(Upvoted so someone can explain it without Karma cost.)
Downvoted because feeding Will when he is speaking this kind of pretentious drivel is precisely the kind of thing that the cost is intended to penalize. It is an example of the system working as it should!
(Note that my own earlier reply would be penalized if I made it now and that too would be a desirable outcome. If I was confident that Will’s claim about the Sermon on the Mount would be dismissed and downvoted as it has been then I would not have made a response.)
It is an example of the system working as it should!
Really, it’s an example of the system backfiring,causing someone to upvote a comment that deserved a downvoting it would probably otherwise have received.
What probability do you assign to someone with total karma less than 5 coming and translating this specific Will_Newsome’s comment into intelligible speach? My estimate is: epsilon.
Breaking a rule, and explaining that it has to be done to provide an opportunity for something with epsilon probability and a very low value even if it happened… that’s just an example of a person deliberately breaking a rule, and signalling dissatisfaction with the rule.
People respond to incentives. Especially loss-related incentives. I do not give homeless people nickels even though I can afford to give a nearly arbitrary number of homeless people nickels. The set of people with karma less than five will be outright unable to reply—the set of people with karma greater than five will just be disincentivized, and that’s still something.
The prior probability of someone being able to explain negative-value Will_Newsome’s comments in a way that provides value for LW readers is already epsilon. Even without the disincentives.
I think that people less responding to intentionally meaningless comments is a good thing. Therefore, trivial disincentives for doing this are a good thing. Therefore, removing them in this specific situation is a bad thing.
Don’t judge others, and you won’t be judged. For whatever standard you use to judge others will be used to judge you, and whatever measurement you use to measure others will be used to measure you. Why do you look at the speck that’s in your brother’s eye, and don’t notice the plank that’s in your own eye? How are you going to say to your brother, “Let me take out the speck from your eye” when you have a plank in your own eye? You hypocrite, first get rid of the plank in your own eye, and then you’ll see clearly to take out the speck from your brother’s eye.
This claims that people underestimate their flaws relative to others’. Will claims that the obvious implication is that one must judge others more leniently to compensate, rather than refraining from judgement entirely as said two sentences earlier.
There’s also a suggestion of projection there. Having discovered that I have some flaw (say, anger; or baseless faith), I may go about finding the same fault in others — but if I correct the flaw in myself first, the world may look different. The one with road rage drives on a highway populated by assholes and maniacs; the creationist accuses Darwinism of “being a religion”.
the creationist accuses Darwinism of “being a religion”.
It is, the way they’re trying to use that word. Also is intelligent design a type of creationism? ’Cuz I think I like ID, at least more than the standard model. I’d like to think of myself as a human in the reference class “creationist who accuses Darwinism of being a religion”.
Someone who claims that faith is a good thing should not also use it as an accusation of impropriety.
The creationist does not claim — before cowans, gentiles, and the unwashed — that Darwinism is the wrong religion; rather, he claims that it is “a religion” as if to say that this is condemnation enough. To fellow creationists he may well say that Darwinism is Satanism, or a rival tribe to be vanquished by force or deception. But he does not expect that argument to fly with outsiders. With them he merely asserts that the (straw-)Darwinist is a hypocrite, a know-it-all elitist nerd who commits the grave faux-pas of mistaking his religion for science.
Meanwhile the sociologist of religion wonders where the temples of Darwin are. The strong-programme sociologist of science (who uses the methodological assumption that science doesn’t work, even as he posts on the Internet!) can mistake a laboratory for a center of ritual, but one who has studied comparative religion does not see worship happening in the microscope, the genomics software, or the fMRI.
Someone who claims that faith is a good thing should not also use it as an accusation of impropriety.
I get the impression that that argument is used more to undermine claims that darwinism is a science than anything else.
Physics is a clear science; you can use the right equations and predict the motion of the Earth about the Sun, or the time a barometer will take to fall from a given height. This gives it a certain degree of credibility. The theory of evolution (and how the creationists love to remind everyone of that word, ‘theory’!) is also science; but they would deny it, on the basis that accepting it suggests that it is as credible as physics or mathematics. If they insist that darwinism is a religion, then both alternatives start from the same basis of credibility; the creationists can then point out, quite accurately, that their version is older and has been around for longer, and therefore at least claim seniority.
Meanwhile the sociologist of religion wonders where the temples of Darwin are.
Remember that Darwinism is a lot more than biology. Sure, a computer isn’t exactly an altar. That doesn’t change that most of what universities are famous for in the wider world is their ideology.
Eh that’s sort of a less charitable reading of me than you could have given. But I suppose you’ve already walked with me 1.2 miles, and it’d be a stretch for me to ask for .8 more. ;)
What?
(Upvoted so someone can explain it without Karma cost.)
Downvoted because feeding Will when he is speaking this kind of pretentious drivel is precisely the kind of thing that the cost is intended to penalize. It is an example of the system working as it should!
(Note that my own earlier reply would be penalized if I made it now and that too would be a desirable outcome. If I was confident that Will’s claim about the Sermon on the Mount would be dismissed and downvoted as it has been then I would not have made a response.)
Really, it’s an example of the system backfiring,causing someone to upvote a comment that deserved a downvoting it would probably otherwise have received.
That was my point.
What probability do you assign to someone with total karma less than 5 coming and translating this specific Will_Newsome’s comment into intelligible speach? My estimate is: epsilon.
Breaking a rule, and explaining that it has to be done to provide an opportunity for something with epsilon probability and a very low value even if it happened… that’s just an example of a person deliberately breaking a rule, and signalling dissatisfaction with the rule.
People respond to incentives. Especially loss-related incentives. I do not give homeless people nickels even though I can afford to give a nearly arbitrary number of homeless people nickels. The set of people with karma less than five will be outright unable to reply—the set of people with karma greater than five will just be disincentivized, and that’s still something.
The prior probability of someone being able to explain negative-value Will_Newsome’s comments in a way that provides value for LW readers is already epsilon. Even without the disincentives.
I think that people less responding to intentionally meaningless comments is a good thing. Therefore, trivial disincentives for doing this are a good thing. Therefore, removing them in this specific situation is a bad thing.
Will is referring to Matthew 7:1-5.
This claims that people underestimate their flaws relative to others’. Will claims that the obvious implication is that one must judge others more leniently to compensate, rather than refraining from judgement entirely as said two sentences earlier.
There’s also a suggestion of projection there. Having discovered that I have some flaw (say, anger; or baseless faith), I may go about finding the same fault in others — but if I correct the flaw in myself first, the world may look different. The one with road rage drives on a highway populated by assholes and maniacs; the creationist accuses Darwinism of “being a religion”.
It is, the way they’re trying to use that word. Also is intelligent design a type of creationism? ’Cuz I think I like ID, at least more than the standard model. I’d like to think of myself as a human in the reference class “creationist who accuses Darwinism of being a religion”.
Someone who claims that faith is a good thing should not also use it as an accusation of impropriety.
The creationist does not claim — before cowans, gentiles, and the unwashed — that Darwinism is the wrong religion; rather, he claims that it is “a religion” as if to say that this is condemnation enough. To fellow creationists he may well say that Darwinism is Satanism, or a rival tribe to be vanquished by force or deception. But he does not expect that argument to fly with outsiders. With them he merely asserts that the (straw-)Darwinist is a hypocrite, a know-it-all elitist nerd who commits the grave faux-pas of mistaking his religion for science.
Meanwhile the sociologist of religion wonders where the temples of Darwin are. The strong-programme sociologist of science (who uses the methodological assumption that science doesn’t work, even as he posts on the Internet!) can mistake a laboratory for a center of ritual, but one who has studied comparative religion does not see worship happening in the microscope, the genomics software, or the fMRI.
I get the impression that that argument is used more to undermine claims that darwinism is a science than anything else.
Physics is a clear science; you can use the right equations and predict the motion of the Earth about the Sun, or the time a barometer will take to fall from a given height. This gives it a certain degree of credibility. The theory of evolution (and how the creationists love to remind everyone of that word, ‘theory’!) is also science; but they would deny it, on the basis that accepting it suggests that it is as credible as physics or mathematics. If they insist that darwinism is a religion, then both alternatives start from the same basis of credibility; the creationists can then point out, quite accurately, that their version is older and has been around for longer, and therefore at least claim seniority.
There’s a short story by Asimov that gives a very nice view of the whole argument.
That is a quintessentially Asimovian story. +1.
Remember that Darwinism is a lot more than biology. Sure, a computer isn’t exactly an altar. That doesn’t change that most of what universities are famous for in the wider world is their ideology.
Eh that’s sort of a less charitable reading of me than you could have given. But I suppose you’ve already walked with me 1.2 miles, and it’d be a stretch for me to ask for .8 more. ;)
One way we say it here is to be cautious of other-optimizing …
Though sadly sometimes the only alternative is no optimization at all.
Yes, but more frequently than that, the only alternative appears to be no optimization at all. Hence the heuristic.