Randaly comments on Three ways CFAR has changed my view of rationality - Less Wrong

102 Post author: Julia_Galef 10 September 2013 06:24PM

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Comment author: Randaly 11 September 2013 06:55:58AM 2 points [-]

Loosely speaking, epistemic and instrumental rationality are prescriptions for the two sides of the is/ought gap. While 'ought statements' generally need to make reference to 'is statements', they cannot be entirely reduced to them.

If epistemic rationality is implementation of any of a set of reliable procedures for making true statements about reality, and instrumental rationality is use of any of a set of reliable procedures for achieving goals, then the latter is contained in the former, since reliably achieving goals entails possession of some kind of high-fidelity model of reality.

One possible goal is to have false beliefs about reality; another is to have no impact on reality. (For humans in particular, there are unquestionably some facts that are both true and harmful (i.e. instrumentally irrational) to learn.)

Furthermore, what kind of rationality does not pursue goals?

Epistemic rationality.

(I assume that you mean 'isn't about pursuing goals.' Otherwise, epistemic rationality might pursue the goal of matching the map to the territory.)