Does it seem at all worrying that your explanation hinges on members of the in-group having a lot of positive characteristics that members of the out-group lack? “We’re just too honest and unflinching in the face of criticism. If only the out-group were so gifted!”
There’s probably more than one thing going on here; among them some evaporative cooling.
The politically correct response to your valid objection would be to claim that the positive characteristics come from discrimination, historical oppression, and unjust privileges.
Shelve the meta-speculation until you’ve at least checked speculation-prime.
“Our problem is that we’re too good” is a really, really, really suspicious thing for a human to say. Have you considered the possibility that it might not be true?
(Also, request to taboo the term “politically correct”)
“Our problem is that we’re too good” is exactly what any community based around values uncommon in the world at large—or at least not visibly common and visibly commonly not held—would say. Epistemic rationality is not visibly common and visibly commonly not held.
Does it seem at all worrying that your explanation hinges on members of the in-group having a lot of positive characteristics that members of the out-group lack? “We’re just too honest and unflinching in the face of criticism. If only the out-group were so gifted!”
There’s probably more than one thing going on here; among them some evaporative cooling.
The politically correct response to your valid objection would be to claim that the positive characteristics come from discrimination, historical oppression, and unjust privileges.
Shelve the meta-speculation until you’ve at least checked speculation-prime.
“Our problem is that we’re too good” is a really, really, really suspicious thing for a human to say. Have you considered the possibility that it might not be true?
(Also, request to taboo the term “politically correct”)
“Our problem is that we’re too good” is exactly what any community based around values uncommon in the world at large—or at least not visibly common and visibly commonly not held—would say. Epistemic rationality is not visibly common and visibly commonly not held.
Upvoted for having my favorite rationality quote of the last month.