To save you some time: the standard response is "I'm being censored! You're an Eliezer-cult! All these downvotes are just because you're scared of the Truth!".
I never said anything like this and I never invoked Eleizer. I don't understand why you're telling me off for something I didn't do. Look at my post history if you don't trust me.
What you are doing is not fitting into the community norms of discussion, like research and linking/referring to specific sources
It only makes sense to do so when making a claim. Yet people on this site have refused to back up their own claims with citations because apparently "I'm not worth bothering with".
but there are almost never flame wars
I never flamed anyone. The only guy who is calling people names "like troll for example" is you (well now that you've done it others are following your lead too, well done..).
Are you enjoying wasting your time on this website?
Not really, I didn't expect to get rejected so harsly. I've read all the sequences twice and been rational for years so I don't know what the problem is. What's the point of all this meta discussion, why is everyone trying to drag me into these metadiscussions and brand me as a troll after I passed 100 downvotes. We should get back onto the actual topic.
You are trying to submit too fast. try again in 6 minutes.
Yet people on this site have refused to back up their own claims with citations because apparently "I'm not worth bothering with".
I found this claim difficult to believe, so I looked it up. For the record:
...911truther: Freezing things makes water expand and burst the fragile parts of your brain.
gwern: Freezing canard: proof you have not read the cryonics literature. Instant downvote.
911truther: If "the cryonics literature" (presumably explaining why freezing does not destroy the brain) actually exists why don't you link to it?
I'm trying to develop a large set of elevator pitches / elevator responses for the two major topics of LW: rationality and AI.
An elevator pitch lasts 20-60 seconds, and is not necessarily prompted by anything, or at most is prompted by something very vague like "So, I heard you talking about 'rationality'. What's that about?"
An elevator response is a 20-60 second, highly optimized response to a commonly heard sentence or idea, for example, "Science doesn't know everything."
Examples (but I hope you can improve upon them):
"So, I hear you care about rationality. What's that about?"
"Science doesn't know everything."
"But you can't expect people to act rationally. We are emotional creatures."
"But sometimes you can't wait until you have all the information you need. Sometimes you need to act right away."
"But we have to use intuition sometimes. And sometimes, my intuitions are pretty good!"
"But I'm not sure an AI can ever be conscious."
Please post your own elevator pitches and responses in the comments, and vote for your favorites!