I can appeal to negative externalities at this point, and I have evidence for them too.
I can appeal to negative externalities at this point, and I have evidence for them too.
Such as?
I can certainly list negative consequences of the false belief being widespread (and "official"). For example, currently companies must either hire unqualified people or risk being accused to racism and/or sexism since they're workplace ratios don't match those of the general population. People attempting to create alternate accreditation systems regularly get sued on disparate impact grounds.
Suppose I told you that I knew for a fact that the following statements were true:
You’d think I was crazy, right?
Now suppose it were the year 1901, and you had to choose between believing those statements I have just offered, and believing statements like the following:
Based on a comment of Robin Hanson’s: “I wonder if one could describe in enough detail a fictional story of an alternative reality, a reality that our ancestors could not distinguish from the truth, in order to make it very clear how surprising the truth turned out to be.”1
1Source: http://lesswrong.com/lw/j0/making_history_available/ewg.