(Tangent: In some cases it's possible to find a third party that understands a participant's intuitions and is willing to explain them to participants with opposing intuitions in language that everyone, including bystanders, can understand. E.g. I think that if I was involved as a translator in the Muehlhauser--Goertzel debate then at least some of Ben's intuitions would have been made clearer to Luke. Because Luke didn't quite understand Ben's position this also led some LW bystanders to get a mistaken impression of what Ben's position was, e.g. a highly upvoted comment suggested that Ben thought that arbitrary AGIs would end up human-friendly, which is not Ben's position. A prerequisite for figuring out what to do in the case of disagreeing intuitions is to figure out what the participants' intuitions actually are. I don't think people are able to do this reliably. (I also think it's a weakness of Eliezer's style of rationality in particular, and so LessWrong contributors especially might want to be wary of fighting straw men. I don't mean to attack LessWrong or anyone with this comment, just to share my impression about one of LessWrong's (IMO more glaring and important) weaknesses.))
This smells true to me, but I don't have any examples at hand. Do you?
This would be especially useful here, as specific examples would make it easier to think about strategies to avoid this, and maybe see if we're doing something systematically badly.
I thought Ben Goertzel made an interesting point at the end of his dialog with Luke Muehlhauser, about how the strengths of both sides' arguments do not match up with the strengths of their intuitions:
What do we do about this disagreement and other similar situations, both as bystanders (who may not have strong intuitions of their own) and as participants (who do)?
I guess what bystanders typically do (although not necessarily consciously) is evaluate how reliable each party's intuitions are likely to be, and then use that to form a probabilistic mixture of the two sides' positions.The information that go into such evaluations could include things like what cognitive processes likely came up with the intuitions, how many people hold each intuition and how accurate each individual's past intuitions were.
If this is the best we can do (at least in some situations), participants could help by providing more information that might be relevant to the reliability evaluations, and bystanders should pay more conscious attention to such information instead of focusing purely on each side's arguments. The participants could also pretend that they are just bystanders, for the purpose of making important decisions, and base their beliefs on "reliability-adjusted" intuitions instead of their raw intuitions.
Questions: Is this a good idea? Any other ideas about what to do when strong intuitions meet weak arguments?
Related Post: Kaj Sotala's Intuitive differences: when to agree to disagree, which is about a similar problem, but mainly from the participant's perspective instead of the bystander's.