Well, first off I have no problem with karma serving me. Doesn't it serve you too?
Second, it IS feedback. If you make more than one comment, you get to see what gets upvotes and what gets downvotes. If you make a lot of comments, you get a sense for what people approve of and what people disapprove of, and insofar as that correlates to quality you get a sense of how to make quality comments. Not every comment deserves other users expending their time providing constructive criticism, and I don't see why it's necessarily better that people spend their time responding in ways that are good for YOU instead of good for them.
Doesn't it serve you too?
The only times I downvote are when I think the poster is being deliberately rude or cruel, but I don't like doing that and would rather have a moderator take care of what I see as a dirty job. And unless a post is exceptionally uninteresting, I upvote posts simply as a way of keeping track of those I've already read. So no, it doesn't serve me very well, and the use I make of it is not conductive to prOtherwise, I don't use it, because I'm not interested in punishing posts simply because I don't enjoy seeing them here. I do rewa...
This is my first attempt at starting a casual conversation on LW where people don't have to worry about winning or losing points, and can just relax and have social fun together.
So, Big Bang Theory. That series got me wondering. It seems to be about "geeks", and not the basement-dwelling variety either; they're highly successful and accomplished professionals, each in their own field. One of them has been an astronaut, even. And yet, everything they ever accomplish amounts to absolutely nothing in terms of social recognition or even in terms of personal happiness. And the thing is, it doesn't even get better for their "normal" counterparts, who are just as miserable and petty.
Consider, then; how would being rationalists would affect the characters on this show? The writing of the show relies a lot on laughing at people rather than with them; would rationalist characters subvert that? And how would that rationalist outlook express itself given their personalities? (After all, notice how amazingly different from each other Yudkowsky, Hanson, and Alicorn are, just to name a few; they emphasize rather different things, and take different approaches to both truth-testing and problem-solving).
Note: this discussion does not need to be about rationalism. It can be a casual, normal discussion about the series. Relax and enjoy yourselves.
But the reason I brought up that series is that its characters are excellent examples of high intelligence hampered by immense irrationality. The apex of this is represented by Dr. Sheldon Cooper, who is, essentially, a complete fundamentalist over every single thing in his life; he applies this attitude to everything, right down to people's favorite flavor of pudding: Raj is "axiomatically wrong" to prefer tapioca, because the best pudding is chocolate. Period. This attitude makes him a far, far worse scientist than he thinks, as he refuses to even consider any criticism of his methods or results.