DeVliegendeHollander comments on [link] The surprising downsides of being clever - Less Wrong Discussion
You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.
You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.
Comments (34)
Do you really think so? Dancing is a highly social activity for extroverts that people with any hint of autism spectrum rarely do, and the last thing I would imagine about the LW community is to be less autistic than the average. I would say some amount of it is almost a precondition for rationalism: there is at least a slight autism in thinking a belief is something you form yourself, individually, on the inside, based on evidence, not an inner echo simply reflecting the socially expected opinion. You need to shut yourself a little bit from social life to have that, to make your beliefs really individual and not social echo based.
The social dance scene is full of over educated introverts. Ritualized social interaction. Uncomfortable chit chat is not required.
Also, I think introverts tend toward kinesthetic sensory focus, for which dance provides a natural outlet.
I do spent a lot of time dancing but it produces little conversations that are influential for the beliefs I hold.
Dancing in a context with loud music doesn't really produce an environment that produces social expectations about beliefs you hold.
It's not time in which I about substantial new beliefs, but there's other time for that. It doesn't even have to be alone time. Conversations with other people who also care that their beliefs are based on evidence and who are well read is just as good for forming new beliefs as forming than alone on the internet.
Well. Shows how useful that line of argument is. lololol