There’s been periodic attempts to create formal Double Crux frameworks
Do you have any links about those, or specifically about how they fail?
To be honest, I think it’s likely that the whole idea of formalizing that sort of thing is naive, and only appeals to a certain kind of person (such as myself), due to various biases. Still, I have some hope that it could work, at least for such people.
This framework shares that issue, but something that made me a bit more optimistic than usual about it is that I’ve had a lot of good experiences using google docs as a way to hash out ideas, with the ability to blend between formal bullet points, freeforming paragraphs, and back-and-forth conversation in the comments as needed.
Do elaborate. Did “hashing out ideas” involve having many disagreements? Did the ideas relate to anything controversial, or were they more technical? Where the people you collaborated with “rationalists”? Did you feel much resistance from them, to doing anything even remotely formal?
I looked for the DoubleCrux website but couldn’t find it (I think Lifelonglearner made it). [fake edit: tried very slightly harder and then found it: http://double-crux.appspot.com/]
I think it’s likely that the whole idea of formalizing that sort of thing is naive, and only appeals to a certain kind of person (such as myself), due to various biases
I think most attempts have something of this quality.
My own motivation came specifically because of some debates that went for several months and didn’t seem to have resolved anything.
Did “hashing out ideas” involve having many disagreements? Did the ideas relate to anything controversial, or were they more technical? Where the people you collaborated with “rationalists”? Did you feel much resistance from them, to doing anything even remotely formal?
1. yes – I regularly hash out disagreements on google docs. I haven’t had to do deep worldview disagreements, but standard disagreements within a shared frame. Some of the ideas were “controversial”, but not frame-breakingly controversial among the people discussing them.
2. yes, basically entirely rationalists that I trust reasonably
3. Not sure I parse the third question – I didn’t feel much resistance one way or another. (The structure here was “write an initial braindump on google docs, then invite people hash out disagreements in the comments).
(I’d only suggest the DoubleCrux framework in the OP for people who trust or at least meta-trust each other)
The structure here was “write an initial braindump on google docs, then invite people hash out disagreements in the comments
Is it possible that you did 90% of the work on those docs, at least of the kind that collects and cleans up existing arguments? This is sort of what I meant by “resistance”. E.g. if I wanted to have a formalized debated with my hypothetical grandma, she’d be confused about why I would need that, or why we can’t just talk like normal people, but this doesn’t mean that she wouldn’t play along, or that I wouldn’t find the results of the debate useful. I wonder what fraction of people, even rationalists, would feel similarly.
Well, that has fewer moving parts and fewer distinct kinds of text than I would appreciate. But I suspect that the greatest problem with this sort of thing would be a lack of persistent usage. That is, if a few people actually dedicated effort into having disagreements with a similar tool, even this simple, they might draw some benefit from it. But since such tools aren’t the least effort option for anybody, they end up unused. I guess google docs are pretty good in this sense, in that everyone has access to them, the docs are persistent and live in a familiar place (assuming the person uses google docs for other purposes), and maybe you can even be notified somehow, that “person X modified doc Y”.
Do you have any links about those, or specifically about how they fail?
To be honest, I think it’s likely that the whole idea of formalizing that sort of thing is naive, and only appeals to a certain kind of person (such as myself), due to various biases. Still, I have some hope that it could work, at least for such people.
Do elaborate. Did “hashing out ideas” involve having many disagreements? Did the ideas relate to anything controversial, or were they more technical? Where the people you collaborated with “rationalists”? Did you feel much resistance from them, to doing anything even remotely formal?
I looked for the DoubleCrux website but couldn’t find it (I think Lifelonglearner made it). [fake edit: tried very slightly harder and then found it: http://double-crux.appspot.com/]
I think most attempts have something of this quality.
My own motivation came specifically because of some debates that went for several months and didn’t seem to have resolved anything.
1. yes – I regularly hash out disagreements on google docs. I haven’t had to do deep worldview disagreements, but standard disagreements within a shared frame. Some of the ideas were “controversial”, but not frame-breakingly controversial among the people discussing them.
2. yes, basically entirely rationalists that I trust reasonably
3. Not sure I parse the third question – I didn’t feel much resistance one way or another. (The structure here was “write an initial braindump on google docs, then invite people hash out disagreements in the comments).
(I’d only suggest the DoubleCrux framework in the OP for people who trust or at least meta-trust each other)
Is it possible that you did 90% of the work on those docs, at least of the kind that collects and cleans up existing arguments? This is sort of what I meant by “resistance”. E.g. if I wanted to have a formalized debated with my hypothetical grandma, she’d be confused about why I would need that, or why we can’t just talk like normal people, but this doesn’t mean that she wouldn’t play along, or that I wouldn’t find the results of the debate useful. I wonder what fraction of people, even rationalists, would feel similarly.
Well, that has fewer moving parts and fewer distinct kinds of text than I would appreciate. But I suspect that the greatest problem with this sort of thing would be a lack of persistent usage. That is, if a few people actually dedicated effort into having disagreements with a similar tool, even this simple, they might draw some benefit from it. But since such tools aren’t the least effort option for anybody, they end up unused. I guess google docs are pretty good in this sense, in that everyone has access to them, the docs are persistent and live in a familiar place (assuming the person uses google docs for other purposes), and maybe you can even be notified somehow, that “person X modified doc Y”.