One element of meta-contrarian reasoning is as follows. Consider a proposition P, that is hard for a layperson to assess. Because of this difficulty, an individual must rely on others for information. Now, a reasonable layperson might look around and listen with an open mind to all the arguments, and choose the one that seems most plausible to assign a probability to P.
The problem is that certain propositions have large corps of people whose professions depend on the proposition being true, but no counterforce of professional critics. So there is a large group of people (priests) who are professionally committed to the proposition “God exists”. The existence of this group causes an obvious bias in the layperson’s decision algorithm. Other groups, like doctors, economists, soldiers, and public school teachers, have similar commitments. Consider the proposition “public education improves national academic achievement.” It could be true, it could be false—it’s an empirical question. But all public school teachers are committed to this proposition, and there are very few people committed to the opposite.
So meta-contrarians explicitly correct for this kind of bias. I don’t necessarily think that the public school proposition is false, but it should be thoroughly examined. I don’t necessarily think that the nation would be safer if we abolished the Army and Marine Corps, but it might be.
The problem is that certain propositions have large corps of people whose professions depend on the proposition being true, but no counterforce of professional critics.
One element of meta-contrarian reasoning is as follows. Consider a proposition P, that is hard for a layperson to assess. Because of this difficulty, an individual must rely on others for information. Now, a reasonable layperson might look around and listen with an open mind to all the arguments, and choose the one that seems most plausible to assign a probability to P.
The problem is that certain propositions have large corps of people whose professions depend on the proposition being true, but no counterforce of professional critics. So there is a large group of people (priests) who are professionally committed to the proposition “God exists”. The existence of this group causes an obvious bias in the layperson’s decision algorithm. Other groups, like doctors, economists, soldiers, and public school teachers, have similar commitments. Consider the proposition “public education improves national academic achievement.” It could be true, it could be false—it’s an empirical question. But all public school teachers are committed to this proposition, and there are very few people committed to the opposite.
So meta-contrarians explicitly correct for this kind of bias. I don’t necessarily think that the public school proposition is false, but it should be thoroughly examined. I don’t necessarily think that the nation would be safer if we abolished the Army and Marine Corps, but it might be.
This really is a very good point.