eliminating cognitive biases is EXTREMELY important in order to reach their goal...
I agree that we can define an evolutionary trait as a flaw or as perfect depending on what is the definition of success of the observer, but my options are between the "Human" and the biological justification. My objective is to work with the truth too!
We'd also need to separate the first from the second.
The first one probably has little advantage to reproduction (It would make sense to say that rationalists SHOULD be at the top of the social ladder but in fact that's not often true.)
The second is probably your best bet of reproducing.
but my options are between the "Human" and the biological justification.
I don't understand this. Care to elaborate?
I am a newbie so today I read the article by Eliezer Yudkowski "Your Strength As A Rationalist" which helped me understand the focus of LessWrong, but I respectfully disagreed with a line that is written in the last paragraph:
So this was my comment in the article's comment section which I bring here for discussion:
Edit 1: I realize there is change in the environment and that may make some of our cognitive biases, which were useful in the past, to be obsolete. If the word "flaw" is also applicable to describe something that is obsolete then I was wrong above. If not, I prefer the word obsolete to characterize cognitive biases that are no longer functional for our preservation.