Neo comments on Stranger Than History - Less Wrong

52 Post author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 01 September 2007 06:57PM

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Comment author: brazil84 25 March 2014 09:08:59AM 6 points [-]

people in 1901 had much lower levels of rationality than people from the 20th century.

Do you have any examples of this which do not rely on measuring peoples' rationality by the extent they agree with modern progressive political views?

Comment author: Neo 25 March 2014 11:45:11AM 3 points [-]

Flynn effect, economic prosperity, increase in rate of innovation, and better educational systems and other tools are around nowadays.

I cannot provide you a video tape, but this seems to be at least some evidence for that statement in my opinion.

Comment author: RichardKennaway 25 March 2014 12:51:09PM 6 points [-]

The significance of the Flynn effect is disputed, and some claim that the course of the 20th century saw a decline in innovation. Unfortunately, the divide on these matters, at least in the lay blogosphere, aligns with a political division. Those who want to say that the world is going to hell in a handbasket point to a decline in reaction times (which are correlated with intelligence) and claim scientific stagnation, those who believe that we've never had it so good and will have it better in the future point to Flynn and the modern cornucopia. Is evidence producing worldviews or are worldviews selecting evidence?

Comment author: Neo 25 March 2014 01:16:32PM *  3 points [-]

Those who advocate that the world is going to hell, do they point to a certain era as the most rational time, and what would have caused the downturn?

EDIT: Mainly asking this question in order to find out how they measure rationality, as right now I find the point of view rather surprising.

Comment author: brazil84 25 March 2014 01:58:43PM 4 points [-]

Those who advocate that the world is going to hell, do they point to a certain era as the most rational time, and what would have caused the downturn?

I don't think the world is going to hell, but I do think that wealth and power can give you more luxury to hold irrational beliefs. So perhaps people were more rational back in the days of our noble savage ancestors and it's been downhill ever since. :)

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 26 March 2014 02:28:49AM 2 points [-]

Since holding irrational beliefs tends to result in eventually loosing one's wealth and power, this tends to work as a negative feedback effect.

Comment author: brazil84 26 March 2014 07:44:09AM 3 points [-]

Since holding irrational beliefs tends to result in eventually loosing one's wealth and power,

I'm not sure this is true because of standby-rationality mode. Also known as hypocrisy.

Comment author: Grant 26 March 2014 08:21:58AM 3 points [-]

Agreed. Powerful people (especially politicians) seem to hold plenty of irrational beliefs. Of course we can't really tell the difference between lying about irrational beliefs and hypocrisy, if there's a meaningful difference for the outside observer at all.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 28 March 2014 02:23:28AM 2 points [-]

The problem is that the politician who honestly holds a popular irrational belief (assuming said belief isn't directly related to the mechanisms of election campaigns) is better able to signal it and thus more likely to get elected than the politician who merely false claims to hold it.

Comment author: CCC 28 March 2014 11:46:50AM 0 points [-]

I'm not sure about that. As Granny Weatherwax points out in Wyrd Sisters, "Things that try to look like things often do look more like things than things."

Or, to put it a different way, if one concentrates on the signalling, and if one is reasonably competent at acting, and isn't caught in the act of breaking character, one can signal a belief a lot better than someone who merely holds said belief.

Comment author: [deleted] 30 March 2014 08:09:48AM -1 points [-]

I'd expect politicians to be much better at occlumency than the general population, though.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 27 March 2014 12:19:57AM 1 point [-]

Standby-rationality mode isn't nearly as good as actual rational reasoning. Also hypocrisy creates cognitive dissonance (both in individuals and institutions) that tends to be resolved by actually adopting the (false) beliefs one is claiming to believe.

Comment author: brazil84 27 March 2014 07:51:47PM 0 points [-]

Standby-rationality mode isn't nearly as good as actual rational reasoning

Can you give me a couple concrete examples of this?

Also hypocrisy creates cognitive dissonance (both in individuals and institutions) that tends to be resolved by actually adopting the (false) beliefs one is claiming to believe.

Same question. TIA

Comment author: RichardKennaway 25 March 2014 02:09:48PM 4 points [-]

Those who advocate that the world is going to hell, do they point to a certain era as the most rational time, and what would have caused the downturn?

I'm referring to the reactosphere, of course, which I don't actually follow, but am aware of. Some trace the fall to the Enlightenment, some to the Reformation. Moldbug, on the other hand, has a lot of time for writers up to the 19th century, as people who knew what was what and from whose state of grace we have fallen. He has mentioned many times the persistent leftwards trend since then but the last I saw, still considered it a mystery. Others look to prehistory when men were men and women were chattels, and think that things started going downhill with the invention of agriculture, with the Reformation, the Enlightenment, and the 20th century being but further headlong descent down the rings of hell.

Leftists, in contrast, read the persistent leftwards trend as the inevitable march towards truth. At least, when they aren't crying "help, help, I'm being oppressed!", which requires portraying their opposition as the ones with power.

Comment author: TheAncientGeek 25 March 2014 03:26:44PM 0 points [-]

You accept the leftard trend as fact, but the economics of the left have been abandoned, while their social policies have been accepted.

Comment author: IlyaShpitser 25 March 2014 03:56:47PM *  5 points [-]

"Leftard" :)


What do you mean by economics of the left? Do you mean state capitalism like in China, or a generous welfare state like in Sweden? Arguably both are quite successful.


I think I stopped paying attention to Moldbug somewhere around the time he said he was too cool to respond to Scott's demolishing of neoreaction.

Comment author: TheAncientGeek 25 March 2014 04:20:58PM 0 points [-]

I mean state communism, nationalization, the govt co strolling the means of production.

Comment author: IlyaShpitser 25 March 2014 05:11:16PM *  1 point [-]

How has nationalization and the government controlling the means of production been abandoned? Have you seen what Russia and China are up to?


The history of the 19th and 20th century has seen a continuous movement towards welfare and labor reforms, which are broadly "leftist" (or at least a part of the liberal project -- the neoreaction types will agree). In other words, what the heck are you talking about?

Comment author: TheAncientGeek 26 March 2014 09:37:46AM *  0 points [-]

Nationalization etc have been abandoned by the parties of the left in western democracies. Putin acts for Putin. China is state CAPITALISM.

The past 100 years have seen a trend towards labour reform. The past 30 years have seen capitalist economics accepted by everyone. Free market economics was imposed on Russia in the 90s, as the obvious choice of system. Because of prevailing inequalities, that led to the oligarchs. Putns threats of nationalization are part of a power struggle with them.

Edit: do you think western countries could have the kind of capitalism they one have with an unreformsd labour market of downtrodden serfs, bonded for life to a single overlord? Much labor reform came about because capitalism was evolving to a form where employers needed an educated and flexible workforce. Some reforms were pushed by government, but much just had to happen, because you can't plug Jethro the serf into the job done by Josh the freelance web designer.

Comment author: RichardKennaway 25 March 2014 04:22:06PM 2 points [-]

You accept the leftard trend as fact

Just stating Moldbug's view, but I do think he has a point here. Compare current policies everywhere with those of 100 to 150 years ago (which is the timescale he is viewing things on).

Comment author: TheAncientGeek 25 March 2014 06:05:37PM -1 points [-]

Social or economic policies?

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 26 March 2014 02:32:17AM 0 points [-]

Either. Consider government budget as a percentage of GDP today versus 100 years ago. No, left-wing economic policies haven't been abandoned.

Comment author: TheAncientGeek 26 March 2014 09:18:34AM 0 points [-]

Hmmm. Is that policy, or just size? Consider the money spent on beaurocracy by large corporations as opposed to small ones.

Comment author: brazil84 25 March 2014 01:42:58PM 5 points [-]

Unfortunately, the divide on these matters, at least in the lay blogosphere, aligns with a political division.

To an extent I agree with you, but based on my personal observations I would say that most people are pretty much irrational now and probably were also back in 1901. Gay marriage is actually a good example. Whether it's a rational belief or not, it's pretty clear to me that most people believe in it or not based on what they think a good liberal (or conservative) is supposed to believe. As opposed to any logical reasoning.

I doubt people were any better back in 1901 -- it's just human nature to believe stuff based on what serves your interests; what group you belong to; what signals you want to send; etc.

So I would say that people were pretty much irrational back in 1901 just like today. (At least in "far mode.")

Comment author: [deleted] 30 March 2014 08:20:20AM 0 points [-]

a decline in reaction times (which are correlated with intelligence)

I chalk it up to sleep deprivation, which was much less prevalent before the Internet/television/the light bulb became available.