Handle: Larks (also commonly Larklight, OxfordLark, Artrix)
Name: Ben
Sex: Male
Location: Eastbourne, UK
Age: at 17 I suspect I may be the baby of the group?
Education: results permitting (to which I assign a probability in excess of 0.99) I'll be reading Mathematics and Philosophy at Oxford
Occupation: As yet, none. Currently applying for night-shift work at a local supermarket
I came to LW through OB, which I found as a result of Bryan Caplan’s writing on Econlog (or should it be at Econlog?). I fit much of the standard pattern: atheist, materialist, economist, reductionist, etc. Probably my only departure is being a Conservative Liberal rather than a libertarian; an issue of some concern to me is the disconnect between the US/Econlog/OB/LW/Rationalist group and the UK/Classical Liberal/Conservative Party group, both of which I am interested in. Though Hayek, of course, pervades all.
In an impressive display, I suppose, of cognitive dissidence, I realised that the Bible and Evolution were contradictory in year 4 (age:8), and so came to the conclusion that the continents had originally been separated into islands on opposite sides of the planet. Eden was on one side, evolution on the other, and then continental drift occurred. I have since rejected this hypothesis. I came to Rationalism partly as a result of debating on the NAGTY website.
There are probably two notable influences OB/LW have had on my life. Firstly, I’ve begun to reflexively refer to what would or would not be empirically the case under different policies, states of affairs, etc., thus making discourse notably more efficient (or at least, it makes it harder for other people to argue back. Hard to tell the difference.)
Secondly, I’ve given up trying out out-argue my irrational Marxist friend, and instead make money off him by making bets about political and economic matters. This does not seem to have affected his beliefs, but it is profitable.
I suspect you mean “cognitive dissonance”. Perhaps you meant “cognitive dissidents”, though, which is closer in spelling and would be a charming notion.
Edit: I looked it up and apparently, unbeknownst to me, “dissidence” is a word. But I still suspect that “dissonance” was meant and that “dissidents” would have been charming.
Dissidence (i.e. dissent/the state of being a dissident) actually seems to fit the context better than dissonance. I thought it was a nice turn of phrase.
I’m glad that my word has caused such joy. I’ve now read the line so many times I can’t for the life of me work out which one I intended, or is correct, or recall if it was simply a typo!
I came to LW through OB, which I found as a result of Bryan Caplan’s writing on Econlog (or should it be at Econlog?). I fit much of the standard pattern: atheist, materialist, economist, reductionist, etc. Probably my only departure is being a Conservative Liberal rather than a libertarian; an issue of some concern to me is the disconnect between the US/Econlog/OB/LW/Rationalist group and the UK/Classical Liberal/Conservative Party group, both of which I am interested in. Though Hayek, of course, pervades all.
In an impressive display, I suppose, of cognitive dissidence, I realised that the Bible and Evolution were contradictory in year 4 (age:8), and so came to the conclusion that the continents had originally been separated into islands on opposite sides of the planet. Eden was on one side, evolution on the other, and then continental drift occurred. I have since rejected this hypothesis. I came to Rationalism partly as a result of debating on the NAGTY website.
There are probably two notable influences OB/LW have had on my life. Firstly, I’ve begun to reflexively refer to what would or would not be empirically the case under different policies, states of affairs, etc., thus making discourse notably more efficient (or at least, it makes it harder for other people to argue back. Hard to tell the difference.)
Secondly, I’ve given up trying out out-argue my irrational Marxist friend, and instead make money off him by making bets about political and economic matters. This does not seem to have affected his beliefs, but it is profitable.
I suspect you mean “cognitive dissonance”. Perhaps you meant “cognitive dissidents”, though, which is closer in spelling and would be a charming notion.
Edit: I looked it up and apparently, unbeknownst to me, “dissidence” is a word. But I still suspect that “dissonance” was meant and that “dissidents” would have been charming.
Dissidence (i.e. dissent/the state of being a dissident) actually seems to fit the context better than dissonance. I thought it was a nice turn of phrase.
I’m glad that my word has caused such joy. I’ve now read the line so many times I can’t for the life of me work out which one I intended, or is correct, or recall if it was simply a typo!