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Luke_A_Somers comments on How big of an impact would cleaner political debates have on society? - Less Wrong Discussion

4 Post author: adamzerner 06 February 2014 12:24AM

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Comment author: Luke_A_Somers 07 February 2014 12:09:28AM 0 points [-]

For a politician to be interested in doing something, it has to translate into political power. How many voters would traverse a logical dependency tree?

Comment author: adamzerner 07 February 2014 02:12:30AM *  0 points [-]

Not many. But consider this: it might lead to a lot of academics and journalists doing analysis, which might lead to news stories that the general public would pay attention to.

Comment author: DanArmak 07 February 2014 11:39:52AM *  1 point [-]

My impression of US politics is that academics and journalists, like everyone else, either have their bottom line already written (i.e. they search for arguments to help their party) or the facts and science themselves become politicized (how do you win with facts if voters deliberately vote against facts?)

If two opposing beliefs are affiliated with the two parties, one of the beliefs being objectively true makes surprisingly little difference, because they are only being used as attire in the first place. At best you get one party labelled as more pro-science than the other. And even then most people think "anti-science" means "anti-scientist-funding", not "anti-truth" or "anti-objectively-correct-policies".