{"version":"1.1.0","chapters":[{"startTime":9.0,"title":"Introduction"},{"startTime":53.0,"title":"Prelude: On Shorthand"},{"startTime":210.0,"title":"Guidelines, in brief:"},{"startTime":319.0,"title":"What does it mean for something to be a \"guideline\"?"},{"startTime":642.0,"title":"Where did these come from?"},{"startTime":747.0,"title":"Why does this matter?"},{"startTime":777.0,"title":"Expansions"},{"startTime":782.0,"title":"1. Don't say straightforwardly false things."},{"startTime":915.0,"title":"2. Track and distinguish your inferences from your observations."},{"startTime":1184.0,"title":"3. Estimate and make clear your rough level of confidence in your assertions."},{"startTime":1420.0,"title":"4. Make your claims clear, explicit, and falsifiable, or explicitly acknowledge that you aren't doing so (or can't)."},{"startTime":1669.0,"title":"5. Aim for convergence on truth, and behave as if your interlocutors are also aiming for convergence on truth."},{"startTime":1981.0,"title":"6. Don't jump to conclusions—maintain at least two hypotheses consistent with the available information."},{"startTime":2217.0,"title":"7. Be careful with extrapolation, interpretation, and summary/restatement."},{"startTime":2574.0,"title":"8. Allow people to restate, clarify, retract, and redraft their points."},{"startTime":2786.0,"title":"9. Don't weaponize equivocation/abuse categories/engage in motte-and-bailey shenanigans."},{"startTime":3132.0,"title":"10. Hold yourself to the absolute highest standard when directly modeling or assessing others' internal states, values, and thought processes."},{"startTime":3470.0,"title":"Appendix: Miscellaneous Thoughts"},{"startTime":3597.0,"title":"Appendix: Sabien's Sins"}]}