Frelkins and Marshall pretty well sum up my impressions of the exchange between Jaron and EY.
Perhaps pertinent, I’d suggest an essay on OvercomingBias on our unfortunate tendency to focus on the other’s statements, rather than focusing on a probabilistic model of the likelihood function generating those statements. Context is crucial to meaning, but must be formed rather than conveyed. Ironically—but reflecting the fundamentally hard value of intelligence—such contextual asymmetry appears to work against those who would benefit the most.
More concretely, I’m referring to the common tendency to shake one’s head in perplexity and say “He was so wrong, he didn’t make much sense at all.” in comparison with laughing and saying “I can see how he thinks that way, within his context (which I may have once shared.)”
Frelkins and Marshall pretty well sum up my impressions of the exchange between Jaron and EY.
Perhaps pertinent, I’d suggest an essay on OvercomingBias on our unfortunate tendency to focus on the other’s statements, rather than focusing on a probabilistic model of the likelihood function generating those statements. Context is crucial to meaning, but must be formed rather than conveyed. Ironically—but reflecting the fundamentally hard value of intelligence—such contextual asymmetry appears to work against those who would benefit the most.
More concretely, I’m referring to the common tendency to shake one’s head in perplexity and say “He was so wrong, he didn’t make much sense at all.” in comparison with laughing and saying “I can see how he thinks that way, within his context (which I may have once shared.)”