MichaelVassar comments on Complexity of Value ≠ Complexity of Outcome - Less Wrong
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Disagreeing positions don't add up just because they share a feature. On the contrary, If people offer lots of different contradictory reasons for a conclusion (even if each individual has consistent beliefs) it is a sign that they are rationalizing their position.
If 2/3's of experts support proposition G , 1/3 because of reason A while rejecting B, and 1/3 because of reason B while rejecting A, and the remaining 1/3 reject A and B; then the majority Reject A, and the majority Reject B. G should not be treated as a reasonable majority view.
This should be clear if A is the koran and B is the bible.
If we're going to add up expert views, we need to add up what experts consider important about a question, not features of their conclusions.
You shouldn't add up two experts if they would consider each other's arguments irrational. That's ignoring their expertise.
This applies very generally when the evidential properties of reference classes are brought up.