“most of the time you’ll end up doing more harm than good”,
its the most of the time assumption that I have the most difficulty with, what’s your base rate?
“and the next time won’t be much different from the last time.” seems like an arbitrary application of the planning fallacy, why is it any different if you do or you don’t?
These statements from Eliezer’s piece are empirically based (he says so in the piece). So the short answer is, that’s where the base rate comes from and that’s why this isn’t the planning fallacy. (You could challenge the empirics of course).
I’m not sure, I could do that. I work in a highly regulated business. Urban housing has a range of zoning and technical regulations 90% of which work 100% of the time. The other 10% seen like normal considerations, changes in fashion and legacy issues that are always being resolved. For me a general case for or against regulation wouldn’t map on to my experience of the world.
These statements from Eliezer’s piece are empirically based (he says so in the piece). So the short answer is, that’s where the base rate comes from and that’s why this isn’t the planning fallacy. (You could challenge the empirics of course).
I’m not sure, I could do that. I work in a highly regulated business. Urban housing has a range of zoning and technical regulations 90% of which work 100% of the time. The other 10% seen like normal considerations, changes in fashion and legacy issues that are always being resolved. For me a general case for or against regulation wouldn’t map on to my experience of the world.