Kaj_Sotala comments on Rationality Quotes March 2014 - Less Wrong

4 Post author: malcolmocean 01 March 2014 03:34PM

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Comment author: James_Miller 01 March 2014 05:27:27PM *  22 points [-]

[A]lmost no innovative programs work, in the sense of reliably demonstrating benefits in excess of costs in replicated RCTs [randomized controlled trials]. Only about 10 percent of new social programs in fields like education, criminology and social welfare demonstrate statistically significant benefits in RCTs. When presented with an intelligent-sounding program endorsed by experts in the topic, our rational Bayesian prior ought to be “It is very likely that this program would fail to demonstrate improvement versus current practice if I tested it.”

In other words, discovering program improvements that really work is extremely hard. We labor in the dark -- scratching and clawing for tiny scraps of causal insight.

Megan McArdle quoting or paraphrasing Jim Manzi.

[Edited in response to Kaj's comment.]

Comment author: Kaj_Sotala 01 March 2014 06:00:17PM 4 points [-]

I think the quote is from Jim Manzi rather than Megan McArdle, given that McArdle starts the article with

I asked Jim Manzi, who has literally written the book on randomized controlled trials, to share his thoughts. Below is what he said:

and later on in the article it says

I agree with the weight and seriousness of each of these objections. My agreement is not ad hoc; I wrote a book that tried to describe how businesses have implemented experimental processes that operate in the face of all of these issues.

suggesting that the whole article after the first paragraph is a quote (or possibly paraphrase).