In this thread: What's a key thing you would tell /r/SneerClub users, to try and bridge the "worldview gap"?
I am talking about extremely-basic background / shared assumptions, that you really wish the other people had. What would you say to them, to plant the seed of changing their mindset from their current one?
Diagrams, stories, and hokey analogies encouraged. Condescension completely allowed. (The more basic and obvious the worldview difference, the more it needs to be written down).
No jargon.
Top-level comments should be cringe-inducingly earnest.
This question is mirrored and inverted on /r/SneerClub.
While there may be a substantial worldview gap, I suspect the much larger difference is that most Sneer Clubbers are looking to boost their status by trying to bully anyone who looks like a vulnerable target, and being different, as LessWrong is, is enough to qualify. This situation is best modeled by conflict theory, not mistake theory.
Since that does not seem likely to be the sort of answer you’re looking for though, if I wanted to bridge the inferential gap with a hypothetical Sneer Clubber who genuinely cared about truth, or indeed about anything other than status (which they do not), I’d tell them that convention doesn’t work as well as one might think. If you think that the conventional way to approach the world is usually right, the rationalist community will seem unusually stupid. We ignore all this free wisdom lying around and try to reinvent the wheel! If the conventional wisdom is correct, then concerns about the world changing, whether due to AI or any other reason, are pointless. If they were important, conventional wisdom would already be talking about them. If the conventional wisdom is correct, Bayesianism is potentially wrong (it’s not part of the Standard Approach to Life), and certainly useless: why try to learn through probability theory when tradition can tell you everything you need to know much faster? But I would tell them that in a world where the conventional wisdom was embarrassingly wrong in all previous eras, it would be a real coincidence for this age to be the first to get everything right. And if tradition isn’t perfect, or nearly so, that’s when rationalism suddenly becomes very important.
I would also tell them that it’s possible to actually understand things. Most people seem to go through life on rote, seemingly not recognizing when something doesn’t make sense because they don’t expect anything to make sense. But it’s possible to start thinking through how things work, and when you do that, rationality starts seeming sensible because you can see how it works and that it works, rather than silly because it superficially pattern matches to a Scientology style cult.
Is a special case of "tribalism is the mind killer"
Whereas your ingroup must be something different, because ingroups and outgroups never have anything in common.
Ditto.