I suggest evaluating a point of view by its best proponents, not its worst or even its average proponents.
Right. That's an obvious failure mode that occurred here. Unfortunately, it isn't always clear which proponents of a view are actually the best. Moreover, sometimes the best proponents get lost in the noise of the less intelligent/rational/informed proponents.
This makes me worry how often this occurs. To use a really extreme example: maybe the Young Earth Creationists have some really slamdunk argument but I'm not noticing it because it is so rarely used? The failure that occurred in this context doesn't seem to be that large a scale of getting reality just wrong but it does create those sorts of worries.
The scale of the post 9/11 failure, not just by me, but my lots of people, some quite smart is frightening. I can look back and see specific things that went wrong but how much of even that is hindsight bias? How many big decision are we making even now that I support that in a decade will seem incredibly wrong and stupid?
How many big decision are we making even now that I support
What does this mean, exactly?
Hopefully the number of big decisions you support where you estimate the probability that things will be better than the counterfactual without the big decision is one is zero.
There's more to it than the probability things will be better - the worst thing that can happen is a lot worse than the best thing that can happen is good.
Those last sentences are both atrocious. If I think of a better way to say that I will edit it.
Noah Millman wrote:
Link (which includes additional good retrospectives) thanks to Ampersand.
This article may have more political content than is suitable for LW-- if you'd rather discuss it elsewhere, I've linked it at my blog. I've posted about it here because it's an excellent example of updating and of recognizing motivated cognition even if well after the fact.