Markus: Happy to link to the details, but where in the huge stream would you like to be linked to? The problem is that opinions can be sharply skewed by choosing to link to only selected items.
I cite as evidence Oscar’s choice, below, to link to a post by EY. In that post he makes a series of statements that are flagrant untruths. If you read that particular link, and take his word as trustworthy, you get one impression.
But if you knew that EY had to remove several quotes from their context and present them in a deceiptful manner, in order to claim that I said things that I did not, you might get a very different impression.
You might also get a different impression if you knew this. The comment that Oscar cites came shortly after I offered to submit the dispute to outside arbitration by an expert in the field we were discussing. I offered that ANYONE could propose an outside expert, and I would abide by their opinion.
It was only at that point that EY suddenly wrote the post that Oscar just referenced, in which he declared me to be banished from the list and (a short time later) that all discussion about the topic should cease.
I’ll gladly start reading at any point you’ll link me to.
The fact that you don’t just provide a useful link but instead several paragraphs of excuses why the stuff I’m reading is untrustworthy I count as (small) evidence against you.
I’ve read SL4 around that time and saw the whole drama (although I couldn’t understand all the exact technical details, being 16). My prior on EY flagrantly lying like that is incredibly low. I’m virtually certain that you’re quite cranky in this regard.
I was on SL4 as well, and regarded Eliezer as basically correct, although I thought Loosemore’s ban was more than a little bit disproportionate. (If John Clark didn’t get banned for repeatedly and willfully misunderstanding Godelian arguments, wasting the time of countless posters over many years, why should Loosemore be banned for backtracking on some heuristics & biases positions?)
You use this word in an unconventional way, i.e., you use it to mean something like ‘unfairly causing harm and wasting people’s time’, which is not the standard definition: the standard definition necessitates intention to provoke or at least something in that vein. (I assume you know what “trolling” means in the context of fishing?) Because it’s only ever used in sensitive contexts, you might want to put effort into finding a more accurate word or phrase. As User:Eugine_Nier noted, lately “troll” and “trolling” have taken on a common usage similar to “fascist” and “fascism”, which I think is an unfortunate turn of events.
The animus here must be really strong. What Yudkowsky did was infer that Loosemore was lying about being a cognitive scientist from his ignorance of a variant of the Wasson experiment. First, people often forget obvious things in heated online discussions. Second, there are plenty of incompetent cognitive scientists: if Loosemore intended to deceive, he probably wouldn’t have expressly stated that he didn’t have teaching responsibilities for graduate students.
If what you say is true, then Eliezer is lying about Loosemore lying about his credentials, in which case Eliezer is “trolling”. But if what you say is false, then you are the “troll”.
(This comment is an attempt to convincingly demonstrate that Eliezer’s notion of trolling is, to put it bluntly, both harmful and dumb.)
If what you say is true, then Eliezer is lying about Loosemore lying about his credentials, in which case Eliezer is “trolling”. But if what you say is false, then you are the “troll”. (This comment is an attempt to convincingly demonstrate that Eliezer’s notion of trolling is, to put it bluntly, both harmful and dumb.)
I don’t know about you, but I’d prefer to be considered a troll than a liar; correspondingly, I think the expanded definition of liar is worse than the inaccurate definition of troll. Not every inaccuracy amounts to dishonesty and not all dishonesty to prevarication.
Markus: Happy to link to the details, but where in the huge stream would you like to be linked to? The problem is that opinions can be sharply skewed by choosing to link to only selected items.
I cite as evidence Oscar’s choice, below, to link to a post by EY. In that post he makes a series of statements that are flagrant untruths. If you read that particular link, and take his word as trustworthy, you get one impression.
But if you knew that EY had to remove several quotes from their context and present them in a deceiptful manner, in order to claim that I said things that I did not, you might get a very different impression.
You might also get a different impression if you knew this. The comment that Oscar cites came shortly after I offered to submit the dispute to outside arbitration by an expert in the field we were discussing. I offered that ANYONE could propose an outside expert, and I would abide by their opinion.
It was only at that point that EY suddenly wrote the post that Oscar just referenced, in which he declared me to be banished from the list and (a short time later) that all discussion about the topic should cease.
That fact by itself speaks volumes.
I’ll gladly start reading at any point you’ll link me to.
The fact that you don’t just provide a useful link but instead several paragraphs of excuses why the stuff I’m reading is untrustworthy I count as (small) evidence against you.
I’ve read SL4 around that time and saw the whole drama (although I couldn’t understand all the exact technical details, being 16). My prior on EY flagrantly lying like that is incredibly low. I’m virtually certain that you’re quite cranky in this regard.
I was on SL4 as well, and regarded Eliezer as basically correct, although I thought Loosemore’s ban was more than a little bit disproportionate. (If John Clark didn’t get banned for repeatedly and willfully misunderstanding Godelian arguments, wasting the time of countless posters over many years, why should Loosemore be banned for backtracking on some heuristics & biases positions?)
(Because JKC never lied about his credentials, which is where it really crosses the line into trolling.)
You use this word in an unconventional way, i.e., you use it to mean something like ‘unfairly causing harm and wasting people’s time’, which is not the standard definition: the standard definition necessitates intention to provoke or at least something in that vein. (I assume you know what “trolling” means in the context of fishing?) Because it’s only ever used in sensitive contexts, you might want to put effort into finding a more accurate word or phrase. As User:Eugine_Nier noted, lately “troll” and “trolling” have taken on a common usage similar to “fascist” and “fascism”, which I think is an unfortunate turn of events.
The animus here must be really strong. What Yudkowsky did was infer that Loosemore was lying about being a cognitive scientist from his ignorance of a variant of the Wasson experiment. First, people often forget obvious things in heated online discussions. Second, there are plenty of incompetent cognitive scientists: if Loosemore intended to deceive, he probably wouldn’t have expressly stated that he didn’t have teaching responsibilities for graduate students.
If what you say is true, then Eliezer is lying about Loosemore lying about his credentials, in which case Eliezer is “trolling”. But if what you say is false, then you are the “troll”.
(This comment is an attempt to convincingly demonstrate that Eliezer’s notion of trolling is, to put it bluntly, both harmful and dumb.)
I don’t know about you, but I’d prefer to be considered a troll than a liar; correspondingly, I think the expanded definition of liar is worse than the inaccurate definition of troll. Not every inaccuracy amounts to dishonesty and not all dishonesty to prevarication.