You are saying that your interpretation implies the original question. But that leaves the possibility of your question being a stronger statement than the original question. If a libertarian denies your interpretation that does not necessarily mean they deny the original question.
In other words, it is possible that if "A poor person is more likely to base his self-worth on how many dollars he owns than a rich person is likely to base his self-worth on how many dollars he owns" is false that "it stands that n+1 is a higher increase in self-worth for the 'arbitrary' poor person (compared to n) than is n+1 an increase compared to n for the 'arbitrary' rich person." is also false.
In other words, just because poor people are not more likely to base their self-worth on dollars-owned than rich people, it does not mean that they necessarily do not value a dollar more than a rich person.
For example, a poor person may value the dollar more because it increases the amount of food they can buy to be enough to feed all their children. Perhaps they attach most of their self-worth to the ability to feed their children.
If your interpretation includes indirectly valuing dollars then the answer changes anyway.
You are saying that your interpretation implies the original question.
I'm saying it's an interpretation of the original question, yes.
But that leaves the possibility of your question being a stronger statement than the original question.
... my question, as I have proposed it, IS the original question. Or, rather, it's informational value is a subset of the informational value range available to the original question. Any assertions as to the potential strength of the original question, then, must include the rephrasing.
It's definitionally impossib...
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.