Interestingly, the Authority Card seems subject to the Rule of Separate Magisteria. I’m sure you’ve also noticed this at some point. Basically, the reputedly-intelligent person will convince anyone of any “fact” by simply saying it convincingly and appearing to themselves be convinced, but only when it is a fact that is part of the Smart-person Stuff magisterium within the listener’s model. As soon as you depart from this magisterium, your statements are mere opinion, and thus everything you say is absolutely worthless, since 1⁄6 000 000 000 = 0 and there are over six billion other people that have an opinion.
In other words, I agree that it constitutes somewhat of a problem. I found myself struggling with it in the past. Now I’m not struggling with it anymore, even though it hasn’t been “solved” yet. It becomes a constant challenge that resets over time and over each new person you meet.
Of course, as a young person, this obstacle is largely eliminated by the context. Interact with the same group of people for a long period of time, a group through which information spreads quickly, and then develop a reputation for knowing everything. Downside: people are very disappointed when you admit you don’t know something. Upside: life is easier. More important downside: you get lazy in your knowledge acquisition.
Downside: people are very disappointed when you admit you don’t know something.
This. Sometimes, when I tell people I don’t know how to help them with something, they accuse me of being deliberately unhelpful with them because I’m selfish, angry with them, or something.
Interestingly, the Authority Card seems subject to the Rule of Separate Magisteria. I’m sure you’ve also noticed this at some point. Basically, the reputedly-intelligent person will convince anyone of any “fact” by simply saying it convincingly and appearing to themselves be convinced, but only when it is a fact that is part of the Smart-person Stuff magisterium within the listener’s model. As soon as you depart from this magisterium, your statements are mere opinion, and thus everything you say is absolutely worthless, since 1⁄6 000 000 000 = 0 and there are over six billion other people that have an opinion.
In other words, I agree that it constitutes somewhat of a problem. I found myself struggling with it in the past. Now I’m not struggling with it anymore, even though it hasn’t been “solved” yet. It becomes a constant challenge that resets over time and over each new person you meet.
Of course, as a young person, this obstacle is largely eliminated by the context. Interact with the same group of people for a long period of time, a group through which information spreads quickly, and then develop a reputation for knowing everything. Downside: people are very disappointed when you admit you don’t know something. Upside: life is easier. More important downside: you get lazy in your knowledge acquisition.
This. Sometimes, when I tell people I don’t know how to help them with something, they accuse me of being deliberately unhelpful with them because I’m selfish, angry with them, or something.