wedrifid comments on Living bias, not thinking bias - Less Wrong

19 Post author: crazy88 23 September 2011 08:30AM

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Comment author: wedrifid 23 September 2011 02:05:01PM 7 points [-]

Is there any serious evidence that "biases" are significantly harmful on average in nonartificial settings? This is the big unspoken assumption, but evidence is lacking.

What the? Are you serious? People gamble on lotteries and smoke. Young males pay more for insurance than other groups.

Our entire civilization is 'artificial' from the perspective of our genetic heritage. Of course some of our biases are going to be a hindrance in everyday life.

Comment author: thomblake 23 September 2011 02:17:43PM 6 points [-]

None of that sounds to me like what was requested in the grandparent.

Sure, theoretically, biases are worse than perfect rationality. No problem there.

But in practice, is having a bunch of biases directing many of our actions significantly harmful on average, as compared to some other method of bounded rationality? I don't think I've seen a study on this.