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  "title": "Continuous Integration for the Mind: Treating Feelings as Data",
  "subtitle": "Coverage of lessw-blog",
  "category": "risk",
  "datePublished": "2026-03-01T12:05:00.206Z",
  "dateModified": "2026-03-01T12:05:00.206Z",
  "author": "PSEEDR Editorial",
  "tags": [
    "Cognitive Science",
    "Systems Thinking",
    "AI Collaboration",
    "Rationality",
    "Mental Health",
    "Continuous Integration"
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    "https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zmzLBfkrwZu2krYHn/continuously-integrating-feelings-processing-feelings-moment"
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  "contentHtml": "\n<p class=\"mb-6 font-serif text-lg leading-relaxed\">In a recent post, lessw-blog discusses a theoretical framework that applies the software engineering principle of \"Continuous Integration\" to human emotional regulation and decision-making.</p>\n<p>In a recent post, lessw-blog discusses a novel approach to personal optimization titled <strong>&quot;Continuously Integrating Feelings,&quot;</strong> which frames human emotions not as irrational noise, but as valuable data outputs from the brain's internal &quot;heuristic algorithms.&quot;</p><p>The intersection of cognitive science, rationality, and systems thinking often grapples with the friction between logical intent and emotional reality. Traditional approaches to productivity or self-improvement frequently encourage overriding emotional states to achieve goals. However, this post argues that such suppression creates technical debt in the form of &quot;maladaptive escapism.&quot; When the brain generates a feeling-a signal that something is amiss or requires attention-and that signal is ignored, individuals often turn to &quot;superstimuli&quot; (such as video games, social media, or other high-dopamine distractions) to numb the sensation.</p><p>The author proposes a model where feelings are treated as high-bandwidth information that requires &quot;postprocessing.&quot; By acknowledging and analyzing these emotional outputs moment-to-moment-similar to how a developer reviews logs during a Continuous Integration (CI) process-an individual can derive &quot;reflectively stable policy changes.&quot; These are behavioral adjustments that stick because they resolve the underlying heuristic conflict rather than merely suppressing the symptom.</p><p>Of particular interest to technologists is the methodology used to develop this framework. The author collaborated extensively with <strong>Claude (Opus 4.6)</strong>, using the AI not just as a text generator, but as a partner in cognitive architecture design. This collaboration resulted in a structured model, a song for mnemonic reinforcement, and a practical Emacs reminder system to prompt the user to engage with their internal state. This suggests a growing utility for AI in the realm of psychological self-reflection and systems design.</p><p>This post is significant for those interested in the application of algorithmic thinking to human psychology. It moves beyond vague mindfulness advice, offering a mechanistic view of emotions as system alerts that, when properly integrated, optimize the agent's interaction with their environment.</p><p>We recommend reading the full post to understand the specific mechanics of the &quot;postprocessing&quot; technique and how the author utilized AI to construct this mental model.</p><p><a href=\"https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zmzLBfkrwZu2krYHn/continuously-integrating-feelings-processing-feelings-moment\">Read the full post on LessWrong</a></p>\n\n<h3 class=\"text-xl font-bold mt-8 mb-4\">Key Takeaways</h3>\n<ul class=\"list-disc pl-6 space-y-2 text-gray-800\">\n<li>**Feelings as Heuristics**: The brain utilizes internal algorithms that manifest as feelings; these should be viewed as data requiring postprocessing rather than noise to be suppressed.</li><li>**The Superstimuli Trap**: Ignoring negative feelings often leads to engagement with superstimuli (e.g., excessive media consumption) as a form of maladaptive escapism.</li><li>**Reflectively Stable Policies**: By integrating emotional data into decision-making, individuals can create policy changes that are robust and self-reinforcing.</li><li>**AI-Assisted Introspection**: The framework was developed through a dialogue with Claude (Opus 4.6), highlighting the potential of AI in designing personal cognitive architectures.</li>\n</ul>\n\n<p class=\"mt-8 text-sm text-gray-600\">\n<a href=\"https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zmzLBfkrwZu2krYHn/continuously-integrating-feelings-processing-feelings-moment\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\" class=\"text-blue-600 hover:underline\">Read the original post at lessw-blog</a>\n</p>\n"
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