In the spirit of contrarianism, I'd like to argue against The Bottom Line.
As I understand the post, its idea is that a rationalist should never "start with a bottom line and then fill out the arguments".
It sounds neat, but I think it is not psychologically feasible. I find that whenever I actually argue, I always have the conclusion already written. Without it, it is impossible to have any direction, and an argument without any direction does not go anywhere.
What actually happens is:
- I arrive at a conclusion, intuitively, as a result of a process which is usually closed to introspection.
- I write the bottom line, and look for a chain of reasoning that supports it.
- I check the argument and modify/discard it or parts of it if any are found defective.
It is at the point 3 that the biases really struck. Motivated Stopping makes me stop checking too early, and Motivated Continuation makes me look for better arguments when defective ones are found for the conclusion I seek, but not for alternatives, resulting in Straw Men.
The small-scale version of this is the "coin test".
You have a choice with two outcomes. Flip a coin. If it comes up heads, pick the first outcome; tails, the second outcome.
And if you don't like your pick, just switch to the other one.
Often, it's not so much about the actual decision as it is about avoiding responsibility for error. The coin test forces you to choose.