I know this may come off as a “no true scotsman” argument, but this is a bit different- bear with me.
consider christianity (yes, I’m bringing religion into this, sort of...) in the beginning, we have a single leader preaching a set of morals that is (arguably) correct from a utilitarian standpoint, and calling all who follow that set “christians” by so doing, he created what Influence: Science and Practice would call “the trappings of morality” …so basically, fast-forward a few hundered years, and we have people who think they can do whatever they like and it’ll be morally right, so long as they wear a cross doing it.
parallel to the current situation: we set up science- a set of rules that will always result in truth, if followed. by so doing, we created the trappings of right-ness. fast forward to now, and we have a bunch of people who think they can decide whatever they want, and it’ll be right, so long as they wear a labcoat while doing it.
understand, that’s a bit of metaphor, in truth, these “scientists” (scoff) simply learned the rules of science by rote without really understanding what they mean. to them, reproducible results is just something nice to have as part of the ritual of science, instead of something completely necessary to get the right answer
...all of this stuff I said, by the way, is said in one of the core sequences, but I’m not sure which. I may reply to myself later with the link to the sequence in question.
I don’t know whether it’s what you’re thinking about, but I file that sort of thing under Goodhart’s Law—any measurement which is used to guide policy will become corrupted.
I know this may come off as a “no true scotsman” argument, but this is a bit different- bear with me. consider christianity (yes, I’m bringing religion into this, sort of...) in the beginning, we have a single leader preaching a set of morals that is (arguably) correct from a utilitarian standpoint, and calling all who follow that set “christians” by so doing, he created what Influence: Science and Practice would call “the trappings of morality” …so basically, fast-forward a few hundered years, and we have people who think they can do whatever they like and it’ll be morally right, so long as they wear a cross doing it. parallel to the current situation: we set up science- a set of rules that will always result in truth, if followed. by so doing, we created the trappings of right-ness. fast forward to now, and we have a bunch of people who think they can decide whatever they want, and it’ll be right, so long as they wear a labcoat while doing it. understand, that’s a bit of metaphor, in truth, these “scientists” (scoff) simply learned the rules of science by rote without really understanding what they mean. to them, reproducible results is just something nice to have as part of the ritual of science, instead of something completely necessary to get the right answer
...all of this stuff I said, by the way, is said in one of the core sequences, but I’m not sure which. I may reply to myself later with the link to the sequence in question.
I don’t know whether it’s what you’re thinking about, but I file that sort of thing under Goodhart’s Law—any measurement which is used to guide policy will become corrupted.