You are the proud recipient of a gold-plated uniform distribution on a finite set. Congrats.
Since my comment has been downvoted to 0, I assume that the LW community likes people who go along with the group opinion even when they know it is wrong? Perhaps people are unsatisfied with this as a rationality test because they think that the test should focus on getting as close to the truth as possible (in which case conforming is good in most cases for most people) rather than adding value to a rationalist community (in which case conforming just because everyone else does is actively hurting the community).
Also, having skimmed the pace.edu link, I am unconvinced that Asch’s results are being misinterpreted, at least by me. Asch found that, in the situation of overwhelming evidence, only 25% of subjects could be trusted to consistently call things the way they really were, i.e. 25% of the subjects pass what I would call the absolute minimum standard of rationality over social conformity.
Note that Carl’s link to the OB article gives us a more nuanced version of this debate, which I recommend.
“Paul Crowley reminds me to note that when subjects can respond in a way that will not be seen by the group, conformity also drops, which also argues against an Aumann interpretation.”
yeah, OK, it’s only 1 person’s opinion, I’ll wait and see what happens when more time passes and more people get the chance to vote.
In defense of my interpretation… few comments get downvoted to zero, so even a small amount of time at zero is fairly significant evidence that people don’t like what you’re saying.
You are the proud recipient of a gold-plated uniform distribution on a finite set. Congrats.
Since my comment has been downvoted to 0, I assume that the LW community likes people who go along with the group opinion even when they know it is wrong? Perhaps people are unsatisfied with this as a rationality test because they think that the test should focus on getting as close to the truth as possible (in which case conforming is good in most cases for most people) rather than adding value to a rationalist community (in which case conforming just because everyone else does is actively hurting the community).
Also, having skimmed the pace.edu link, I am unconvinced that Asch’s results are being misinterpreted, at least by me. Asch found that, in the situation of overwhelming evidence, only 25% of subjects could be trusted to consistently call things the way they really were, i.e. 25% of the subjects pass what I would call the absolute minimum standard of rationality over social conformity.
Note that Carl’s link to the OB article gives us a more nuanced version of this debate, which I recommend.
“Paul Crowley reminds me to note that when subjects can respond in a way that will not be seen by the group, conformity also drops, which also argues against an Aumann interpretation.”
Hasty generalization/Belief in the law of small numbers
yeah, OK, it’s only 1 person’s opinion, I’ll wait and see what happens when more time passes and more people get the chance to vote.
In defense of my interpretation… few comments get downvoted to zero, so even a small amount of time at zero is fairly significant evidence that people don’t like what you’re saying.