Something like that. I agree that you can engage in Dark Arts without ever doing something that can get you called out for using fallacious arguments, but I think the underlying structure is usually if not always the same. You do things that can be somewhat correlated with the truth in ways that will predictably lead to them being moved by it when in reality they shouldn’t. For example, wearing a fake lab coat while speaking may not be an explicit “logical fallacy” but the effect is still “appeal to authority”.
I don’t know—a typical Dark Arts technique would be to carefully select the facts/evidence to present (plus the facts NOT to mention) and this is not a fallacy, this is just a straight-up attempt to mislead.
Simply seeing that there exist facts/evidence that support one side isn’t enough to support the conclusion that it’s actually right. To get there you have to make the jump “there exists this set of evidence for, therefore it is true”, which is fallacious, in general, since sometimes there’s more compelling facts/evidence in the other direction and you have to check for those too.
I don’t really like the “fallacy” framework itself too much given the whole “logical fallacies as weak Bayesian evidence” thing, but I think there’s an important point to be made in that you influence people through their (perhaps implicit) reasoning processes. The idea that there is this “separate” backchannel where you can influence people with things that have nothing to do with truth (in the target’s frame) isn’t a real thing, so any framing of “Dark Arts” as “using the Dark Channel [which is dark regardless of how it’s used or what the underlying intent is]” is mistaken, and Dark Arts has to be recognized as the optimization of a message to pass through and be validated by the targets reasoning process even when it “shouldn’t”.
you have to make the jump “there exists this set of evidence for, therefore it is true”, which is fallacious
It’s not fallacious. You can check for counter-arguments, but proving a negative is pretty hard, so you can never be sure that there are no facts anywhere which overturn your theory. That is not a good reason to never come to any conclusions.
you influence people through their (perhaps implicit) reasoning processes
No, I don’t think so. There is the entire highly successful field of marketing/advertising which disagrees.
It’s not fallacious. You can check for counter-arguments, but proving a negative is pretty hard, so you can never be sure that there are no facts anywhere which overturn your theory. That is not a good reason to never come to any conclusions.
And someone wearing a lab coat is generally more credible than someone dressed like a homeless person, so if you lack the ability to evaluate the arguments yourself then you go with what you’ve got. Fallacies don’t come from nowhere, they’re Bayesian evidence, even if they’re sometimes used in ways that don’t make for great reasoning.
No, I don’t think so. There is the entire highly successful field of marketing/advertising which disagrees.
I’m saying this from the perspective of someone who has used hypnosis to get people to download and run a (benign) program called “virus.exe”, among many other things. The success of marketing/advertising is the weak version of this challenge.
The claim isn’t that marketing/advertising “doesn’t work”, it’s that Ads Don’t Work That Way. Any framing that ignores/denies that they’re dealing with a reasoning process and looks only at the individual blocks is missing the forest for the trees. Yes, you can do stuff at the tree level sometimes, but that does not negate the forest level view, and including the bigger picture is not just more complete but also more powerful.
what do you mean by “reasoning processes”? [quoted by memory]
The processes which take in information from the world and output [usually implicit] the models of the world that they act on.
For example, if someone cites statistics on how safe airplanes are but feels fear and then won’t get on the airplane, then I’m not just looking at whatever made them say “airplanes are safe” but also what made them feel fear and what made them choose to side with the fear instead of the verbal reasoning.
Ah, so a “reasoning process” is basically everything that the mind does?
If you suddenly notice a spider near you and jump away, that was the result of a “reasoning process” because the output (the jump) implied that in your model of the world spiders are scary?
If so, your original quote
you influence people through their (perhaps implicit) reasoning processes
looks quite trivial: you influence people though changing what’s happening inside their mind—well, of course.
It is nearly tautological, yes, but it’s also true, and people seem to forget that. “The Dark Arts” do not belong in the same category as involuntary drug/hormone injections. If you treat tautologies as if they’re false then you’re gonna end up making mistakes.
For example, with the spider thing, this “trivial” insight implies that if you make up your mind about whether spiders are dangerous and conclude that they are not, then you stop jumping from spiders. This is indeed what I find, and I also find that most people don’t find this to be “obvious” and are rather surprised instead when they see it happen.
People don’t forget “tautologies are trivially true”, they forget the “persuasion works through your reasoning process, not around it” because the logically necessary implications sometimes seem “absurd”. (“So, the easy way to treat any phobia is merely to “make up your mind”? Methinks it’s considerably more complicated than that.”)
While tautological statements can’t rule out any logical possibilities, they’re important because they do rule out logical impossibilities. If you try to say “that’s tautological, therefore it’s trivial and meaningless” then you’re gonna end up saying silly stuff like “So, you’re a bachelor. Are you also married?”, for example.
“Solving phobias is about making up your mind” is tautologically true. Nowhere did I say anything about the complexity of doing so, but it’s tautologically true. A phobia is “an extreme or irrational fear of or aversion to something”. This requires both a fear and conflicting judgement that the fear isn’t rational. If you fall in the lion cage, for example, fear is just a rational response to danger. If you don’t have a conflicted mind (i.e. you’ve “made up your mind”), you don’t have a phobia—just a rational fear or no fear.
If you let yourself believe false and logically impossible things like “solving phobias is not about making up one’s mind” then you’re going to end up fooling yourself into silly thing like failing to notice that “systematic desensitization” is merely an attempt to help someone makeup their mind by providing evidence a bit at a time in a safe context and hoping that it shows what you want it to show and convinces the part of the mind that perceives danger. If you fool yourself into thinking the logically impossible “not about making up your mind”, then you don’t notice the possibility of other ways of bringing about coherence, which are often better and quicker ways of doing things.
For example, a few months ago I was having this same conversation with a friend who also felt like “getting over irrational fears” was more than just “making up her mind”. Fortunately she also had what she considered to be an irrational fear of heights and I had a rock wall tall enough to scare her, so I could show her. I pointed out the holes in her “my mind is made up” logic until she could no longer hold that view, then helped her make up her mind by asking her what, exactly, she was afraid might happen and whether she could know she was safe from that outcome or whether she needed the fear. We spent a few minutes to go through a few possibilities and then covered the rest with a catch-all. After bouldering on her own later, she told me that she hadn’t realized that she was afraid even while bouldering, but that the difference jumped out at her now that the fear was gone. That was exactly “just making up her mind”, both from my perspective and hers. It was actually pretty damn simple too, even though “making up her mind” necessarily took more than an instant because there were several questions she had to think about and answer first.
In other cases it becomes even quicker and does look like a snap decision. I had another friend, for example, whose needle phobia spontaneously disappeared after having an unrelated experience with me that convinced her to accept that I’m right when I say things can be that easy. If we broaden to scope to other things you might find “more complicated than merely making up one’s mind”, then I can give a few other examples of things that felt like the inside like “just making a snap decision” and having results that match.
“Making up your mind” can be complicated sometimes, but it can also be simple. And remembering what it’s about helps keep it simple so you can end up the kind of person who doesn’t jump at [theoretically potentially poisonous creature who is nevertheless unlikely to hurt you] without ever working on that problem in particular.
Something like that. I agree that you can engage in Dark Arts without ever doing something that can get you called out for using fallacious arguments, but I think the underlying structure is usually if not always the same. You do things that can be somewhat correlated with the truth in ways that will predictably lead to them being moved by it when in reality they shouldn’t. For example, wearing a fake lab coat while speaking may not be an explicit “logical fallacy” but the effect is still “appeal to authority”.
I don’t know—a typical Dark Arts technique would be to carefully select the facts/evidence to present (plus the facts NOT to mention) and this is not a fallacy, this is just a straight-up attempt to mislead.
Simply seeing that there exist facts/evidence that support one side isn’t enough to support the conclusion that it’s actually right. To get there you have to make the jump “there exists this set of evidence for, therefore it is true”, which is fallacious, in general, since sometimes there’s more compelling facts/evidence in the other direction and you have to check for those too.
I don’t really like the “fallacy” framework itself too much given the whole “logical fallacies as weak Bayesian evidence” thing, but I think there’s an important point to be made in that you influence people through their (perhaps implicit) reasoning processes. The idea that there is this “separate” backchannel where you can influence people with things that have nothing to do with truth (in the target’s frame) isn’t a real thing, so any framing of “Dark Arts” as “using the Dark Channel [which is dark regardless of how it’s used or what the underlying intent is]” is mistaken, and Dark Arts has to be recognized as the optimization of a message to pass through and be validated by the targets reasoning process even when it “shouldn’t”.
It’s not fallacious. You can check for counter-arguments, but proving a negative is pretty hard, so you can never be sure that there are no facts anywhere which overturn your theory. That is not a good reason to never come to any conclusions.
No, I don’t think so. There is the entire highly successful field of marketing/advertising which disagrees.
And someone wearing a lab coat is generally more credible than someone dressed like a homeless person, so if you lack the ability to evaluate the arguments yourself then you go with what you’ve got. Fallacies don’t come from nowhere, they’re Bayesian evidence, even if they’re sometimes used in ways that don’t make for great reasoning.
I’m saying this from the perspective of someone who has used hypnosis to get people to download and run a (benign) program called “virus.exe”, among many other things. The success of marketing/advertising is the weak version of this challenge.
The claim isn’t that marketing/advertising “doesn’t work”, it’s that Ads Don’t Work That Way. Any framing that ignores/denies that they’re dealing with a reasoning process and looks only at the individual blocks is missing the forest for the trees. Yes, you can do stuff at the tree level sometimes, but that does not negate the forest level view, and including the bigger picture is not just more complete but also more powerful.
How do you define “reasoning process”, then?
The processes which take in information from the world and output [usually implicit] the models of the world that they act on.
For example, if someone cites statistics on how safe airplanes are but feels fear and then won’t get on the airplane, then I’m not just looking at whatever made them say “airplanes are safe” but also what made them feel fear and what made them choose to side with the fear instead of the verbal reasoning.
Ah, so a “reasoning process” is basically everything that the mind does?
If you suddenly notice a spider near you and jump away, that was the result of a “reasoning process” because the output (the jump) implied that in your model of the world spiders are scary?
If so, your original quote
looks quite trivial: you influence people though changing what’s happening inside their mind—well, of course.
It is nearly tautological, yes, but it’s also true, and people seem to forget that. “The Dark Arts” do not belong in the same category as involuntary drug/hormone injections. If you treat tautologies as if they’re false then you’re gonna end up making mistakes.
For example, with the spider thing, this “trivial” insight implies that if you make up your mind about whether spiders are dangerous and conclude that they are not, then you stop jumping from spiders. This is indeed what I find, and I also find that most people don’t find this to be “obvious” and are rather surprised instead when they see it happen.
Tautologies are trivially true, I don’t know why you think that people forget that.
So, the easy way to treat any phobia is merely to “make up your mind”? Methinks it’s considerably more complicated than that.
People don’t forget “tautologies are trivially true”, they forget the “persuasion works through your reasoning process, not around it” because the logically necessary implications sometimes seem “absurd”. (“So, the easy way to treat any phobia is merely to “make up your mind”? Methinks it’s considerably more complicated than that.”)
While tautological statements can’t rule out any logical possibilities, they’re important because they do rule out logical impossibilities. If you try to say “that’s tautological, therefore it’s trivial and meaningless” then you’re gonna end up saying silly stuff like “So, you’re a bachelor. Are you also married?”, for example.
“Solving phobias is about making up your mind” is tautologically true. Nowhere did I say anything about the complexity of doing so, but it’s tautologically true. A phobia is “an extreme or irrational fear of or aversion to something”. This requires both a fear and conflicting judgement that the fear isn’t rational. If you fall in the lion cage, for example, fear is just a rational response to danger. If you don’t have a conflicted mind (i.e. you’ve “made up your mind”), you don’t have a phobia—just a rational fear or no fear.
If you let yourself believe false and logically impossible things like “solving phobias is not about making up one’s mind” then you’re going to end up fooling yourself into silly thing like failing to notice that “systematic desensitization” is merely an attempt to help someone makeup their mind by providing evidence a bit at a time in a safe context and hoping that it shows what you want it to show and convinces the part of the mind that perceives danger. If you fool yourself into thinking the logically impossible “not about making up your mind”, then you don’t notice the possibility of other ways of bringing about coherence, which are often better and quicker ways of doing things.
For example, a few months ago I was having this same conversation with a friend who also felt like “getting over irrational fears” was more than just “making up her mind”. Fortunately she also had what she considered to be an irrational fear of heights and I had a rock wall tall enough to scare her, so I could show her. I pointed out the holes in her “my mind is made up” logic until she could no longer hold that view, then helped her make up her mind by asking her what, exactly, she was afraid might happen and whether she could know she was safe from that outcome or whether she needed the fear. We spent a few minutes to go through a few possibilities and then covered the rest with a catch-all. After bouldering on her own later, she told me that she hadn’t realized that she was afraid even while bouldering, but that the difference jumped out at her now that the fear was gone. That was exactly “just making up her mind”, both from my perspective and hers. It was actually pretty damn simple too, even though “making up her mind” necessarily took more than an instant because there were several questions she had to think about and answer first.
In other cases it becomes even quicker and does look like a snap decision. I had another friend, for example, whose needle phobia spontaneously disappeared after having an unrelated experience with me that convinced her to accept that I’m right when I say things can be that easy. If we broaden to scope to other things you might find “more complicated than merely making up one’s mind”, then I can give a few other examples of things that felt like the inside like “just making a snap decision” and having results that match.
“Making up your mind” can be complicated sometimes, but it can also be simple. And remembering what it’s about helps keep it simple so you can end up the kind of person who doesn’t jump at [theoretically potentially poisonous creature who is nevertheless unlikely to hurt you] without ever working on that problem in particular.