Peanut Butter

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/gRcBten4TBmCNduMZ/peanut-butter

Contents

Follow up thoughts

The Hedonic Treadmill

In my guide to getting rich slowly, I wrote that my goal is to improve my material lifestyle by 2% a year. I still stand by it. I think that even slow progress (coupled with technology getting better) feels a lot better than stagnation. Sharp increases in lifestyle don’t increase happiness by a commensurate amount and can’t be ratcheted back without causing suffering. Effective Altruism is a wonderful way to use the extra money for happiness and fulfillment while keeping material lifestyle inflation in check. A 2% increase in consumption is certainly achievable if you’re willing to work and do sensible financial planning, especially if your starting point is modest. For other pursuits it’s harder – I don’t know how to guarantee that I sleep with partners who are 2% sexier every year for the rest of my life.

Diet

How’s my diet going? The experiment was to see if I could lose even 4 pounds, and I predicted that if I can achieve that I’ll be even more motivated to stick to counting calories and daily intermittent fasting. Instead, I quickly lost 5 pounds and then plateaued there, which is really demotivating. After interviewing deluks917 I bought some peanuts and carrots and had just that for lunch for four days straight. It worked great in suppressing my appetite and keeping my diet on track, but also really bummed me out. I will keep trying to replace more of what I eat every day with routine staples, but I don’t think I’ll ever get to having nothing but 3 items in my fridge.

Taste Tests

My friend Spencer ran a blind tasting experiment which confirmed that people have no idea what they’re drinking and that cheap stuff often tastes better. My favorite blind tasting red wine, which was also the crowd’s favorite, was the Mirassou pinot noir which you can get for under $10.

Attachments

The issue of attachment brings together Buddhist and Stoic philosophy, although they ultimately arrive at different answers. Buddhism sees the suffering as inevitable – whatever you enjoy will ultimately bring you grief because it is impermanent. It is better to give it up from the start. Stoicism is more optimistic, holding that it’s possible to sever the feeling of attachment without necessarily giving up the object of desire itself. Stoicism endorses eating peanut butter, but not forever – just long enough to dispel the fear of losing access to a rich diet. Once you realize how great peanut butter is, you can better enjoy the steaks and caviar. The same is true for things like relationships. I know people who have wasted lifetimes in codependent, abusive, or just unsatisfying relationships because they couldn’t get over the fear of being alone. Getting rid of the fear doesn’t require giving up relationships. The Stoic Seneca advised:

Set aside a certain number of days, during which you shall be content with the scantiest and cheapest fare, with coarse and rough dress, saying to yourself the while: ‘Is this the condition that I feared?’When I was 22, I worked 12 hours a day for Israeli minimum wage in a small city in the desert far from my friends. I was single and shared an apartment with 2 roommates and six cats. And I was far from unhappy because I had just finished four years of mandatory military service and civilian life of any sort was an upgrade. Today I work 9 hours a day for a whole lot more money, and I live with my wife in New York City surrounded by friends. This is way better, and I wouldn’t give any of it up without a fight. But I know that I can lose it all and the world won’t end. Perhaps this is how Buddhism and Stoicism can be integrated – learning to meditate not in order to permanently dissolve all suffering but to know that meditation works and that negative mental states are not all that scary.

Suffering

I can think of two compelling criticisms of the core Buddhist project: avoiding suffering by letting go of desires. The first is utopian – instead of changing our minds to be content with an unsatisfactory universe, let’s change the universe to satisfy our desires. We used to be sick, hungry, and cold; we invented antibiotics, peanut butter, and the Uniqlo ultralight down jacket. Mental illness? Loneliness? Death? We’re working on it. As a benefit, actually solving problems instead of meditating them away helps those who aren’t meditators instead of throwing them under the bus. The second answer is… I’ll let Zarathustra speak for himself: "We have discovered happiness"—say the last men, and blink thereby.> One still worketh, for work is a pastime. But one is careful lest the pastime should hurt one.One no longer becometh poor or rich; both are too burdensome. Who still wanteth to rule? Who still wanteth to obey? Both are too burdensome.Every one wanteth the same; every one is equal: he who hath other sentiments goeth voluntarily into the madhouse."Formerly all the world was insane,"—say the subtlest of them,"We have discovered happiness,"—say the last men, and blink thereby. Thus Spake Zarathustra *by Friedrich Nietzsche.*The Nietzschian response to Buddhism is that suffering is necessary, for nothing else drives creativity and transformation. The universe is full of dust and gas that feel no suffering, along with a handful of humans who alone are capable of suffering and also doing anything whatsoever. Would we give it up to become more like rocks? I find wisdom in all three approaches. Some suffering is an illusion that should be dispelled, some can be solved by applied technology, and some must be borne to propel us to greatness. Telling which is which is left as an exercise for the reader.

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/gRcBten4TBmCNduMZ/peanut-butter?commentId=u8dJPwnTBEvSTApsR

Authentic Buddhism is basically a guide to wireheading. If you follow Buddhism really strictly, you become a monk who sits and meditates all day and eats one bowl of rice. There’s no magic, you’re not restoring karma to the universe, you have just found a way to be very happy. But it’s not obvious to say what part of yourself you’re willing to part with to be happy.I want to push back a bit against this perspective, since it’s one of several that I think take an overly narrow view of Buddhism and is fairly widespread. Buddhism is very wide and deep with a lot of very different practices that may share a common history but are very spread out in idea space. Some forms of Buddhism are arguably about wireheading, to be fair, but many are not. For example, my own practice with Zen falls within the Mahayana branch of Buddhism which explicitly rejects the notion that it’s appropriate to practice only to achieve nirvana (liberation from suffering) and instead that the purpose of practice is to help all suffer less. Each of us is, of course, part of "all" and so we contribute to all suffering less by liberating ourselves from suffering, and we will often act unskillfully to help others so long as we are caught by our own suffering-inducing delusions, so we must focus on ourselves enough to be able to actually help others. But this focus on self is limited by an equal valuing of all beings, thus there is no attempt to attain nirvana except in the limit when perhaps all beings could attain it together. This doesn’t even begin to get into some of the weirder stuff that is even farther away from looking like wireheading, but I think should give enough sense of the fact that thinking that "Buddhism is a guide to wireheading" is missing out on a lot of what goes on under the label of "Buddhism".

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/gRcBten4TBmCNduMZ/peanut-butter?commentId=9iTjQb3gfBZMsxj4E

Well said. On the Nietzsche front, "Formerly all the world was insane" is certainly remarkable. "Follies and Crimes" and "Galaxies of Joy" are both right up there with it. Here’s Galaxies — "What? The final aim of science should be to give man as much pleasure and as little displeasure as possible? But what if pleasure and displeasure are so intertwined that whoever wants as much as possible of one must also have as much as possible of the other — that whoever wants to learn to ‘jubilate up to the heavens’ must also be prepared for ‘grief unto death’? And that may well be the way things are! […] Even today you still have the choice: either as little displeasure as possible*, in short, lack of pain — and socialists and politicians of all parties fundamentally have no right to promise any more than that — or* as much displeasure as possible as the price for the growth of a bounty of refined pleasures and joys that hitherto have seldom been tasted. Should you decide on the former, i.e. if you want to decrease and diminish people’s susceptibility to pain, you also have to decrease and diminish their capacity for joy. With science one can actually promote either of these goals! So far it may still be better known for its power to deprive man of his joys and make him colder, more statue-like, more stoic. But it might yet be found to be the great giver of pain! — And then its counterforce might at the same time be found: its immense capacity for letting new galaxies of joy flare up!" — Nietzsche, The Gay Science, 1882

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/gRcBten4TBmCNduMZ/peanut-butter?commentId=aqW6ruhy3CEBBnfat

Based on focusing I have realized some feelings like tiredness are not really ‘real’. They’re just a felt sense of not wanting to keep programming.

Feelings such as tiredness involve more high-level processing than I used to think.

That doesn’t cause me to classify them as less real. Instead, I conclude that most, or maybe all, feelings of tiredness include some rather high-level predictions about the costs and benefits of whatever I’m doing now.