It’s totally wrong that you can’t argue against someone who says “I don’t know”, you argue against them by showing how your model fits the data and how any plausible competing model either doesn’t fit or shares the salient features of yours. It’s bizarre to describe “I don’t know” as “garbage” in general, because it is the correct stance to take when neither your prior nor evidence sufficiently constrain the distribution of plausibilities. Paul obviously didn’t posit an “unobserved kindness force” because he was specifically describing the observation that humans are kind. I think Paul and Nate had a very productive disagreement in that thread and this seems like a wildly reductive mischaracterization of it.
It’s totally wrong that you can’t argue against someone who says “I don’t know”, you argue against them by showing how your model fits the data and how any plausible competing model either doesn’t fit or shares the salient features of yours. It’s bizarre to describe “I don’t know” as “garbage” in general, because it is the correct stance to take when neither your prior nor evidence sufficiently constrain the distribution of plausibilities. Paul obviously didn’t posit an “unobserved kindness force” because he was specifically describing the observation that humans are kind. I think Paul and Nate had a very productive disagreement in that thread and this seems like a wildly reductive mischaracterization of it.
But this assumes a model should aim to fit all data, which is a waste of effort.
I’m confused about what you mean & how it relates to what I said.