Topic for sharing or discussion about promoting Critical Fallibilism.
Keep things positive in this topic. For problems, post in Obstacles to Promoting Critical Fallibilism
Topic for sharing or discussion about promoting Critical Fallibilism.
Keep things positive in this topic. For problems, post in Obstacles to Promoting Critical Fallibilism
I shared the CF forum to someone for the first time last week. It was to my professor. It was nice cuz I usually am too ashamed in a way to share and have others see my posts. Now im ok with others seeing my posts cuz I feel like Iām participating in important discussion. That and Im getting results from learning about the philosophy. Also im ok with being wrong and the idea that i was wrong in the past.
Edit: i have told a friend before about CF but I liked telling someone I dont really know about it
Nice work! ![]()
Facebook groups & Reddit
In the Oxford Karl Popper Society Facebook group, I shared Responding to AI Summaries of Popperās Critics. It got 1 like and 1 share.
In the Ayn Rand Facebook group I shared David Deutsch Smears Ayn Rand. It got 6 likes and 2 comments. I also posted it on the Ayn Rand subreddit. It got 4 upvotes, 2.3k views, and 12 comments.
I might try posting Atlas Shrugged Close Reading Chapter 1 to the Facebook group and the AR &/or Oism subreddit(s), too, but will wait a bit before doing that to avoid spamming.
Yaron Brook debate
Inspired by this post, I emailed Yaron Brook requesting that he host a debate with ET about Karl Popper.
Subject: Karl Popper Debate on YBS?
Hi Yaron,
I saw an old clip of the Yaron Brook Show where you said you were looking for a Popper expert. A great Popper expert that I know of (who is also a huge fan of Objectivism) is Elliot Temple. Temple was an editor of āThe Beginning of Infinityā by David Deutsch and was a colleague of Deutsch for 10 years. Another example of Templeās work is his essay, āIntroduction to Critical Rationalismā (Critical Rationalism being Karl Popperās philosophy). (Temple also has close readings/analyses of some Atlas Shrugged chapters, which I liked a lot.)
I think it would be amazingly fascinating if you could host a debate between Elliot Temple and, e.g., Mike Mazza (who gave a speech at OCON critiquing Popper). Thatād be an epic Yaron Brook Show episode!
Templeās email is et@elliottemple.com
Best wishes,
Jarrod
He hasnāt responded. If he doesnāt respond in a week, I might email again. Also, maybe some other forum members can email Yaron the same request (probably best not to copy and paste my exact email though; use your own words).
Animal consciousness debate continued
I emailed another animal consciousness expert (Jonathan Birch) asking him about ET.
Subject: Animal Sentience Question
Dear Professor Birch,
Iāve seen compelling arguments which disagree with you about whether non-human animals are sentientāand I havenāt found any satisfactory ways to answer them (not even in your book The Edge of Sentience). Iād be very grateful to know how youād answer them.
Specifically, the arguments made in the article āAnimal Welfare Overviewā by American philosopher Elliot Temple. (As context, in case you havenāt heard of him, Temple was an editor of the book āThe Beginning of Infinityā and was a colleague of the physicist David Deutsch for 10 years.)
The articleās core thesis, rooted in the Popperian/Deutschian view of intelligence, is that animals lack subjective experience, including sentience or any kind of suffering, because all such experience requires a capacity for interpretationāan ability which Temple argues is unique to human-like general intelligence.
Iād love to know how youād address the points he makes there. (Or if you could even just link me to someone who addresses those arguments against animal suffering, Iād be so grateful.)
Thank you so much,
Jarrod
P.S. Skip the āHuman Sufferingā section of the āAnimal Welfare Overviewā article, which isnāt relevant to whether animals can suffer.
P.P.S. Do you have a preferred process or site for receiving and responding to counterarguments on animal sentience? E.g., do you maintain an āobjections and repliesā page (or a forum) and a written process for how you triage and respond to these sorts of counterarguments? Or a debate policy?
If Temple is correct, then much of the work on animal sentience would be overturned. This raises the meta-level question of: How would you find out if a critic like Temple were right? Hence why I ask whether you have a systematic process for engaging with challenges that, if correct, would require revising core assumptions in your field. (I think this is something that intellectuals in all fields should have, as Temple himself advocates.)
He hasnāt responded.
Peter Godfrey-Smith, whom I emailed and received a response from before, still hasnāt responded to my latest email. If he doesnāt respond in a week, I might politely follow up.
I also commented on this Substack post, āBecoming Shrimp-Pilledā (about shrimp consciousness and donating to the Shrimp Welfare Project (SWP) to reduce shrimp suffering).
Have you addressed arguments against animal sentience? E.g., https://curi.us/2545-animal-welfare-overview
If theyāre right, youāre wrong about āthe unfathomable effectiveness of the SWPā and youāre wasting your donations. Will you write an essay responding to the articleās criticisms or participate in a debate with itās author? (He has a debate policy here: https://www.elliottemple.com/debate-policy)
The author responded.
Now note: the argument for shrimp welfare just depends on the idea that itās not extremely implausible that shrimp are conscious. Thatās all you need to think it has very high expected value. Now, if you want to know why I think itās not that unlikely that shrimp are conscious see https://benthams.substack.com/p/betting-on-ubiquitous-pain
I replied to his response.
I really appreciate your reply. Thank you for sharing those links, but I couldnāt find anything in them that answers the argument I linked to previously (which is rooted in the Popperian/Deutschian view of intelligence and claims that consciousness requires general intelligence (it also criticizes Yudkowskyās view of intelligence/mind design space)).
Also, I think your method of evaluating ideas (in this case, about shrimp consciousness) is mistaken.
Your argument rests on evaluating the *likelihood* or *plausibility* of shrimp consciousness. You use phrases like ānot extremely implausible,ā ānot that unlikely,ā and you argue that the expected value is high even with a low probability. In the second article you linked, you also mention how ādataā¦provided more and more evidence for consciousness.ā
This suggests a framework where evidence and arguments add weight, support, probability, or credence to an idea. This way of thinking is a mistake, as explained here by epistemologist Elliot Temple: https://criticalfallibilism.com/introduction-to-critical-fallibilism/#decisive-arguments & https://criticalfallibilism.com/yes-or-no-philosophy-summary/
Instead, ideas should be evaluated in a binary, pass/fail way: an idea is either *refuted* (we know of a decisive criticism against it) or it is *non-refuted* (we donāt).
This is why the expected value calculation doesnāt work. Youāre multiplying an enormous number (trillions of shrimp) by a probability thatās assigned to a refuted idea.
TCS
I replied to Aaron Stupple on X/Twitter asking him to address ETās criticism of TCS and also ETās new article criticizing āThe Sovereign Childā specifically.
Whoops, I think I accidentally posted it twice since I tried to edit it so it wasnāt a response to Dface specifically.
Oh I had a similar issue recently. The UI is confusing. I deleted one. For future reference, while you canāt delete posts, you can edit one to say ā[accidental duplicate]ā or similar.
For promoting ET/CF, I want a (relatively) quick way to introduce people to some of ETās ideas (or at least give an indication of why I think theyāre exciting and worth investigating further). I couldnāt really think of a good place for people to start so I just wrote my own thing so I can link people to it. Iāll post that below. (Disclaimer: I used AI to write the last bits.) I might edit it or post a new version or variants in the future if needed. This is just a very very *very*(!) rough draft/initial stab at solving the problem of how to quickly introduce ppl to ET (or at least share my own personal enthusiasm and hope itās contagious lol).
Also, let me know if you guys have any ideas on the best way to introduce people to Elliot Templeās work.
E.g., let me know if you have any favorite ET stuff youād recommend to newbies as a good starting point/introduction (for someone who has never heard of ET before).
I know thereās the Intro to CF article but personally I worry thatās a bit too dry/formal/abstract/theoretical to be a good starting point/introduction for everyone. It also doesnāt cover anywhere near all of ETās ideas so Iām not sure itās really a complete intro/guide to ETās ideas/work in general. I also donāt think it really explains why ETās ideas are so exciting and world changing. (Which is fine for that article but I still feel like it could be good to have a more exciting intro for total newbies whoāve never heard of ET or CF before and who may not immediately grasp/appreciate the implications & enormity of what ET is doing.)
I was asked what I āview as the best introduction to [Elliot Templeās] philosophy?ā
I think this is a legitimate difficulty with Elliot Templeās work atm. Because itās spread across heaps of stuff, thereās not one best starting point. Itās like with Rand, without Atlas Shrugged or OPAR by Peikoff, Iād find it hard to point to any single essay of hers as the best place to start. Temple is like that too. (I assume every wide-ranging philosopher is like that, really.)
That said, I can speak to what I personally find most exciting about his philosophyā¦
(Disclaimer: This is nowhere near a complete list of Templeās ideas (itās only a tiny fraction). Itās just some personal favorites that occur to me off the top of my headāand my attempt at explaining why I like them. Itās also just my current personal understanding of his ideas. Iām a new student of this philosophy so I assume Iāve made a bunch of errors in describing it. Also: the order I listed the ideas in doesnāt really matter.)
What is it? Many public intellectuals advance certain claims while not having a way to get corrected if theyāre wrong. Paths Forward is Templeās solution to this problem. Itās a set of ideas and methodologies for creating reliable ways (or āpathsā) for intellectual progress to happenāespecially for correcting errors that other people have already figured out.
Why I like it: Thereās some issues where virtually everyone agrees (e.g., 2+2=4, the Earth orbiting the Sun, water consisting of hydrogen and oxygen). But then thereās so many other fields of knowledge where disagreements linger (e.g., Keynesianism vs Austrian economics, saturated fats vs seed oils, Popperianism vs induction, whether itās better to invest in solving aging vs climate change, etc., etc.āor another example is politics where itās just accepted that half of Congress disagrees with the other half and that theyāll never convince each other). I think if Paths Forward & rational debate methodologies were a cultural norm, it would enable the resolution of these types of lingering disagreements & massively accelerate the intellectual progress of humanity. (Thatās why Iām trying to promote it.)
Some of Templeās content on the topic:
Hereās another world-changing idea of Templeās that I love:
What is it? Often someone will seemingly āloseā a debateābut despite ālosingā, they still donāt feel convinced by the other side. They havenāt changed their mind. Or theyāll feel like they disagree but struggle to articulate exactly why they donāt agree. In our current culture, people are often jerks about this kinda thing, treating it as a āgotchaā moment or pressuring people to suppress their intuition/feelings in favor of forcing themselves to be purely āunemotionalā and ārationalā. None of this actually addresses/refutes the subconscious idea(s) giving rise to the intuitive disagreement though. Besides, the subconscious idea/intuition might be right!
Temple has a method for dealing with intuitive disagreements like this in debates (and other contexts). It involves imagining hypothetical situations and seeing how your intuition feels about them (does your intuition agree or disagree with the hypotheticals?). Doing this allows you to narrow in on exactly what your intuition disagrees/agrees with. Once you pinpoint your intuitive disagreement, you can use it in debate and the other side can let you know if they know why itās wrong. If they canāt, maybe your intuition is right! (You can also help your debate partner pinpoint any intuitive disagreements he might have too.)
Why I like it: I dislike our current cultureās nasty and combative approach to debates (e.g., dunking on people, āliberal tearsā, āDESTROYINGā ppl with āfactsā and ālogicā, gotcha questions, etc., etc.). Helping people deal with their intuitive disagreements seems really kind. Itās also productive: ostensibly ābeatingā someone in debate but actually failing to change their mind often doesnāt really accomplish anything (except entertain a nasty & lowbrow audience, perhaps). Actually finding out why people truly disagree and arenāt convincedāand then having the opportunity to address their actual deep-seated disagreementsāseems way more productive and like something that would actually help people to reach true agreement. A world/culture in which this practice was widespread would be way better.
Some of Templeās content on the topic:
What it it? Most people think that being rational means carefully āweighingā the evidence and arguments and seeing which side has the most āsupportā for its conclusion. This is a fallacy. There is no rational way to decide how much a certain piece of evidence (or a certain argument) āweighsā (which is a bad metaphor) or how much it āsupportsā a certain conclusion. Also, a single piece of counterevidence (or a single counterargument) can debunk/refute a claim even if there was a mountain of evidence in its favor. (E.g., the classic example of a single black swan refuting the claim that āall swans are whiteāāeven if youāve seen millions of white swans.)
Instead, Temple advocates categorizing ideas not in terms of stuff like weight/likelihood/plausibility/support/strength/justification (or anything like that) but into only two categories: refuted or non-refuted. Thatās it. Itās binary (rather than a spectrum that goes from āweakā to āstrongā ideas or from āpossibleā to āprobablyā to ācertainā).
Why I like it: I think it can help debates reach conclusions as it eliminates peopleās ability to just say stuff like āwell, we have lots of evidence/argument/studies/etc on our sideā while refusing to engage with decisive counterarguments. So a world/culture that accepted this epistemological point would be more rational and have more conclusive debates. Also, it just makes sense.
Some of Templeās content on the topic:
What is it? Current debates/discussions are usually just limited to one topic/āpropositionā. In those debates/discussions, people often want to stick to the initial topic and resent it if someone goes meta or brings up other issues. But often people are not just wrong about the initial topicātheyāre also wrong about underlying assumptions, epistemology, debate methodology, something theyāre unwittingly betting their career on (as I talk about below), or even the way theyāre living their whole life(!), etc, etc. (In other words, their whole approach to ideas and their life in general is full of known errors.) And these other errors can prevent the discussion from reaching a conclusion about (or are more important & urgent than) the initial topic. So rather than viewing it as bad (or inconvenient, a hassle, a painful imposition) when a critic or discussion partner brings up meta/other issues, a rational person should embrace unbounded discussion so that no part of their life is left unimproved by the awesome power of reason & discussion & criticism. Their whole life and approach to ideas and everything they do should be open to rational discussion & criticism. Not just one narrow topic/āpropositionā.
Why I like it: I donāt think Iām yet psychologically able to handle unbounded criticism, but I find the idea darkly appealing because I like the idea of being perfectly rational in every aspect of my life & not having any part of my life thatās unimproved by the power of philosophy/rationality. If everybody was radically transparent and open toāand sought out (e.g., via Paths Forward)āunbounded criticism, I think everybodyās personal & intellectual growth would be off the charts. Thatād be a great world!
Some of Templeās content on the topic:
Breaking People (The title refers to the fact that most people ābreakā (and hate it/experience it as painful/embarrassing) if offered too much constructive criticism despite the fact that a rational person should delight in criticism because it allows them to improve and get better and get closer to the truth.)
Do You Really, Actually, Genuinely Want Unbounded Discussion?
Reason is Urgent; Now or Never (not exactly the same topic but still cool)
What is it? Many intellectual professionals bet their careers on premises they havenāt investigated. For example, approximately all activists and politicians bet their careers on the idea that their anti-capitalist policies are good and will improve the world while being unable to refute the arguments of capitalist thinkers like Mises. As a result, they end up wasting their life making the world worseāeven if they actually had good intentions. Likewise, >50% of scientists waste their careers betting that Karl Popperās epistemology is wrong without actually being able to explain why heās wrong. Etc., etc.
Why I like this perspective: This idea shines a light on the colossal amount of wasted effort in the world. So many smart, well-intentioned people spend their entire lives working hard on projects that are ineffective, or even harmful, because the foundational ideas they took for granted were wrong. A culture where people were expected to identify and rationally defend their core premises would be radically more productive. Instead of wasting decades on a flawed path, people could correct their course early on. Combining this perspective with Paths Forward (including unbounded discussion) would save countless individuals from the tragedy of a wasted career and redirect all that human talent towards projects that can actually succeed and improve the world.
Some of Templeās content on the topic:
What is it? Overreaching means trying to do things that are too hard for your current skill levelātaking on projects where youāll make errors faster than you can correct them. When your error rate exceeds your error correction rate, problems pile up. You become overwhelmed, start ignoring criticism (because you canāt handle more problems), and either fail or struggle inefficiently. The solution is to do easier things that you can succeed at, build skills through repeated successes (see āPractice and masteryā below), and gradually work your way up to more complex things as your skill level increases. This allows you to gradually and sustainably increase your problem-solving/error-correction ābudgetā over time, so that things which were once hard eventually become easy.
Some of Templeās content on the topic:
What is it? Itās the idea that learning isnāt complete when you can do something once, or even do it successfully most of the time while concentrating hard. True mastery is achieved when a skill or idea becomes second-natureāautomatic, intuitive, and easy. Itās when you can apply an idea correctly with very little conscious attention, freeing up your mind to focus on more complex problems. Many people stop practicing too early, leaving skills in an effortful, high-attention state where they are difficult to use and easy to forget.
Some of Templeās content on the topic:
Practice and Mastery (has some nice Ayn Rand quotes at the end)
As I said, this is just a teeny tiny sample of some of Templeās ideas. Itād take many books to go through everything.
I would say Philosophy: Who Needs It (the essay) for most people. Even for most people who are already philosophy fans, because most of them donāt think that philosophy is for practical life.
We could divide unbounded criticism into two main types:
I want (1) to be allowed in general. I think itās important to debates.
I think (2) is important sometimes but risky. It often works best in long, close friendships (when the friend judges it will go well) or with people who want it enough to pay for it.
Itās hard to just allow (1) but not (2) by default in a forum category (with 2 being available just by consent) for a few reasons. There are some issues that blur lines. The underlying issue is basically topic changes/additions, and what ideas are part of what topic is a human construct, not something inherent in the ideas. People can and do disagree about what is on- or off-topic.
One sort of topic change that doesnāt fit cleanly into (1) or (2) is bias. If someone is being biased, that can be a fairly relevant, objective part of the discussion, but also be taken as personal. Like if someone says āI hate asian peopleā, and you start arguing with racism, is that a personal attack which is hard for them to take, or is it just objectively analyzing what they said? What if they say something more subtle? Does it depend how much you focus on analyzing their words instead of guessing their personality? Their words and personality are related.
I want to be able to point out potential bias. I think thatās important. I wouldnāt want to exclude that for being too personal/psychological. I think that e.g. scientists need to be able to talk about bias and receive criticism about it.
Another topic change that doesnāt fit cleanly into (1) or (2) is reading comprehension errors (or arithmetic errors, logic errors, other ābasicā errors). People can get really personally offended by the idea that theyāre incompetent or bad at things that are taught in elementary school. In some sense, I think itās just a topic change to an objective, impersonal field. But I do understand people taking it personally. But I think itās hard to avoid talking about it if it comes up repeatedly. Sometimes people donāt mind if you point out a reading error or two with no further commentary, but if you point out too many or point out the pattern itself then they get offended, but if itās a pattern and you donāt talk about the pattern then the errors may ruin the discussion (and if you do talk about them, irrational responses may ruin the discussion, but at least youāre trying to solve the problem).
Anyway, you might want to put some thought into what types of criticism or topic changes you find scary or not scary and why.
I think Iāve made progress since writing this. By using a debate policy, itās much easier for me to just go silent without explanation, and if someone actually wants to continue they can invoke my debate policy (or ask why I stopped, though they shouldnāt ask me that if they donāt want to hear an honest answer). I also tend to use milder and more polite language now. I think Deutsch was a bad influence in terms of making grand or extreme claims (Rand too) and Iām trying to think and speak more modestly more like Popper or Socrates.
Also, I used to think it was important to treat people as rational until proven irrational (like innocent until proven guilty). Basically, be charitable and give them a chance until they do something wrong. Now, I think itās better to wait for people to earn rational criticism, do good work and show they want it and may be able to handle it well.
I think one of the things going on was I was trying to treat people as I wanted to be treated, and how Deutsch said rationality works and all rational people, including himself, would want to be treated. It has been confusing to me that many people donāt like things they say they want, including Deutsch but also many others. I wasnāt trying to be mean to people but it sometimes came off that way, partly because I followed Deutschās lead (I didnāt understand it at the time, but he actually is a mean person and a social climber).
Also, people may put themselves forward as public figures or authors ā if you write a philosophy book or article, I can critique it on my blog, whether you like it or not, but with no expectation that you read my critique, itās different than direct interaction. Thatās different than conversing with people on forums or social media.
I think that urgency was a mistake. I prefer a softer approach. People can go do whatever with their lives. I donāt care. They donāt have to be rational intellectual debaters. I was trying to help people who wanted help but some people felt pressured. I have issues with a lot of stuff I wrote in that article. I think itās important to focus on people who come to me/philosophy on their own initiative, with their own positive motivations (or if they choose to go be public figures then wanting to debate them is fine). I think a lot of what Deutsch said about irrationality, and how he and Fitz-Claridge tried to recruit for TCS, ARR and CR, was toxic. Iām trying to stay away from that stuff now. Itās interesting to me that you like it enough to highlight it. I worry it may feel motivational and pump you up in a way that wonāt last (but thatās just a general concern; itās not based on personal knowledge about you).
Also in general I think I underestimated the complexity of the world, of people, of social problems. I was really impressed by Deutsch and his grand ideas and I thought I knew a lot. And it was a lot and I know more now than before, but I now see myself as knowing less relative to the amount of knowledge needed to change the world or be really effective. I understand more about the difficulties and how much more there is that I donāt know. Iām less impressed with stuff like TCS ā even if i hadnāt come up with some criticisms of TCS, Iād still just generally be more doubtful about how complete and useful it is, and be much more content for people who want to to take some inspiration from it, and not so interested in anyone doing it in a complete or consistent way. I also e.g. think that politics is harder than Deutsch thinks it is, and Iāve lowered my opinion of how well I can evaluate candidates or know what will or should happen. I donāt think other people are good at it either but I donāt care much. My goal isnāt to save the world or individuals. I donāt expect people to radically change from irrational to rational. If people would just ask intellectuals they follow to create debate policies, thatād be pretty good, and they would be contributing usefully to human progress without having to change their lives.
See also Curiosity ā Toxic Attitudes about Greatness
I think maybe you like this because you see it as high stakes, important, urgent, a big deal, similar to some stuff above.
It is that in some sense. But my intention with it was partly the opposite: I wanted people to be more humble modest, curious, and less confident, arrogant, dismissive. Maybe thereās a better way I could approach this. One potential change would be discussing it more explicitly in terms of systemic issues and societal results rather than individuals.
I think a lot of people get kinda stuck and donāt know how to master the basics enough. Iām not sure what to do about it but I havenāt been bringing this up a lot because Iām not sure what would be really helpful for people. And itās something people can feel bad about, so if you donāt have an effective solution to pair with it that can be bad. I do think there are valid abstract issues to be discussed and there are widespread problems where people struggle with all sorts of things due to having issues with other knowledge it builds on (e.g. when people struggle high school math or algebra, they often didnāt learn fractions well enough and revisiting some previous math can help).
People ought to work on small chunks and master stuff on a frequent basis, and I think that should be possible in theory, and I think Iām intuitively good at doing it, but I think a lot of people struggle to break it down and organize it correctly and get that to work, partly because itās too complex to do just with spreadsheets or checklists, and a lot of intuition and wisdom is needed too.
I donāt think AS or OPAR work as introductions to Rand. Theyāre very long. She wrote a more suitable book titled For the New Intellectual.
I consider Paths Forward suitable for all issues.
Idk how helpful it would be but maybe targeted articles/essays would be a good idea? Like if someone is struggling to make a decision maybe send something like multi-factor decision making math (I donāt think thatās necessarily a good idea, just an example).
Similarly if you found an idea of Elliots particularly helpful in your own life, then you can probably do a good job of explaining that to other people versus something of Elliots you think is intellectually stimulating but you havenāt incorporated into your own life.
Maybe you had issues in the past related to getting good at something. You read some stuff about automatization and practice. Now if you have a friend who is running into an issue related to mastering something. You can share Elliots articles around that topic and give first-hand understanding and experience.
Thatās a good point. I think that could be a decent essay to start with.
It reminds me of Alcibiades I (also known as First Alcibiades) by Plato, which apparently used to be the classic entry point for students into Platoās work. Itās a dialogue where Socrates makes an ambitious and overconfident 19- or 20-year-old (or so) Alcibiades realize that he knows almost nothing about what he thought he knew and is actually woefully unprepared to achieve great things or be a great man. And that if he wants to have any hope at all of living a great life, he desperately needs the guidance of philosophy. So, in other words, the classic intro to Plato was (like PWNI by Rand) about convincing readers of the crucial importance of philosophy to their lives. (Thereby motivating them to read more philosophy.)
Which makes me think: if in the future I work way more on promoting ET/CF, then perhaps I could take a cue from Plato. When introducing people to ET/CF and trying to convince them of its importance, I could emphasize how crucial philosophy is to living a great life and actually being in control of oneās life. So great idea. Thanks for that!
The closest thing of ETās I can think of is this: Dialog: Non-Consumption of Philosophy
Iāll read that dialogue by Plato, sounds cool.
Also, convincing people about Rand would help for Elliot as well since Rand is the most controversial philosopher Elliot likes.
Anyway, you might want to put some thought into what types of criticism or topic changes you find scary or not scary and why.
I might do that. Besides, itād be a good opportunity to practice your method for investigating intuitions. ![]()
But my intention with it was partly the opposite: I wanted people to be more humble modest, curious, and less confident, arrogant, dismissive.
So like acknowledging that oneās making a bet and that oneās bet could be wrong? IOW, viewing it as a bet (vs a sure thing) means being open to the possibility that the bet might not work out/pay offāeven if one has done oneās very best to investigate reasons one might be wrong?
If so, that does strike me as a much more modest & intellectually humble perspective. And a perspective that would motivate one to be curious about reasons oneās bet might be wrong. I like it a lot! And hadnāt considered that way of thinking about it before. So thank you for sharing that.
Maybe thereās a better way I could approach this. One potential change would be discussing it more explicitly in terms of systemic issues and societal results rather than individuals.
Iām not sure what that means or what it would look like to discuss it in such terms.
I asked AI and it gave an example:
Individual frame: āThat scientist is irrationally betting his career against Popper.ā
Systemic frame: āThe entire institution of modern academic science, with its āpublish or perishā incentive structure and peer-review system, creates an environment where challenging foundational premises like Popperās is career-suicide. The societal result is a massive misallocation of research funding and slower scientific progress for all of humanity.ā
Is something like that what you meant?
If so, I still think the individual frame is a helpful perspective (even if incomplete). Because even in the AI-generated example, the scientists are still in effect betting that working within academia rather than independently/privately (or working in science rather than philosophy like you) is better.
That said, I suppose acknowledging the role of systemic incentives and norms could give a more complete picture of whatās going on.
rather than individuals.
Is your goal to not pressure/blame/accuse individuals? (Or am I totally misunderstanding all this?)
I also donāt see how discussing it in terms of systemic issues would make people more humble, curious, etc. though. (Unless the idea is to make them feel less defensive by removing the blame? But that might just trigger something like the bystander effect rather than making them humble and curious.)
Iām pretty confused tbh.
Idk how helpful it would be but maybe targeted articles/essays would be a good idea? [ā¦] You can share Elliots articles around that topic and give first-hand understanding and experience.
Thatās a good idea. If I see an opportunity to do that, Iāll do it.
Re systemic issues, and re pressure, itās different to say:
vs.
I promoted TOC on this video Access to information may not be the problem:
If you want to learn about effective thinking that you can apply quickly, you should learn Theory of Constraints by Goldratt. Goldratt is known for business management ideas but his goal was to teach the world to think better. He talks about project management (includes personal projects), bottlenecks, focus, local vs global optima, etc. I think of it as the vim of thinking and productivity itself, since you can use it to speed up all learning and projects.
āvimā is a text editor which is a central topic in his channel.
I tried to link Introduction to Theory of Constraints as a reply but I think youtube hid it.
I also made this comment:
Thinking about meta thinking/rationality/philosophy is an investment. Pick some ratio of investment and consumption (that includes productive stuff like programming). What ratio? How much time should you spend thinking about thatā¦? The starting point doesnāt matter much. Just pick a ratio and change it if you think thereās a problem, e.g., youāre not getting enough programming done.
Heās ambitious, thinks knowledge is powerful and wants to change education, from his forum:
Iām in contact with some pretty powerful people (money wise) through networking, and Iām going to attempt to change the world. My biggest enemy is our education systems are crumbling, and our information is rotting and becoming meaningless.