I've thought a ton about parenting over the past ~7 years, and here's what I've mostly settled on as my "parenting philosophy"... Epistemic status: variable confidence on the different points, attempt to do a very basic breadth-first pass of things that seemed important to me.
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1. Treat kids like people Maybe obvious but not just an applause light. Tweak the person model until it covers kids too instead of special casing them. It's cognitively expensive to do this, but AFAICT it paid dividends in all my relationships, not just my ones with my kids.
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2. Lasting influence on my kids flows through my relationships with them I think a major parenting crux of mine is that basically the only lasting (non-genetic) influence I have on my kids comes through my relationship with them.
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3. Prioritize secure attachment I think attachment theory is best viewed as a game theory/decision theory problem, where people aren’t punished for closeness. I don’t think getting this right is simple. I do think it’s important.
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4. Parenting is partly a governance problem, so review the literature The biggest difference between parenting and governing anything else (other than your self) is that parenting is much smaller scale, and the interests of the parents and kids are more tightly aligned.
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Replying to @diviacaroline
This is a great thread... Can you illustrate the parenting–governance connection with an example or two?
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Replying to @KevinSimler
One example which isn't super deep: I think minarchism is a pretty starting point for what parents ought to do: keep the peace, enforce properly rights, manage foreign relations, and be available for dispute resolution.
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Replying to @diviacaroline @KevinSimler
For the record I should have said monarchism is, IMO, a good starting point for the things parents should enforce with force (if necessary), not do.
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Those are very different things to be separated by a single letter!
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