少点错误 2024年11月16日
Ayn Rand’s model of “living money”; and an upside of burnout
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本文提出一个意志力的玩具模型:你的意识思维通过选择长期滋养你基础过程的行为来“赚取”意志力(获得你其他心理部分的信任)。例如,你的意识思维可能耗费意志力去参加令人失望的初次约会,然后在找到一段带来长期浪漫关系的约会时,恢复并获得更多意志力。明智的意识思维可以通过制定平均滋养你基础过程的计划来获得大量的意志力预算。另一方面,妄想或漠不关心的意识思维通常会‘筋疲力尽’——他们的意志力预算耗尽,导致他们几乎无法获得意志力。本文还探讨了类似的‘活的意志力’和‘死的意志力’概念,以及意志力枯竭与经济中‘活的资金’和‘死的资金’之间的类比。

🤔 **意志力模型:**意识思维通过选择长期滋养基础过程的行为来“赚取”意志力,类似于获得心理其他部分的信任。明智的意识思维能获得更多意志力,而妄想或漠不关心的意识思维则容易耗尽意志力。

💰 **活的资金与死的资金:**作者借鉴了阿兰·德·波顿的“活的资金”概念,将资金比作意志力。活的资金用于创造价值,死的资金则用于满足个人主观愿望,最终耗尽。

🧠 **活的意志力与死的意志力:**活的意志力理解自己对生命、意识和选择的条件负责,而死的意志力则忽略了这些条件。死的意志力可能会导致意志力枯竭,即无法再获得基础过程的配合。

🔄 **意志力枯竭的积极面:**意志力枯竭可以促使人们重新审视哪些行为真正能激发基础过程,并学习如何更有效地运用有限的意志力,从而区分哪些意志力的使用方式有助于维持生命循环,哪些则无益。

🔥 **意志力枯竭与社会:**作者认为,现代社会某些经济模式可能导致‘死的意志力’和‘死的资金’的产生,并探讨了其背后的机制。

Published on November 16, 2024 2:59 AM GMT

Epistemic status: Toy model. Oversimplified, but has been anecdotally useful to at least a couple people, and I like it as a metaphor.

Introduction

I’d like to share a toy model of willpower: your psyche’s conscious verbal planner “earns” willpower (earns a certain amount of trust with the rest of your psyche) by choosing actions that nourish your fundamental, bottom-up processes in the long run.  For example, your verbal planner might expend willpower dragging you to disappointing first dates, then regain that willpower, and more, upon finding a date that leads to good long-term romance.  Wise verbal planners can acquire large willpower budgets by making plans that, on average, nourish your fundamental processes.  Delusional or uncaring verbal planners, on the other hand, usually become “burned out” – their willpower budget goes broke-ish, leaving them little to no access to willpower.

I’ll spend the next section trying to stick this discussion into a larger context, then get back to discussing willpower.

On processes that lose their relationship to the unknown

Good scientists seek truth, craft hypotheses that stick their necks out, and send their ideas forth to die in their stead, while retaining their own ability to change their minds.

Actual humans who aspire to be scientists, on the other hand, often forget that this is the goal, and instead get stuck defending some fixed theory.

I suspect this forgetting is a special case of a general phenomenon: many processes, if they are to remain healthy, must take an active interest in things they don’t yet know.  And yet those same processes will tend to collapse into structures that actively resist new data.  To list a few other examples:

I hope someone someday writes an essay kind of like the Waluigi essay, that gives a decent, rent-paying model of why processes often collapse in this way.  (The tie-in to willpower is that IMO a lot of burnout is downstream of this kind of collapse.)

Ayn Rand’s model of “living money” 

I love the model of Rand’s that I’m about to share because it offers a crisp microcosm of the junction between “I want power enough to do what I want, whether or not that fits easily with the world” and “if I don’t attend to how the world is shaped, I’ll cease to be.”

The model is set in an ideal economy – the sort of place libertarians would want to build.  (If you think this isn’t possible for humans, imagine a different species and context for which it is possible; I want this as a toy model, or a detailed metaphor.)

In this ideal economy, people can only make money by creating something people want. (Otherwise, those others wouldn't part with their money.)  So, if you want money, you basically have to attend to things like "what do people want?" and "how does the world work -- e.g. how do I make metal for train tracks that will hold together well, or bread that will be tasty, or etc.?" Even if you're a bit of an idiot who wants only the temporary illusion that you're creating value, by getting to e.g. boss people around and make what looks like a business even though it's destroying value or something -- even then you need to pay attention, because otherwise you can't get people to do what you want, and can't get those with land or factories or whatever to loan it to you.  Unless!  Unless you have savings.

Savings are interesting in this model because they give you the temporary ability to get people to mix metals or bake bread or whatever in the way you want them to, whether or not your way makes sense to them (by paying them to do this).  On Rand’s model, there’re two superficially similar, but really very different, ways this ability can be used:

Living money:  Sometimes an entrepreneur sees a new path to produce real value and makes a bet, spending their savings to set up a factory/research lab/etc. that has a real shot at later making things people want (even though others can't see this yet, and so wouldn't yet want in unless paid in advance).  Such an entrepreneur’s money is “living” in the sense that it is part of a homeostatic dance that spends and replenishes, sustains itself over time, and creates more life/value.

Dead money: Other times, a person spends down their savings (and thereby gets people to do things those people don’t independently see value in) while taking no interest in the complex and often not-yet-known-to-us processes by which value is created and destroyed.  For example, Rand’s fiction depicts characters who inherit large sums of money without any corresponding virtue.  Sometimes these characters say they want to “help people,” but “help people” is for them something of a detached symbol; e.g. one such character who inherits a bank preferentially gives bank loans to people who’re pitiable but unlikely to repay the money (“to help people”) until the bank they are running goes bust and loses the entrusted savings of many; another inherits an energy research firm and makes “compassionate” changes that make it far less likely to create good power plant designs.  Such an heir’s money is not a living system; it gets used up via paying people to do things that usually cause destruction.  And then it’s gone.  There is no sustained or life-aligned dance this money takes part in.

The tendency of “dead money” to burn itself out helps keep the idealized economy in a state where businesses are mostly “living,” are mostly curious about and responsive to the question of what will actually create goodness for the economy’s inhabitants.[1] The bankruptcy of particular businesses and of particular piles of savings is part of what keeps the economy in living relationship with the unknown, instead of letting it get closed off and colonized by stasis.  Sort of like how the “death” of falsified scientific hypotheses is part of what keeps the process of science alive despite the tendency-toward-closed-offness of the humans who aspire to be scientists.

An analogous model of “living willpower” and burnout. 

My toy model of willpower is basically the same:

There’s a bottom-up process within us (as within young children and non-human animals) that tends, if left to its own devices, to do a lot of good things (going on a walk when restless, eating when hungry, gravitating toward conversations or play activities that help us make sense of things, etc.).  But as humans we can sometimes do better than this – we can sometimes foresee steps that seem dumb to our more visceral processes, but that pay off in the long-run, including from a visceral perspective.

“Living willpower” is willpower that is consciously understood as a bet on unknowns: “I don’t know whether this project will pay off, but I am betting my finite credibility on it anyhow.”  “Dead willpower” is willpower that has forgotten where it comes from, that tries to arbitrarily make up some actions that are “good” to do (in some sense of “good” that is not accountable, not based in the conditions required to sustain life and choice, as with the Rand villain who wanted to "help people"). [2]

Basically: “living willpower” understands itself as accountable to the conditions required for life, consciousness, and choice – while “dead willpower” doesn’t.

On this model, burnout is the analog of running out of savings – burnout is running out of the ability to get your visceral process to follow your suggestions.  Burnout is what happens when either living willpower makes enough bad bets despite trying to make good ones until it “goes credibility-broke”, or when dead willpower makes many bad bets while forgetting it is making bets at all.  

This has some upside: once a person is credibility-broke, they can more easily study which things are and aren't bottom-up motivating (since those are ~the only actions they can take); and which uses of their tiny willpower do and don't rapidly produce more; and this is sometimes helpful for learning the difference between uses of willpower that form part of the living dance, and uses that don't.

  1. ^

    Again, this is within an idealized economy.  IMO it is an important question to what extent today's actual economies in e.g. the US cause "dead money" to burn out, vs having pathways whereby dead money can acquire more dead money via regulatory capture or similar without any need to create value.

  2. ^

     This is perhaps something of a digression, but my own experience is that when I’m using “dead willpower,” there is in practice a “tiny note of discord”-type sensation that tugs gently at my sleeve, letting me know that there’re some clues I’m not looking at, concerning whether this is what I want to be doing.

    Perhaps another word for what I’m calling “dead willpower,” here, is “being dissociated from some of your own caring, or some of your own capacity to care.”  IME it often comes with a desire to stay distracted, to continue blocking out that “tiny note of discord.”  Also IME, folks living this way are more likely to get hijacked by ideologies (or to invite ideologies to come distract them?) – more likely to e.g. feel as though they “need to” do what (wokism / EA / staying “okay” relative to some middle class notion of career success / whatever) demands, less likely to enjoy and appreciate getting to choose.  (But this is all anecdotal with small n, I admit.)



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意志力 心理模型 活的资金 意志力枯竭 基础过程
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