There is a tactic in formal debate where you make several independent arguments to support a claim. Any one of the arguments is sufficient to prove your case. The arguments are redundant. Your wins even if all but one of your arguments for it is struck down.
Rationality is the opposite of debate. A rationalist should make only the strongest argument.
Suppose I believe "There is no monkey in my closet." There are two arguments I could put forth to support my claim.
- I live in the Pacific Northwest. Monkeys don't live in the Pacific Northwest.
- I looked in my closet and observed that there was no monkey in it.
If I was in a formal debate then I would put forth both claims. But I am a rationalist. My primary objective isn't to persuade other people. It is to identify my own reasons for believing things. I want to pinpoint the facts which, if inverted, would change my mind.
Which of my two contentions is stronger? Which bit of evidence, if inverted, would cause me to change my mind?
- If I discovered that monkeys actually do live in the Pacific Northwest then I would continue to believe there is no monkey in my closet.
- If I looked in my closet and saw a monkey then I would believe there is a monkey in my closet, ecology be damned.
A rationalist's arguments should be stripped down to the bare essentials. The whole lattice should collapse with the removal of a single argument. If you can't cut an argument down to its cruxes then you haven't identified your cruxes. If you haven't identified your cruxes then you don't know why you believe what you believe.
Statistical Evidence
What about something like "anthropogenic global warming is real"? Doesn't a lot of evidence go into a conclusion like that?
Since I'm not a climate scientist, I yield to the scientific consensus on climate science. My crux is: "The scientific consensus believes anthropogenic global warming is real." If I discovered the scientific consensus disbelieves "anthropogenic global warming is real" then I would change my mind.
I believe there is scientific consensus which believes in anthropogenic global warming because various trustworthy sources assure me there is one. No single trustworthy source is a crux. If <trustworthy news source > reported there was no scientific consensus then my confidence that there is a scientific consensus would be weakened, but it would not instantly break.
Does this violate "present only your strongest argument"? No. While you should limit arguments to your cruxes, it is acceptable to aggregate lots of evidence into a single statistic. Changing a single statistical datapoint need not invalidate your argument. It is sufficient for a single datapoint to merely weaken the statistic.
Arguments should be cruxy. Data is allowed to be redundant. Put all of your data behind your single cruxiest argument.
It is not perfectly clear whether this post is describing what the actual structure of your beliefs should be, or how you should present them. I think I disagree strongly in both cases.
Suppose I believe that my friend Albert has very recently converted to Christianity, because (1) Albert has told me so and (2) our mutual friend Beth tells me he told her so. These are both good evidence. Neither is conclusive; sometimes people make jokes, for instance. Neither is a crux; if it turned out, say, that I had merely had an unusually vivid dream in which Albert told me of his conversion, I would become less sure that it had actually happened but Beth's testimony would still make me think it probably had.
In this situation I could, I guess, say that I believe in Albert's conversion "because Albert and Beth both told me it was so". But that's purely artificial; one could do that with any set of justifications for a belief. And merely contradicting this belief would not suffice to change my opinion; removing either Albert's or Beth's testimony, but not the other, would falsify "both told me" but I would still believe it.
This is unusual mostly in being an artificially clean and simple case. I think most beliefs, or at any rate a large fraction, are like this. A thing affects the world in several ways, many of which may provide separate channels by which evidence reaches you.
This is true even in what's maybe the cruxiest of all disciplines, pure mathematics. I believe that there are infinitely many prime numbers because of Euclid's neat induction proof. But mathematics is subtle and sometimes people make mistakes, and maybe you could convince me that there's a long-standing mistake in that proof that sometimes [EDIT: of course this should have said "somehow"] I and every other mathematician had missed. But then I would probably (it might depend on the nature of the mistake) still believe that there are infinitely many prime numbers because there are other quite different proofs, like the one about the divergence of ∑1n=∏(1−1p)−1 or the one using (2nn) that proves an actual lower bound on how many primes there are, or the various proofs of the Prime Number Theorem. To some extent I would believe it merely because of the empirical evidence of the density of prime numbers, which (unlike say the distribution of zeros of the zeta function, the empirical evidence of which is also evidence that there are infinitely many primes) seems to be of a very robust kind. To make me change my mind about there being infinitely many prime numbers the proposition you would have to refute is something like "mathematics is not all bullshit".
(Sometimes a thing in pure mathematics has only a single known proof, or all the known proofs work in basically the same way. In that case, there may be an actual crux. But for theorems people actually care about this state of affairs often doesn't last; other independent proofs may be found.)
Outside mathematics things are less often cruxy, and I think usually sincerely so.
Finding cruxes is a useful technique, but there is not the slightest guarantee that there will be one to find.
Perhaps one should present one's beliefs cruxily even when they aren't actually cruxy, either in order to give others the best chance of presenting mind-changing evidence or to look open-minded? I don't think so; if your beliefs are not actually cruxy then lying about them will make it less likely that your mind gets changed when the evidence doesn't really support your current opinion, and if you get caught it will be bad for your reputation.