I don’t think so, since that would be a trivial property that doesn’t indicate anything....
I think it would indicate that not every action is being thought over. That some things a person does which lead to the achievement of a goal may not have beent planned for or acknowledged. By calling all things that are usefull in this way ‘rational’ I think you’d be confusing the term. Making it into a generic substitute for ‘good’ or ‘decent’.
To me, that seems harmfull to an agenda of improving people’s rational thinking.
.>, for there is no alternative available.
I would like to propose the alternatives of ‘beneficial’ and ‘usefull’. Otherwise we could consider ‘involvement in causality’ or something like that.
I think the word rationality could use protection against too much emotional attachment to it. It should retain a specific meaning instead of becoming ‘everything that’s usefull’.
I think the word rationality could use protection against too much emotional attachment to it. It should retain a specific meaning instead of becoming ‘everything that’s useful’.
I’m not in love with using the word “rationality” for what this community means by rationality. But (1) I can’t come up with a better word, (2) there’s no point in fighting to the death for a definition, and (3) thanks to the strength of various cognitive biases, it’s quite hard to figure out how to be rational and worth the effort to try.
I think various forms of “optimization” would probably fit the bill. That is, pretty much everything this site endorses about “rationalists” it would also endorse about “efficient optimizers.”
But the costs associated with such a terminology shift don’t seem remotely worth the payoff.
I think it would indicate that not every action is being thought over. That some things a person does which lead to the achievement of a goal may not have beent planned for or acknowledged. By calling all things that are usefull in this way ‘rational’ I think you’d be confusing the term. Making it into a generic substitute for ‘good’ or ‘decent’. To me, that seems harmfull to an agenda of improving people’s rational thinking.
.>, for there is no alternative available.
I would like to propose the alternatives of ‘beneficial’ and ‘usefull’. Otherwise we could consider ‘involvement in causality’ or something like that.
I think the word rationality could use protection against too much emotional attachment to it. It should retain a specific meaning instead of becoming ‘everything that’s usefull’.
I’m not in love with using the word “rationality” for what this community means by rationality. But (1) I can’t come up with a better word, (2) there’s no point in fighting to the death for a definition, and (3) thanks to the strength of various cognitive biases, it’s quite hard to figure out how to be rational and worth the effort to try.
I think various forms of “optimization” would probably fit the bill. That is, pretty much everything this site endorses about “rationalists” it would also endorse about “efficient optimizers.”
But the costs associated with such a terminology shift don’t seem remotely worth the payoff.