RationalWiki might have perhaps misrepresented Roko’s basilisk, but in fairness I don’t think that EY gets to complain that people learn about it from RationalWiki given that he has censored any discussion about it on LessWrong for years.
If A = RationalWiki might have perhaps misrepresented Roko’s basilisk
B = I don’t think that EY gets to complain that people learn about it from RationalWiki
C = he has censored any discussion about it on LessWrong for year
The literal denotation of your post is “A, but C → B”, but it seems to me that mentioning A in such close proximity to C → B is a (perhaps unintentional) Dark Arts way of communicating C → A.
C does not lead to A, but C does lead to A’, where A’ is “many people get their information about the Basilisk from RationalWiki’s misrepresentation of it” (Banning discussion leads to good information being removed, increasing the visibility of bad information.)
C ⇒ A might be also true to some extent, although it is hard to tell given that RationalWiki misrepresent lots of things even when good primary sources are available.
My point however was that even if EY might be epistemically right about A, C implies that he has no moral high ground to complain about people possibly misrepresenting the basilisk after learning about it from a biased secondary source.
EY bears part of the responsibility for people learning about the basilisk from RationalWiki, since due to his censorship, they can’t (couldn’t?) learn about it from LessWrong, where the primary source would have been available.
RationalWiki might have perhaps misrepresented Roko’s basilisk, but in fairness I don’t think that EY gets to complain that people learn about it from RationalWiki given that he has censored any discussion about it on LessWrong for years.
If A = RationalWiki might have perhaps misrepresented Roko’s basilisk
B = I don’t think that EY gets to complain that people learn about it from RationalWiki
C = he has censored any discussion about it on LessWrong for year
The literal denotation of your post is “A, but C → B”, but it seems to me that mentioning A in such close proximity to C → B is a (perhaps unintentional) Dark Arts way of communicating C → A.
C does not lead to A, but C does lead to A’, where A’ is “many people get their information about the Basilisk from RationalWiki’s misrepresentation of it” (Banning discussion leads to good information being removed, increasing the visibility of bad information.)
C ⇒ A might be also true to some extent, although it is hard to tell given that RationalWiki misrepresent lots of things even when good primary sources are available.
My point however was that even if EY might be epistemically right about A, C implies that he has no moral high ground to complain about people possibly misrepresenting the basilisk after learning about it from a biased secondary source.
That something has a casual influence on something else doesn’t mean that doing the first eliminates moral high ground to complain about the second.
EY bears part of the responsibility for people learning about the basilisk from RationalWiki, since due to his censorship, they can’t (couldn’t?) learn about it from LessWrong, where the primary source would have been available.