I think I am using “rhetoric” in a different way than Aristotle. For Aristotle, it was the art of speaking clearly and eloquently to communicate a position. I am using it more in the way people use when they say “empty rhetoric” or “political rhetoric”. “Unless you give up your rights, the terrorists have already won” is my idea of an archetypal rhetorical technique. That may not be fair to the field of rhetoric, but I need some word to describe it and I can’t think of a better one, so “rhetoric” it is.
Rhetoric is a technique that may be useful to rationalists, but it’s not a rationalist technique. Compare the use of force. I may, as a rationalist, decide the best way towards my goal is murdering all who oppose me, in which case I’ll want to know techniques like how to use an assault weapon. But there’s still something fundamentally shady about the technique of killing people; it may just barely be justified on utilitarian grounds for a sufficiently important goal, but it’s one of those things that you use only as a last resort and even then only after agonizing soul-searching. I feel confident saying that the technique of murdering people effectively as a Dark Art.
I feel the same way about rhetoric (by my pessimistic definition). Tricking people into believing things they have no legitimate evidence for can certainly be helpful, but the more people do it the worse the world gets. Not only do people end up with less than maximally accurate beliefs, but every rhetorician needs to promote Dark Side Epistemology in order to keep zir job. And if I use rhetoric, you need to start using rhetoric just to keep up, and sooner or later everyone’s beliefs are completely skewed and inaccurate. It’s not quite as Dark an Art as force is, and it’s much easier to justify, but it’s in the same category.
Be careful about using the “rationalists should win” slogan too literally. Martial artists should win too, but that doesn’t mean they should take an AK-47 to their next sparring match and blowing their opponent’s face off. Martial artists place high value on winning honorably. I see no reason why we shouldn’t emulate them.
Be careful about using the “rationalists should win” slogan too literally. Martial artists should win too, but that doesn’t mean they should take an AK-47 to their next sparring match and blowing their opponent’s face off. Martial artists place high value on winning honorably. I see no reason why we shouldn’t emulate them.
I disagree. The problem with using dishonest rethoric to win in a debate isn’t that it’s winning dishonorably; it’s that it’s winning at the wrong game—on a game that you wouldn’t consider the most important if you looked at it closely.
To continue with the martial arts analogy, imagine say a Chinese kung fu master in World War 2 Nanjing that knows that Japanese soldiers are coming over to kill off all of his family. Should he try to win the fight honorably? Or just try to win using every dirty trick in the book (including running away)? If he focuses on winning honorably, he’s lost sight of his main goal (save his family) in favor of a secondary one (win honorably).
Similarly, if you foxus on “winning the debate”, and as a result push people into a corner that will make them dislike you and become more attached to their identity as a believer in whatever—you focused on the wrong subgoal, and lost at the one which was important to you.
I’m a precedent utilitarian. I try to maximize utility, except when doing so would set a bad precedent that would lower utility later.
Precedent utilitarians are usually good about restraining from force. Yes, killing a rich miser and distributing her money to the poor might increase utility. But it sets the precedent that anyone can kill someone if they think of a good enough reason, and most people won’t be smart enough to limit themselves to genuinely good reasons. Therefore, precedent utilitarians generally respect the rule of not killing others. But in certain cases this rule breaks down. In the WWII example you mention, it doesn’t seem particularly dangerous to set the precedent that you can use force against invaders coming to kill your family.
I try to use the same thought process when evaluating when to use rhetoric. If anyone can use rhetoric any time it furthers a goal that they consider genuinely good, then there’s little incentive to use rational argument except on the rare hard-core rationalists who are mostly resistant to rhetorical tricks. I want to be able to condemn a demagogue who uses rhetoric without being a hypocrite. If I needed to use rhetoric in a situation where I couldn’t blame anyone else for using rhetoric, like trying to save my family, I’d do it.
(the problem with precedent utilitarianism is that the calculations are impossible to do with real math, and mostly just involve handwaving. But I hope it at least gives a sketch of my thought processes)
Yvain: “I’m a precedent utilitarian. I try to maximize utility, except when doing so would set a bad precedent that would lower utility later.”
I think this is an odd thing to say. Any utilitarian ought to be declining short-term gains that result in long-term losses. So why the need for this specific disclaimer?
Yvain seems to be using the term to mean a utilitarian (in the pure sense) who scrupulously considers the force of his example. The implication is that many don’t—we’re not talking about perfectly rational beings here, just people who agree with the principle of utility maximization.
Um, isn’t it kind of rhetorical to compare rhetoric to force and murder?
Also, all your articles here that I recall—likewise those of Eliezer on Overcoming Bias—are masterful applications of rhetoric. So I’m kind of confused here. Is this one of those “do as I say, not as I do” things?
If you mean the articles here are clear or well argued, thank you. I have no objection to clarity or good argument; see the first paragraph of the comment above. If you mean that I’m using dirty tricks like the “terrorists win” example, then I’d like to know exactly what you mean so I can avoid doing it in the future.
When I compare rhetoric (meaning “empty rhetoric”, as mentioned) to force and murder, I’m not saying they’re equally bad, or doing one leads to the other or anything like that. Just that they’re bad for the same reason. Both are potentially “useful” techniques. But both prevent rational argument and if used too frequently lead to a world in which rational argument is impossible.
But that is precisely the sort of “dirty trick” you claim to be against. By using murder as an example, you’re setting off a “boo light” (opposite of applause light) and linking it to the thing you want people to dislike. That’s rhetoric, and emotional manipulation.
And it’s neither a good thing nor a bad thing, in itself. Used to strengthen a valid argument, it’s fine. Arguing that it’s bad in and of itself is a misunderstanding… and another “boo light” (e.g. “empty rhetoric”, “dirty tricks”).
Emotional manipulation is unavoidable, by the way. Boring presenters and neutral presentations are just manipulating people’s emotions either towards boredom and not caring, or to “respect”, “status”, and “seriousness”, depending on the audience. It’s best to deliberately choose what emotions you want to create, in whom, rather than leaving the matter to chance.
If you mean the articles here are clear or well argued, thank you. I have no objection to clarity or good argument; see the first paragraph of the comment above. If you mean that I’m using dirty tricks like the “terrorists win” example, then I’d like to know exactly what you mean so I can avoid doing it in the future.
I think the point is that you do a little of both; loosely speaking you are guilty of being fairly eloquent—presenting your ideas persuasively and engagingly, in a style that is inherently likely to increase acceptance.
It is an unavoidable facet of human communication that the same idea can be more or less persuasive depending on how it is presented. Over on OB, Robin uses a far more neutral (or at times even anti-persuasive) style, and if memory serves me he and Eliezer have argued a bit about such use of style.
I think I am using “rhetoric” in a different way than Aristotle. For Aristotle, it was the art of speaking clearly and eloquently to communicate a position. I am using it more in the way people use when they say “empty rhetoric” or “political rhetoric”. “Unless you give up your rights, the terrorists have already won” is my idea of an archetypal rhetorical technique. That may not be fair to the field of rhetoric, but I need some word to describe it and I can’t think of a better one, so “rhetoric” it is.
Rhetoric is a technique that may be useful to rationalists, but it’s not a rationalist technique. Compare the use of force. I may, as a rationalist, decide the best way towards my goal is murdering all who oppose me, in which case I’ll want to know techniques like how to use an assault weapon. But there’s still something fundamentally shady about the technique of killing people; it may just barely be justified on utilitarian grounds for a sufficiently important goal, but it’s one of those things that you use only as a last resort and even then only after agonizing soul-searching. I feel confident saying that the technique of murdering people effectively as a Dark Art.
I feel the same way about rhetoric (by my pessimistic definition). Tricking people into believing things they have no legitimate evidence for can certainly be helpful, but the more people do it the worse the world gets. Not only do people end up with less than maximally accurate beliefs, but every rhetorician needs to promote Dark Side Epistemology in order to keep zir job. And if I use rhetoric, you need to start using rhetoric just to keep up, and sooner or later everyone’s beliefs are completely skewed and inaccurate. It’s not quite as Dark an Art as force is, and it’s much easier to justify, but it’s in the same category.
Be careful about using the “rationalists should win” slogan too literally. Martial artists should win too, but that doesn’t mean they should take an AK-47 to their next sparring match and blowing their opponent’s face off. Martial artists place high value on winning honorably. I see no reason why we shouldn’t emulate them.
I disagree. The problem with using dishonest rethoric to win in a debate isn’t that it’s winning dishonorably; it’s that it’s winning at the wrong game—on a game that you wouldn’t consider the most important if you looked at it closely.
To continue with the martial arts analogy, imagine say a Chinese kung fu master in World War 2 Nanjing that knows that Japanese soldiers are coming over to kill off all of his family. Should he try to win the fight honorably? Or just try to win using every dirty trick in the book (including running away)? If he focuses on winning honorably, he’s lost sight of his main goal (save his family) in favor of a secondary one (win honorably).
Similarly, if you foxus on “winning the debate”, and as a result push people into a corner that will make them dislike you and become more attached to their identity as a believer in whatever—you focused on the wrong subgoal, and lost at the one which was important to you.
I’m a precedent utilitarian. I try to maximize utility, except when doing so would set a bad precedent that would lower utility later.
Precedent utilitarians are usually good about restraining from force. Yes, killing a rich miser and distributing her money to the poor might increase utility. But it sets the precedent that anyone can kill someone if they think of a good enough reason, and most people won’t be smart enough to limit themselves to genuinely good reasons. Therefore, precedent utilitarians generally respect the rule of not killing others. But in certain cases this rule breaks down. In the WWII example you mention, it doesn’t seem particularly dangerous to set the precedent that you can use force against invaders coming to kill your family.
I try to use the same thought process when evaluating when to use rhetoric. If anyone can use rhetoric any time it furthers a goal that they consider genuinely good, then there’s little incentive to use rational argument except on the rare hard-core rationalists who are mostly resistant to rhetorical tricks. I want to be able to condemn a demagogue who uses rhetoric without being a hypocrite. If I needed to use rhetoric in a situation where I couldn’t blame anyone else for using rhetoric, like trying to save my family, I’d do it.
(the problem with precedent utilitarianism is that the calculations are impossible to do with real math, and mostly just involve handwaving. But I hope it at least gives a sketch of my thought processes)
Yvain: “I’m a precedent utilitarian. I try to maximize utility, except when doing so would set a bad precedent that would lower utility later.”
I think this is an odd thing to say. Any utilitarian ought to be declining short-term gains that result in long-term losses. So why the need for this specific disclaimer?
Yvain seems to be using the term to mean a utilitarian (in the pure sense) who scrupulously considers the force of his example. The implication is that many don’t—we’re not talking about perfectly rational beings here, just people who agree with the principle of utility maximization.
Um, isn’t it kind of rhetorical to compare rhetoric to force and murder?
Also, all your articles here that I recall—likewise those of Eliezer on Overcoming Bias—are masterful applications of rhetoric. So I’m kind of confused here. Is this one of those “do as I say, not as I do” things?
If you mean the articles here are clear or well argued, thank you. I have no objection to clarity or good argument; see the first paragraph of the comment above. If you mean that I’m using dirty tricks like the “terrorists win” example, then I’d like to know exactly what you mean so I can avoid doing it in the future.
When I compare rhetoric (meaning “empty rhetoric”, as mentioned) to force and murder, I’m not saying they’re equally bad, or doing one leads to the other or anything like that. Just that they’re bad for the same reason. Both are potentially “useful” techniques. But both prevent rational argument and if used too frequently lead to a world in which rational argument is impossible.
But that is precisely the sort of “dirty trick” you claim to be against. By using murder as an example, you’re setting off a “boo light” (opposite of applause light) and linking it to the thing you want people to dislike. That’s rhetoric, and emotional manipulation.
And it’s neither a good thing nor a bad thing, in itself. Used to strengthen a valid argument, it’s fine. Arguing that it’s bad in and of itself is a misunderstanding… and another “boo light” (e.g. “empty rhetoric”, “dirty tricks”).
Emotional manipulation is unavoidable, by the way. Boring presenters and neutral presentations are just manipulating people’s emotions either towards boredom and not caring, or to “respect”, “status”, and “seriousness”, depending on the audience. It’s best to deliberately choose what emotions you want to create, in whom, rather than leaving the matter to chance.
I think the point is that you do a little of both; loosely speaking you are guilty of being fairly eloquent—presenting your ideas persuasively and engagingly, in a style that is inherently likely to increase acceptance.
It is an unavoidable facet of human communication that the same idea can be more or less persuasive depending on how it is presented. Over on OB, Robin uses a far more neutral (or at times even anti-persuasive) style, and if memory serves me he and Eliezer have argued a bit about such use of style.
Except, of course, for all those aspects of martial arts which we shouldn’t emulate.