lessdazed comments on Guessing the Teacher's Password - Less Wrong
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I don't think LW claims that's the only place irrationality comes from. There's the various biases, an inability to update, akrasia, and so on...
Actuarial science, I imagine. My second guess is pharmacy, but that seems less technical than actuarial science.
Can you explain specifically "the need for it to be this way"? Would a person learning these things via SRS or a comparable long-term memorization system not wipe the floor with the crammers in real life? If someone who actually knows the material isn't at an advantage, then why do you need to know these things in the first place.
I ask because I'm leaning toward "recognizing in hindsight the reason behind the structure of the system" is a bias in its own right, though I can't say its been analyzed anywhere, and I don't have enough evidence to definitively say one way or another.
I'm a math grad student, and I also have a larger-than-feasibly-possible, unwieldy mess of information I need to learn, but I don't get the mercy of a multiple-choice exam.
False dichotomy.
Step two to three is lacking in justification.
What? If you truly feel the profession is unethical (and why you would feel this way is not quite clear), pivot into another profession. It's not like everyone has to be a physicist or a construction worker. There are plenty of professions in the world (though perhaps not as many jobs as there used to be, I suppose).
That's why we have SRS, nootropics, expert systems and (ultimately, someday) FAI.
Heh! Math has plenty of "unpredictable detail." Heh.
There's a difference between password-guessing and memorization that I think you've ignored in this... well, for lack of a better word, rant. There's nothing wrong with memorizing facts; there's everything wrong with memorizing the answers to questions.
For instance, at some point a pharmacist needs to memorize that, say, grapefruit juice is contraindicated for some kinds of high blood pressure medicine (or was it cholesterol medicine? I don't know, I'm not a pharmacist.) If we ask them, "What do I need to know about high blood pressure medicine?", the answer "Don't take it with grapefruit juice," isn't a fake answer.
What would be a fake answer is if we were taking a different class of HBP medicine that didn't interact with grapefruit juice, but the pharmacist said "Don't take it with grapefruit juice," anyway on the principle that grapefruit juice interacts with some HBP medicines.
That's probably unclear, but I'm sure someone else will clarify the situation better.
Analogously,
Leo Tolstoy, Anna Karenina, Chapter 1, first line