Eugine_Nier comments on Less Wrong’s political bias - Less Wrong

-6 Post author: Sophronius 25 October 2013 04:38PM

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Comment author: Eugine_Nier 31 October 2013 04:31:52AM 3 points [-]

The best way of handling mindkilling is to look at hard data.

To some extent you may have a valid point, but parties are extremely diverse entities. Even if one looked at small, fringe parties, there's heavy variation in the beliefs. So, you might have a more valid point if you said something like "Self-identified Republicans are on average more likely to believe crazy things than self-identified Democrats."

This is not actually all that objective since it's not clear what constitutes a "crazy belief". Is it simple a matter of how much easily available evidence there is against it? Or does it also include considerations like what proportion of people believe it and how much effort smart people have devoted to rationalizing it?

Comment author: ialdabaoth 28 November 2013 07:45:39PM *  3 points [-]

This is not actually all that objective since it's not clear what constitutes a "crazy belief". Is it simple a matter of how much easily available evidence there is against it? Or does it also include considerations like what proportion of people believe it and how much effort smart people have devoted to rationalizing it?

Ideally, yes (and I upvoted this for its insight), but that can easily becomes a Fully General Counterargument if we aren't EXTREMELY careful - since "how much effort smart people have devoted to rationalizing it" can look like "how much easily available evidence there is against it", and vice-versa.

As people have mentioned, this is a Very Hard Problem.

Comment author: JoshuaZ 31 October 2013 05:10:16AM 0 points [-]

That's a really good point. I was thinking purely in terms of evidence levels against the belief but how much resources is spent rationalizing it might matter. I was trying to avoid thinking too much of that by using the most obviously crazy beliefs all around, but if there's systematic rationalization attempts more for one than another that might not help.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 02 November 2013 08:34:58PM 0 points [-]

I was thinking purely in terms of evidence levels against the belief

Well, your examples are not very well balanced by level of evidence against, although it's hard to compare this across different domains.

Comment author: JoshuaZ 02 November 2013 08:42:28PM 0 points [-]

Could you expand why you think they don't have about the same levels of evidence against? They seemed to to me, but it is possible that I'm missing something. I agree that making such comparisons across domains may be tough.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 02 November 2013 11:17:44PM 2 points [-]

Oops. I was comparing Birtherism to controlled demolition theories and forgot that not all 9/11 Truther theories were that crazy.