Jiro comments on Open Thread, Jun. 22 - Jun. 28, 2015 - Less Wrong

6 Post author: Gondolinian 22 June 2015 12:01AM

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Comment author: Jiro 23 June 2015 06:56:16PM 2 points [-]

I correctly guessed what X was. Because there's only one thing it could ever be, unless the paper was talking about very unusual subgroups like Jehovah's Witnesses in Mormon territory.

Comment author: Lumifer 23 June 2015 07:22:14PM 2 points [-]

there's only one thing it could ever be

That's an interesting observation, isn't it?

Comment author: Nornagest 23 June 2015 11:39:57PM *  1 point [-]

Between the word "beliefs" (which rules out most demographic groups), the word "openly" (which rules out anything you can't easily hide), and the existence of a plausible "anti-X" group (which rules out most multipolar situations), there's not too many possibilities left. The correct answer is the biggest, and most of the other plausible options are subsets of it.

I suppose it could also have been its converse, but you don't hear too much about discrimination cases going that way.

Comment author: Manfred 23 June 2015 09:11:51PM 1 point [-]

Well, it could be creationist zoologists, or satanist school teachers, or transgender fashion models. But of course it's psychologists studying psychologists, and of course it's reiterating an interesting narrative we've seen before.

Comment author: fubarobfusco 23 June 2015 11:35:00PM 1 point [-]

One would expect creationists to be underrepresented in zoology for a number of reasons, only one of which is that zoologists have negative beliefs about creationists and tend not to hire or encourage them. Others would include that creationists may avoid studying zoology because they find the subject matter unpleasantly contradictory to their existing commitments; and that some people previously inclined to creationism who study zoology cease to be creationists.

Comment author: Romashka 24 June 2015 10:59:38AM 1 point [-]

Anecdotally, I know at least one creationist zoologist, although I don't think he publishes creationist stuff. He doesn't stand out at all or has any noticeable trouble because of it. All zoologists I know are weirder than the average person.

Comment author: philh 24 June 2015 11:03:04AM *  -1 points [-]

I think that ngurvfgf would have been a plausible X in some places (and perhaps the opposite in others), but the correct one was the first that came to mind and the one I considered most likely.