Making fun of things is actually really easy if you try even a little bit. Nearly anything can be made fun of, and in practice nearly anything is made fun of. This is concerning for several reasons.
First, if you are trying to do something, whether or not people are making fun of it is not necessarily a good signal as to whether or not it's actually good. A lot of good things get made fun of. A lot of bad things get made fun of. Thus, whether or not something gets made fun of is not necessarily a good indicator of whether or not it's actually good.[1] Optimally, only bad things would get made fun of, making it easy to determine what is good and bad - but this doesn't appear to be the case.
Second, if you want to make something sound bad, it's really easy. If you don't believe this, just take a politician or organization that you like and search for some criticism of it. It should generally be trivial to find people that are making fun of it for reasons that would sound compelling to a casual observer - even if those reasons aren't actually good. But a casual observer doesn't know that and thus can easily be fooled.[2]
Further, the fact that it's easy to make fun of things makes it so that a clever person can find themselves unnecessarily contemptuous of anything and everything. This sort of premature cynicism tends to be a failure mode I've noticed in many otherwise very intelligent people. Finding faults with things is pretty trivial, but you can quickly go from "it's easy to find faults with everything" to "everything is bad." This tends to be an undesirable mode of thinking - even if true, it's not particularly helpful.
[1] Whether or not something gets made fun of by the right people is a better indicator. That said, if you know who the right people are you usually have access to much more reliable methods.
[2] If you're still not convinced, take a politician or organization that you do like and really truly try to write an argument against that politician or organization. Note that this might actually change your opinion, so be warned.
I agree with that, read literally, but I disagree with the implied conclusion. Nonsensical arguments hit diminishing (and indeed negative) returns so quickly that in practice they're nearly useless. (There are situations where this isn't so, namely educational ones, where having a pupil or student express their muddled understanding makes it possible to correct them. But I don't think you have that sort of didactic context in mind.)
Hmm. I tend not to wade into the arguments about feminism so I don't remember any examples that unambiguously meet your criteria, and some quick Google searches don't give me any either, although you might have more luck. Still, even without evidence on hand sufficient to convince a sceptic, I'm fairly sure feminism, and related issues like pick-up artistry and optimal ways to start romantic relationships, are contentious topics on LW. (In fact I think there's something approaching a mild norm against gratuitously bringing up those topics because Less Wrong Doesn't Do Them Well.)
Yep. The person I ended up arguing with was saying that HIV isn't an STD, that seroconversion isn't indicative of HIV infection, and that there's not much reason to think microscopic pictures of HIV are actually of HIV. (They started by saying they had 70% confidence "that the mainstream theory of HIV/AIDS is solid", but what they wrote as the thread unfolded made clear that their effective degree of confidence was really much less.)
Here's the discussion I had in mind.
I quickly skimmed the conversation I was thinking of and didn't see a clear split. But you can judge for yourself.
Here's a post on deciding which charities to donate to. Here's a student asking how they can get rich for effective altruism. Here's a detailed walkthrough of how to maximize the cash you get when searching for a programming job. Here's someone asking straightforwardly how they can make money. Here's Julia Wise wondering which career would allow her to donate the most money.
This would appear to be false.
Whether it affects children's development to such a degree that it can explain future variations in violent crime levels.
I had hoped that your going through my list of examples point by point would clarify how you were judging which topics were "legitimate" & nontrivial, but I'm still unsure. In some ways it seems like you're judging topics based on whether they're things LWers are actually doing something about, but LWers aren't (as far as I know) doing anything more about global warming or peak oil than they are about astronomical waste or the (insufficient speed of the) global demographic transition. So what makes the former more legit than the latter?
The point I meant to make in bringing that up was not that you should cheer people on for dedicating time & money to FAI; it was that people doing so is an existence proof that some LWers are "changing their deep beliefs after 'seeing the light.'". If someone goes, "gee, I used to think I should devote my life to philosophy/writing/computer programming/medicine/social work/law, but now I read LW I just want to throw money at MIRI, or fly to California to help out with CFAR", and then they actually follow through, one can hardly accuse them of not changing their deep beliefs!
Unless my memory's playing tricks on me, Eliezer did ask that person to elaborate, but got no response.
It seems pretty sensible to me to demand evidence when someone on the fringes of an established community says they're convinced they know exactly (1) how to singlehandedly overhaul that community, and (2) what to aim for in overhauling it.
I also can't divine the answer you have in mind, either.
I don't think you're making the argument you think you are. The argument I'm hearing is that LW isn't reaching its full potential because LWers sit around jacking each other off rather than getting shit done. You haven't actually mounted an argument for your own managerial superiority yet.
How about this: I need you to spell out what you mean with this "true face of LessWrong" stuff. (And ideally why you think I'm different & special. The only evidence you've cited so far is that I've bothered to argue with you!) I doubt I'm nearly as astute as you think I am, not least because I can't discern what you're saying when you start laying on the gnomic flattery.
My own hunch: LW will carry on being a reasonable but not spectacular success for MIRI. It'll continue serving as a pipeline of potential donors to (and workers for) MIRI & CFAR, growing steadily but not astoundingly for another decade or so until it basically runs its course.
OK, yes, if the LW memeplex went viral and imprinted itself on the minds of an entire generation, then by definition it'd be silly for me to airily say, "oh, that's just an LW-specific meme, nothing to worry about". But I don't worry about that risk much for two reasons: the outside view says LW most likely won't be that successful; and people love to argue politics, and are likely to argue politics even if most of them end up believing in (and overinterpreting) "Politics is the Mindkiller". Little political scuffles still break out here, don't they?
I do, actually, which raises the question as to why you think I didn't have that in mind. Did you not realize that LessWrong and pretty much our entire world civilization is in such a didactic state? Moreover, if we weren't in such a didactic state, why does LessWrong exist? Does the art of human rationality not have vast ... (read more)