How to explore Scott Alexander's work and his 1500+ blog posts? This unaffiliated fan website lets you sort and do semantic search through the whole codex. Enjoy!

See also Top Posts and All Tags.

Tag: anecdotes

Minutes:
Blog:
Year:
Show all filters

2 posts found
May 23, 2025
acx
Read on
14 min 2,094 words 734 comments 249 likes podcast (13 min)
Scott explores various accounts of people's first memories and moments of consciousness, particularly focusing on claims of sudden 'awakening' experiences, and discusses what this might tell us about the nature of consciousness. Longer summary
Starting from a viral tweet about late consciousness awakening, Scott examines numerous responses describing people's first memories and moments of consciousness. He categorizes these into several types: normal first memories at age 3-6, memories specifically of becoming conscious, memories triggered by dramatic events, claimed memories from infancy, and late consciousness development. He also notes cases of people suddenly realizing their agency or philosophical nature. The post concludes by considering whether consciousness develops gradually or appears suddenly, drawing parallels with lucid dreams and Buddhist enlightenment experiences. Scott acknowledges the unreliability of such retrospective accounts while finding the pattern intriguing. Shorter summary
Nov 10, 2013
ssc
Read on
9 min 1,305 words 41 comments
The post shares insights and anecdotes from a forensic psychiatry conference, covering topics like the insanity defense, criminal psychology, and death penalty cases. Longer summary
This post summarizes highlights from the author's notes taken at a forensic psychiatry conference. It covers various aspects of forensic psychiatry, including the insanity defense, methods for detecting fake insanity pleas, predicting recidivism, death penalty cases, and anecdotes from criminal cases. The author presents surprising statistics about the insanity defense, describes techniques used to detect malingering, and shares interesting fragments of stories from criminal cases. The post also touches on issues related to jury selection in death penalty cases and the effectiveness of capital punishment as a deterrent. Shorter summary