The primary goal of the present LessWrong community is to refine and promote human rationality. The primary goal of people who would register to join political conversations on LessWrong is liable to be different.
Tastefully left unsaid, is that giving people interested in political conversations an incentive to join Less Wrong could erode the quality of discussion. This is an important point.
However, another important point is that maybe it’s really important to the betterment of the world that there be a place on the internet, another site perhaps, where it is appropriate to discuss policy, but where the merits of the argument, and the accuracy of facts are of paramount importance. Such a site wouldn’t be perfect, but surely it could be an improvement over what I’ve seen on the internet.
Such a site could borrow from the scoring mechanisms that have worked on this site, but would need significant refinement. For example, any post which engaged is demagoguery would need to lead to severe chastisement. Another refinement would be tools that help to break an argument down. E.g. to decide which sentences in a post are factually accurate, and which sentences are fallacious (mockup).
Additionally, since you can’t talk about policy without treading on normative issues (“equality of opportunity is more important than helping out the disadvantaged” or “human rights are more important than animal rights”) the site would need to find a way to carve these issues out of the discussion; not ignore them, just find a way to lay them succinctly to the side (I don’t know how).
Personally, I think the most important issue in politics is how to reform politics. I.e. how to ensure that our institutions function for “the common good” by making changes to rules/practices so that individual self-interest is channeled toward what’s good for the group. I think this is a sound principle that can inform but not decide many issues.
Maybe building a website in which reasonably rational policy choices are made could be a first step toward reforming our political institutions.
Tastefully left unsaid, is that giving people interested in political conversations an incentive to join Less Wrong could erode the quality of discussion. This is an important point.
However, another important point is that maybe it’s really important to the betterment of the world that there be a place on the internet, another site perhaps, where it is appropriate to discuss policy, but where the merits of the argument, and the accuracy of facts are of paramount importance. Such a site wouldn’t be perfect, but surely it could be an improvement over what I’ve seen on the internet.
Such a site could borrow from the scoring mechanisms that have worked on this site, but would need significant refinement. For example, any post which engaged is demagoguery would need to lead to severe chastisement. Another refinement would be tools that help to break an argument down. E.g. to decide which sentences in a post are factually accurate, and which sentences are fallacious (mockup).
Additionally, since you can’t talk about policy without treading on normative issues (“equality of opportunity is more important than helping out the disadvantaged” or “human rights are more important than animal rights”) the site would need to find a way to carve these issues out of the discussion; not ignore them, just find a way to lay them succinctly to the side (I don’t know how).
Personally, I think the most important issue in politics is how to reform politics. I.e. how to ensure that our institutions function for “the common good” by making changes to rules/practices so that individual self-interest is channeled toward what’s good for the group. I think this is a sound principle that can inform but not decide many issues.
Maybe building a website in which reasonably rational policy choices are made could be a first step toward reforming our political institutions.