Perhaps I shouldn’t have mentioned any of this. I also don’t think you are doing anything epistemically unvirtuous. I think we are just bouncing off each other for some reason, despite seemingly being in broad agreement about things. I regret wasting your time.
That seems correct. But plausibly the best way for these AIs to fight propaganda is to respond with truthful counterarguments.
I don’t really see “number of facts” as the relevant thing for epistemology. In my anecdotal experience, people disagree on values and standards of evidence, not on facts. AIs that can respond to anti-vaxxers in their own language seem way, way more impactful than what we have now.
The first bit seems in tension with the second bit, no? At any rate, I also don’t see number of facts as the relevant thing for epistemology. I totally agree with your take here.
The first bit seems in tension with the second bit, no?
“Truthful counterarguments” is probably not the best phrase; I meant something more like “epistemically virtuous counterarguments”. Like, responding to “what if there are long-term harms from COVID vaccines” with “that’s possible but not very likely, and it is much worse to get COVID, so getting the vaccine is overall safer” rather than “there is no evidence of long-term harms”.
Perhaps I shouldn’t have mentioned any of this. I also don’t think you are doing anything epistemically unvirtuous. I think we are just bouncing off each other for some reason, despite seemingly being in broad agreement about things. I regret wasting your time.
The first bit seems in tension with the second bit, no? At any rate, I also don’t see number of facts as the relevant thing for epistemology. I totally agree with your take here.
“Truthful counterarguments” is probably not the best phrase; I meant something more like “epistemically virtuous counterarguments”. Like, responding to “what if there are long-term harms from COVID vaccines” with “that’s possible but not very likely, and it is much worse to get COVID, so getting the vaccine is overall safer” rather than “there is no evidence of long-term harms”.