Constant comments on Rationality Quotes: April 2011 - Less Wrong

6 Post author: benelliott 04 April 2011 09:55AM

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Comment author: Alicorn 07 April 2011 03:08:53AM *  73 points [-]

When confronting something which may be either a windmill or an evil giant, what question should you be asking?

There are some who ask, "If we do nothing, and that is an evil giant, can we afford to be wrong?" These people consider themselves to be brave and vigilant.

Some ask "If we attack it wrongly, can we afford to pay to replace a windmill?" These people consider themselves cautious and pragmatic.

Still others ask, "With the cost of being wrong so high in either case, shouldn't we always definitively answer the 'windmill vs. giant' question before we act?" And those people consider themselves objective and wise.

But only a tiny few will ask, "Isn't the fact that we're giving equal consideration to the existence of evil giants and windmills a warning sign of insanity in ourselves?"

It's hard to find out what these people consider themselves, because they never get invited to parties.

-- PartiallyClips, "Windmill"

Comment author: [deleted] 07 April 2011 05:36:49AM 7 points [-]

Nancy Lebovitz came across this too.

Comment author: Alicorn 07 April 2011 05:49:14PM 4 points [-]

Well, I guess that's information about how many people click links and upvote the comments that contained them based on the quality of the linked content.

Comment author: JGWeissman 07 April 2011 05:55:24PM 5 points [-]

Not to argue that transcribing the text of the comic isn't valuable (I do actually appreciate it), but it's also information about how many people go back and vote on comments from posts imported from OB.

Comment author: benelliott 07 April 2011 11:09:23PM 1 point [-]

And about how much more readers quotes threads seem to get compared with everything else.