On the contrary, high-status people can countersignal by publicly changing their mind on things in light of new evidence. You just have to show the evidence as well as the changing of your mind. I mean, if someone’s right, that’s one thing—but publicly changing your mind distinguishes you from people who are merely right by demonstrating the process behind getting things correct.
On the contrary, high-status people can countersignal by publicly changing their mind on things in light of new evidence.
Sometimes. In particular circumstances. With difficulty. Even in circumstances that are abnormally in favour of sanity the status signal is still arguable. But note that effectively gaining social power isn’t about just signalling high status a lot. It’s about navigating social interactions with whichever signals are most effective. Someone who only signals high status comes across as ‘rigid’ or ‘brittle’. I suggest that much of the signalling benefit for mind changing is actually signalling competence and increasing likeability rather than by directly signalling high status in the moment.
On the contrary, high-status people can countersignal by publicly changing their mind on things in light of new evidence.
I agree. And there’s a trick to it, which you described pretty well. I’m just giving that as an example of how big a deal status is: if you don’t know the trick for changing your mind and staying high status, then it can be hard to change your mind, and difficulty changing one’s mind may be the #1 rationality failure mode in the general population.
On the contrary, high-status people can countersignal by publicly changing their mind on things in light of new evidence. You just have to show the evidence as well as the changing of your mind. I mean, if someone’s right, that’s one thing—but publicly changing your mind distinguishes you from people who are merely right by demonstrating the process behind getting things correct.
Sometimes. In particular circumstances. With difficulty. Even in circumstances that are abnormally in favour of sanity the status signal is still arguable. But note that effectively gaining social power isn’t about just signalling high status a lot. It’s about navigating social interactions with whichever signals are most effective. Someone who only signals high status comes across as ‘rigid’ or ‘brittle’. I suggest that much of the signalling benefit for mind changing is actually signalling competence and increasing likeability rather than by directly signalling high status in the moment.
I agree. And there’s a trick to it, which you described pretty well. I’m just giving that as an example of how big a deal status is: if you don’t know the trick for changing your mind and staying high status, then it can be hard to change your mind, and difficulty changing one’s mind may be the #1 rationality failure mode in the general population.