Epistemic Status: My best guess (but, epistemic effort was "talked to like 2-3 people about it and it felt good to each of us")
I've been thinking about a number of issues relating to "what are the standards supposed to be on LessWrong, anyway?", with an understanding that there are different stages of idea development. I'd like the site to have a (valid) reputation for being epistemically sound. I also think that often in the early stages of idea-formation, it's important to be in a looser, playful brainstormy mindset.
A possibility is to actually make Epistemic Status a formal field in the Post submission form. In theory people can just do this fine without special fields, but having it be an official part of the site helps steer the culture of the site.
I'm currently imagining two fields: an freeform text field that people can write whatever they want into, and a multiple-choice field with a few specific options, most likely being:
- Empty (both for backwards compatibility and for posts that for whatever reason don't neatly fit into the epistemic status framework)
- Exploratory (for brainstorming, off-the-cuff or other early stage idea generation. Correspondingly, critiques of these posts should lend themselves to a more playful/brainstormy atmosphere)
- My Best Guess (for when you're pretty sure the idea is actually good and are now ready for serious critique)
- Authoritative (for when you are making a strong or clear-cut claim that you are confident is well backed by legible evidence)
The main cost of this is that every additional UI element comes with some complexity, and small bits of complexity can add up over time. But I think this would be good both for shaping how people approach writing on LessWrong, as well as commenting.
I would support this initiative on the condition that list of epistemic statuses is not freeform text. A list of confidence levels, plus options like "log" or "review" for opinion pieces would serve the original purpose of epistemic status -- allowing an author to write confidently and forthrightly about conclusions while still indicating that they're not 100% sure about those conclusions.
Allowing freeform text, however, would lead to epistemic statuses like:
We must remember that the original purpose of epistemic status was to increase the legibility of posts. The hope was that by introducing a standard set of words indicating confidence, one could quickly and easily share and compare the confidence that one had in their conclusions, facilitating the process of reaching agreement. Epistemic statuses, as they're actually used in the community, are the opposite of that. Most of the time, I ignore them, because they don't add to the content of the post, and just serve as a bonus field for the author to signal how witty and subversive they are.
The introduction of an epistemic standard field for LessWrong posts represents a chance to reclaim the concept and reimplement it in the manner that it was originally meant to be. We should not squander this opportunity.
Edit (2018-08-22): it turns out that one of my friends has an entire tumblr of non-epistemic epistemic statuses.
I disagree with the idea that freeform text leads to bad epistemic statuses. I sense that a big reason why I disagree is because I think you can read into the connotation of a lot of the "bad" epistemic statuses, even if the denotation isn't particularly informative.
- "Casual" tells me that there wasn't too much effort spent doing research, thinking hard about the ideas, getting feedback on them, or iterating, which implies that the author isn't too confident in the ideas. It's more of a brain dump. I think that the ab
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