phenotype isn’t protected by reputational association, and it’s going to take a very long time for the new signal-association to take hold in predators. Once other insects have learned how to replicate the proxy-association or symbol that protected them, they can only wait it out until it’s no longer protective.Thus there is an arms race toward manufacturing and recognizing what can only be called "bullshit," following Harry Frankfurt. It is speech designed to improve one’s image. And as our world becomes more mediated by representation, it in turn becomes more exploitable. We enter the Simulacra. [1] Axelrod & Hamilton 1981. [2] *The Wire *season 2: Barksdale’s crew develops a bad reputation for their underwhelming H, renames it to ditch the old baggage and keep slinging shitty product. [3] See "recognize and retaliate." [4] Hence the parasite, which is a freerider (or worse). [5] David Lewis-Williams, The Mind in the Cave: Consciousness and the Origins of Art [6] Thanks to romeostevensit for pointing me toward related literature. [7] Axelrod & Hamilton 1981.

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https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zzt448rSfwdydinbZ/the-dark-miracle-of-optics?commentId=ZvGRTRZopsgsZ9bj7

You may be interested in my recent convo on super cooperation: https://​​www.youtube.com/​​watch?v=X6MYsKeTjKk also crossposted from fb: Social orders function on the back of unfakeably costly signals. Proof of Work social orders encourage people to compete to burn more resources, Proof of Stake social orders encourage people to invest more into the common pool. PoS requires reliable reputation tracking and capital formation. They aren’t mutually exclusive, as both kinds of orders are operating all the time. People heavily invested in one will tend to view those heavily invested in the other as defectors.There is a market for narratives that help villainize the other strategy.

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zzt448rSfwdydinbZ/the-dark-miracle-of-optics?commentId=zqB8zXhDoSvdB5Yt5

[5] David Lewis-Williams, The Mind in the Cave: Consciousness and the Origins of Art [6] Thanks to romeostevensit for pointing me toward related literature. The end of your footnotes don’t appear on (the version of this post on) your blog.

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https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zzt448rSfwdydinbZ/the-dark-miracle-of-optics?commentId=Ls9d3RSzsod3hD6Tp

Ah thank you, looks like they all got jammed together in the formatting. Hope you enjoyed reading!

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I did. It’s great to see this all in one place—it connects a lot of dots, and a long, good read. After checking both I discovered [7] doesn’t appear on either. Have you been doing this for a long time?

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Thank for the tip on fn 7, it’s a pull from an Axelrod & Hamilton paper! Updated. How long have I been doing what? Edit: I’ll give some possible answers, been blogging regularly six or seven years, been lurking LessWrong four years, writing here a few months, and got into game theory six to eight months ago, though haven’t had as much time as I’d like to dig around in it. Still really need to ready Schelling, and would love to do reading on multiagent simulation.