I'm curious about why you're describing any of the material posted about clothing for fat women as a pity party.
Because I'm being asked to pity them? Yes, the comments are nominally phrased as, "Oh, here is a possible case of people being biased even when it would pay not to be", but the obvious tone is, "poor women, no one will make clothes for them even when there's money to be made".
And frankly, when the asymmetic bra issue came up, I got pretty scared. Some of the commenters -- and I'm not going to single anyone out -- sound like really angry people in general and I fear that being around them would make their rage spill on to me.
They have this entitlement mentality, where everyone has to make clothes that they like. I think it's what motivates a lot of the crime against retailers.
I mean, how dare they make clothes for other people, right?
(Btw, if it matters, there is a relatively large market for wide shoes -- I read an article that it's an issue for Native Americans, and Nike has a shoe line for them, but won't sell to non-Native Americans. Go fig.)
Also, are you going to take back your pretense of ignorance about shoe prejudice?
Late to the party... but I don't actually see self-pity here.
This is the same old thing that starts all the fights around here: the old PC/anti-PC thing. Should we yell at fat people or give them pretty clothes? It's tiresome. It's all heat and no light. We've all got a right to butcher sacred cows... but now can we add something to the discussion?
What was interesting here was the notion that something like an implicit sumptuary law might be going on; a product that people would and could buy is not widely available because of a moralistic belief. (In...
I'm trying to better understand the relationship between incentivization and rationality, and it occurred to me that it is a "folk fact" around here that large financial incentives don't make cognitive biases go away.
However, I can't seem to find any papers that actually say this. It's not easy to google for (I have tried) so I wonder if the Less Wrong collective memory knows how to find the papers?
Is there a pattern to which biases go away with incentivization? Do we have at least 5 examples of biases that go away with incentivization and 5 examples that don't go away with incentivization?
As an incentive, I'll paypal $10 to the commenter whose answer is least biased and most useful.