More than 30 percent of my libertarian compatriots (and more than 40 percent of conservatives), for instance, disagreed with the statement “A dollar means more to a poor person than it does to a rich person”—c’mon, people!—versus just 4 percent among progressives. Seventy-eight percent of libertarians believed gun-control laws fail to reduce people’s access to guns.
I... I notice that I am confused. How could such a large percentage of people get these easy questions wrong? Are they interpreting it as a question of signalling without even reaching the point of evaluating it as an ontological statement?
It doesn't even seem strange to me. The obvious thing for most people to do is to respond with the "correct" signal. But amongst those who actually do think about the question, there's still a matter of interpretation:
A dollar means more to a poor person than it does to a rich person
I might answer "no", depending on what I thought they meant by "means". If I was thinking of it as a symbol and was considering what its semantic value was, I would probably think it was the same for both rich and poor people - they both cor...
A article in the Atlantic, linked to by someone on the unofficial LW IRC channel caught my eye. Nothing all that new for LessWrong readers, but still it is good to see any mention of such biases in mainstream media.
I break here to comment that I don't see why we would expect this to be so given the reality of academia.