ahartell comments on How can we get more and better LW contrarians? - Less Wrong Discussion
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This is all reasoning that should have been made explicit in your comment. Your objection has good thoughts going into it but I had no way of knowing that from your previous comment. I knew that "perverse incentives" was an economic catchphrase but thought you were just referencing it without reason because you made no attempt to describe why the perverse incentives would arise and why the LessWrong commenters would have a difficult time distinguishing intelligent questions from dumb questions. I thought you were treating the economic catchphrase like phlogiston. If your above thought process had been described in your comment it would have made much more sense.
Isn't this the same with answers? I don't see why it wouldn't be.
Isn't this the same with answers? I don't see why it wouldn't be.
This only makes sense if people are rational agents. Given that you've already conceded that we irrationally undervalue good questions and questioners, doesn't it make more sense that actively trying to be kinder to questioners would return the question/answer market to its objective equilibria, thus maximizing utility?
I note the irony of asking questions here but I couldn't manage to express my thoughts differently.
If you come up with a good (or even convincing) answer, you've already front-loaded a lot of the analysis that people need to verify it. All you need to do is write it down -- which is enough work that a lot of people don't, but less than doing the analysis in the first place.
It helps, but not as much. Patching holes takes more original thought than finding them.
It makes sense if people respond to karma incentives. If they don't, there's no point in trying to change karma allocation norms. The magnitude of the incentive does change depending on how people view the pursuits involved, but the direction doesn't.
I didn't say this.
Actually, changing karma allocation norms could change visibility of unanswered questions judged interesting.
This can be an end in itself, or an indirect karma-related incentive.