Rationality Quotes Thread February 2016
Another month, another rationality quotes thread. The rules are:
Provide sufficient information (URL, title, date, page number, etc.) to enable a reader to find the place where you read the quote, or its original source if available. Do not quote with only a name.
Post all quotes separately, so that they can be upvoted or downvoted separately. (If they are strongly related, reply to your own comments. If strongly ordered, then go ahead and post them together.)
Do not quote yourself.
Do not quote from Less Wrong itself, HPMoR, Eliezer Yudkowsky, or Robin Hanson. If you’d like to revive an old quote from one of those sources, please do so here.
No more than 5 quotes per person per monthly thread, please.
Rabindranath Tagore in The Fourfold Way of India (1924)
That’s a great quote!
Shit, that’s good. How do I upvote you?
First you have to get enough karma by posting comments that will be upvoted by others.
Superforcasting, p. 85
I’m not sure what this is saying. Should we assume people are overconfident? Always, or only when they claim high confidence? Should we just ignore people’s confidence claims entirely?
I love this quote. But this...
...strikes me as a highly confident declaration for which the quoted is simultaneously urging me to be skeptical.
I’d imagine the book lays out his case as to why I ought listen to his counsel. I’d be interested to dig into this.
The solution here might be that it does mainly tell you they have constructed a coherent story in their mind, but that having constructed a coherent story in their mind is still usefull evidence for being true depending on what else you know abaut the person, and thus worth telling. If the tone of the book was differnt, it might say:
I think it’s probably false if you treat it as the claim that every person who’s highly confident that an event happens has constructed a coherent story in his mind.
On the other hand that reading doesn’t seem to be the intended message.
It says “mainly”. That’s vague-ish. I assumed greater than 50%; probably something like 75% of the time or more.
There is some small number of people whom I trust when they say they very confident. They can explain the reasons why they came to a belief and the counterarguments. Most other highly confident statements I look upon with suspicion, and I might even take the confidence as evidence against the claim. Many very confident people seem unaware of counterarguments, are entirely dismissive of them, or wear as a badge of pride that they have explicitly refused to consider them.
There are others whose intuition I will trust with high confidence on certain topics, significantly because they are aware that they are exercising intuition. They may not know how they know something, but at least they know they don’t know how they know it, which tends to get them to the right confidence level.
“The remedy lies, indeed, partly in charity, but more largely in correct intellectual habits, in a predominant, ever-present disposition to see things as they are, and to judge them in the full light of an unbiased weighing of evidence applied to all possible constructions, accompanied by a withholding of judgment when the evidence is insufficient to justify conclusions.
I believe that one of the greatest moral reforms that lies immediately before us consists in the general introduction into social and civic life of that habit of mental procedure which is known in investigation as the method of multiple working hypotheses. ”
-T. C. Chamberlin from: http://www.mantleplumes.org/WebDocuments/Chamberlin1897.pdf
Does anyone know what happened to TC Chamberlin’s proposal? In other words, shortly after 1897, did he in fact manage to spread better intellectual habits to other people? Why or why not?
Beautiful. I like that doesn’t berate irrationality.
Abu Rayhan al-Birūni
Philip E. Tetlock in Superforecasting
Context: Brady is talking about a safari he took and the life the animals he saw were leading.
-- Hello internet (link, animated)
Might be more anti-naturalist than strictly rationalist, but I think it still qualifies.
I think he’s mistaken in believing we left :-/
Well, we’re working on it, ok ;)
We obviously haven’t left nature behind entirely (whatever that would mean), but we have at least escaped the situation Brady describes, where we are spending most of our time and energy searching for our next meal while preventing ourselves from becoming the next meal for something else.
The life for the average human in first world countries is definitely no longer only about eating and not dying.
Excuse me, my life is only about eating and not dying. ;)
--Professor Fogg in The Magicians by Lev Grossman, p. 248
Barry Smith in Applied Ontology
Thomas Kuhn in The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
This is an interesting historical note, but I am having a hard time seeing why it is a rationality quote. Perhaps as a record of people acting irrationally? Would you mind explaining a bit?
There a public misconception about Darwin having been primarily opposed for advocating evolution when that wasn’t his biggest problem.
Today there are some people who think of themselves as Darwinists but who follow teleological notions of evolution and say things like: “The goal of life is to procreate.”
The controversial thing that Darwin said was that there’s no goal.
Scott Adams
Does this fit with your experience? As a cynical economist, I’m pleasantly surprised at how non-corrupt grading is at U.S. colleges.
Does that include the grade inflation at major universities or the universities with specific classes that have their difficultly increased and grading deflated so that they fail out students at a more regular rate? (I know some universities do the second type on the introductory science courses while others do it at 3rd year courses.) Or were you referring to something else like bribes?
Bribes.
No.
At least, not here in England. I do a lot of hiring for posts that are well paid with a lot of scope for “professional independence”. There is scope for these being sinecures, at least in the short or medium term. I have never once been offered a bribe or any hint of anything like corruption. I have never once been asked for a bribe by any public official. I have never once been offered one or anything like one when acting as a voluntary public official. I would be genuinely shocked if those ever happened. I do not believe my experience is unusual in this country.
I believe there are other places where this would be unusual.
I feel I should point out that corrupt grading is easily detectable—one can often see it by looking at a corruptly graded paper, or by interviewing a candidate who got a high grade and finding that he does not know the subject. And thus, it is not covered by the Adams quote.
Moreover, universities have a strong incentive to not be corrupt in their grading—if they let people slip through without learning the work, employers will start to notice and discount qualifications from that institution, and then prospective students will hear of this and go to other institutions instead, and then the entire institution will collapse. (It’s not immediate, or perfect, and quick action at the start of the process can save the institution, but it is a consideration).
The fact that few employers request transcripts and fewer distinguish between “barely passing” and “summa cum laude” (maybe apart from recent graduates?) seems like pretty strong evidence about caring about grading corruption. You really need to corrupt your school’s degree award process (like a diploma mill) before anyone will care about it.
Also, as Old_Gold suggests, if you count grade inflation as corruption of grading, empirically this incentive wasn’t strong enough. We also note that across-the-board corruption of this type undermines incentives. If someone comes up with a better signal, the entire institution of universities would collapse, but most people have seemed to accept rampant grade inflation with a shrug rather than mostly ignoring degrees. It may eventually collapse, but on a time scale where it seems difficult to believe “this was due to grade inflation starting 50 years ago.”
Yes, that’s true. The incentive works on grading corruption at the level of “this guy should have scored 10%, how did he pass?”. It has no effect on grading corruption on the level of “this guy should have barely passed, how did he get a distinction?”
Except who sees a paper except the grader and the student who wrote it?
Empirically this incentive wasn’t strong enough.
You do have a recognizable style, y’know...
External examiners?
Very rare for undergrads.
In the UK it is standard—my institution has blind marking, double marking and scrutiny by external examiners for all undergraduate exams. Blind marking: we only have a candidate number and not a student’s name. Second marking: someone else evaluates the marks (grades) I give—in some cases independently; external examiner: someone from another institution checks that the marking criteria is being followed.
Blind marking could be circumvented in various ways, but doing so would be risky as the exams will be seen by others. Second marking and external examining are a huge time burden but achieve some degree of quality control, especially important as students don’t get to see their exam papers again (perhaps the biggest surprise to staff and students who come here from the US and are used to post-exam argumentation as a form of “quality control”).
This screams “corruption”. Knowing that students will be looking at how you grade their paper, and will be comparing how you grade them with how you grade others provides professors with some incentives to be honest and careful in grading.
I’m surprised students put up with it, but they don’t know anything different. They hear about US students who argue every single grade but I don’t think they realise such students actually exist.
However I’m really happy to be away from my first (US) academic post where I constantly faced pressure from an athletic department to “relax” on grades or overlook “minor problems” from athlete-students. Post exam argumentation from individual students is easy enough to deal with reasonably and honestly, institutional forces are another beast entirely.
Agreed.
That sounds like a hell of an understatement to me.
It does somewhat understate the situation, yes.
I suspect the answer is that grading at U.S. colleges just isn’t that important.
It is for many students at good colleges if they want to, say, get a job at an investment bank or a place at a top law school.
Granted. The top hires from the top. This leads to two questions:
Do we see corruption in those grades? If that is where it matters, that is where we would expect to see it. Say, does admittance into and top grades at Harvard Law depend mostly on academics or is class rank better predicted by other factors, from social class to blatant bribery you mention above?
Once you are below the tournament economy, do we see any corruption? I work for a state government. “Do you have a relevant degree?” is the question, not how good your university was or what your class rank was. Barring extremes (obvious diploma mill, top tier graduate from top tier university), grading just isn’t that important.
At good schools nearly everyone graduates in four years, but at lower level schools lots of students don’t finish at all or take more than 4 years in part because they fail (or never finish the work) in classes. Given the importance of getting a degree, and the cost of taking more than 4 years to do so, grading is also important for students “at the bottom” of the college world.
Good point, thank you. I was focusing on the top half of the distribution, when there is also a cutoff in the bottom half.
Waste not your Hour, nor in the vain pursuit Of This and That endeavour and dispute; Better be jocund with the fruitful Grape Than sadden after none, or bitter, Fruit.
Omar Khayyam http://classics.mit.edu/Khayyam/rubaiyat.html Verse LIV
Translation: it’s better to be drunk.
Not sure this qualifies as a rationality quote.
I think paraphrasings of “do what makes you happy” are fair as rationality quotes. What else are you gonna do?
Even if “do what makes you happy” were the best rationality advice, the big problem is figuring out what actually makes you happy, how to achieve it, and how to maintain/improve it. Getting drunk is pretty bad advice for a rationality standpoint, because it’s sacrificing long term gain for short term pleasure, which is basically the opposite of what you should do. The man drinking at a bar all day is happier right now than the one working extra hours or studying, but in a few years, their happiness will probably be reversed as the latter’s investment pays off and the former is still just drinking (only with more health problems).
Investment dude is just working so he can buy booze, yeah? If booze in this metaphor is pleasure anyway. He’s saved up a bunch of stuff, but its not like he gets bonus points when he croaks for how much is in his bank account. Ultimately, the most efficient life only does as much of what you have to as necessary to do what you want to, yeah? Anything beyond that is a fail.
“its not like he gets bonus points when he croaks for how much is in his bank account.” is a valuable quote in its own right
First, I’m not sure that straight all-out short-term hedonism qualifies as rationality.
Second, we’re talking about alcohol and there are… many side-effects to “making you happy” :-/
I feel like there should be some constraint on harming group happiness while you “do what makes you happy.”
It seems like “should” is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence. If you had to turn that word into a sentence or two to let me understand what you mean, what would it be?
I would say that actions that make a particular person happy can have consequences that decrease the collective happiness of some group. I might use a tyrant or an addict as examples. In answering the question “What else are you gonna do?” I’d propose at least “As long as you harm no group happiness, do what makes you happy,” the Wiccan Rede “An’ ye harm none, do what thou wilt” probably being too strict (rules out being Batman, for example).
Focus on doing meaningful work.
Orthodox Islamic apologists rescue Khayyam by interpreting “wine” as spiritual intoxication. (How well this really fits is another matter. And the Song of Solomon is about Christ’s love for His Church.) But one can as easily interpret the verse in a rationalist way. Channelling Fitzgerald for a moment...
The sot knows nothing but the tavern’s wine
Rumi and Shams but ecstacy divine
The Way of Eli is not here nor there
But in the pursuit of a Fun sublime!
Great literature has as many versions as there are readers.
That’s true of most everything if you squint in just the right way :-)
In any case, great literature relies on context and a multilayered web of meanings—it doesn’t work well as an isolated quote stuck into the middle of PUA discussions...
Thomas Kuhn in The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
Is there something not-paywalled which describes what the relevant old definitions were?
I asked at SE : http://hsm.stackexchange.com/questions/5140/what-was-the-historical-definition-of-current-and-resistance/5150#5150
Thanks for doing that!
As quoted by Livy, Ab urbe condita Book XXI, 44, as translated by Aubrey De Sélincourt, in The War with Hannibal (1965). - Wikiquote
That’s a weird quote in that it appears to mash together two sentences not near each other in the original. Besides, Livy, of course, would not talk of a God.
A glance at a better translation would indicate that Hannibal was talking about the power of desperation:
--Robert Oppenheimer testifying in his defense in his 1954 security hearings, discussing the American reaction to the first successful Russian test of an atomic bomb and the debate whether to develop the “super” hydrogen bombs with vastly higher explosive power; from volume II of the Oppenheimer hearing transcripts, pg 95⁄266
Saul A. Kripke in Naming and Necessity
FA Hayek, Intellectuals and Socialism. The warning against the golden mean fallacy is useful but standard, what I like best about this quote is that it brought to my attention the importance of imagination in political reforms. I think this implies we’ll get more and better thinking at the margins of policy if there are many different views about policy’s grand goals.
-- Alfred Korzybski: Science and Sanity
Note that the major relevant historical disagreement is not over any of these ideas, but over what the true territory is. Most medieval maps (pre-1300) were deliberately warped not to represent their territory as it looked in the physical world, but to show “spiritual truths”. Jerusalem would be at the center, each city’s size would be proportional to its importance in God’s plan, and distances and directions would be warped to make a particular set of points draw the figure of a cross on the map. Similarly, maps of medieval cities would not show the city to scale, but would plant the richest part of the city in the center of the map, occupying a large fraction of the map, regardless of its actual physical location or size. Judging from the theories of perception and reality then in circulation, the people making (or at least the people buying) these maps probably thought they were not distorting, but correcting the distortions of the senses and presenting a view that would actually lead to more correct beliefs.
I’m vaguely worried by the way ‘elementalistic’ structure and ‘non-elementalistic’ structure are separated in part A. It seems to have the connotation (I’m not sure if it was intended or not) that the elementalistic structures are better and the non-elementalistic structures are arbitrary. However, there’s a reason why science—especially physics—have increasingly moved over towarda mathematical points of view and the sorts of language you’ve included under non-elementalistic. They really are better at describing the natural world: e.g. you lose out on key concepts if you insist on completely dividing ‘space’ and ‘time’ rather than appreciating the way they interact. This sort of feeds into part (B). He describes languages as being similar or non-similar to the world and our nervous system, but the truth is that once you move beyond the ancestral environment the world is very different to our nervous system. To choose in favour of the languages similar to the nervous system over those similar to the world is ultimately to choose in favour of our own biases.
It seemed to me that Korzybski meant it the other way round.
Elementalistic thinking is focusing on things separately; having a list of nouns and trying to assign adjectives to each of them independently. Non-elementalistic thinking is focusing on relations between things; because sometimes the meaningful explanation requires some interaction between them.
That is, in elementalistic thinking we talk about space separately, and time separately, and we cannot invent the theory of relativity. Also we speak about intellect separately (creating the idea of “Vulcan rationality”), and emotions separately, etc. As long as we have “intellect” and “emotions” as separate concepts, we are able to produce wisdom like “well, intellect is important, but emotions are also very important” (i.e. both the noun “intellect” and the noun “emotion” have the attribute “important”). We are “handicapped by semantic blockages” that prevent us from speaking e.g. about rational and irrational emotions.
I understood it as: our nervous system is capable of understanding the nature when using the language of math and physics (not just literally the equations, but generally the way the scientifically literate people speak), but we lose that capacity when using the inexact language of metaphors, or insisting on using concepts that don’t correspond to the real world (such as Newton’s absolute time).
The notion of the non-elementalistic is important—that was the basis of structuralism—but it reinforces the old view that these operationalizations of our observations were unfortunate but necessary concessions to the limitations of observation, rather than that, e.g., space-time really is the lattice the Universe is laid upon. I doubt there’s a real difference between these views mathematically, but I think there is conceptually.
-Grace Durbin in The Survivor
Peter Diamondis
If you are willing to do only what is easy, life will be hard. But if you are willing to do what’s hard, life will be easy
The mentality of victim hood and self pity are the worst things that can happen a person. Whether you’ve got a mentall illness, or an offended social justice warrior, islamphobe or racist labeller, or you’re a chansurfing gynophobe or redpiller, it’s better to look at yourself than see hatred in the world.
I think that having your eyes gouged out with a hot poker is a worse thing than that that can happen to a person.
I think being personally responsible for a googleplex^googleplex dust specks arriving in a googleplex^googleplex eyes is a worse thing than that that can happen to a person.
Yes, of course. So at least two things are worse than it.
I think literalistic interpretations of written text are among the worse things that have happened to humanity. Your comment and the Islamic State to name a few ;)
The actual point is that “the mentality of victim hood and self pity are the worst things that can happen” is really overstated.
FA Hayek, Intellectuals and Socialism.
The warning against the golden mean fallacy is useful but standard, what I like best about this quote is that it brought to my attention the importance of constructive imagination in political reforms. I think this implies we’ll get more and better thinking at the margins of policy if there are many different views about what policy’s grand goals ought to be.
Attitudes to the past, present and future seem under-study in political science contrasted with personal anecdote. I’d be interested in teasing out these ideas further. To add to this perspective...to paraphrase what I heard on the radio, since I can’t find the original quote:
-Syrian in raqa advising activist on how to deal with execution of friend for not attending morning prayer.
-Verses written on his eighty-sixth birthday (8 July 1925)
Measured in today’s dollars, Rockefeller is the richest person in the history of mankind.
-Wiki: The beginning of infinity
No, there are a lot more constraints, like material resources, or time, or even luck.
A: “I can beat you in chess”
B: “Incorrect! You can beat me in chess only if you have material resources, or time, or even luck”
A: “I can fly to the Moon”
B: “Incorrect! You can fly to the Moon only if you have material resources, or time, or even luck”
-Barbara de Angelis
This is an instrumental rationality quote.
That’s not even true, though. If you are kidnapped and then tortured, you are not remotely in control of your own happiness, just to take the most obvious extreme answer. Even for more mundane situations, people can be trapped in terrible situations, where cruel people have power over them. If you are working at a minimum wage job with bills coming seemingly every day and which you only overcome by working 18 hour days before collapsing exhausted and doing it all again in the morning, there is very little you can do about it. Now if one of the supervisors at one of your jobs is a petty tyrant who makes you miserable, what choice do you have that would increase your happiness?
I see what the quote is trying to say, as a call to action to change your own life, but it simply isn’t true. It also fails the false wisdom reversal test, in that a quote saying “You have no true control over your own happiness; therefore, you must accept your lot in life with all the grace you can muster” sounds just as deep and helpful.
I am somewhat uncertain about whether people who are kidnapped and tortured are in control of their happiness. I know there are at least a few people who’ve been in those situations or similar ones, like the Holocaust, who report that they retained some control over their own thoughts and perspective and this was a source of comfort and strength to them. I think it is possible that people who are tortured are in control of their own happiness, but they generally tend to make the choice to break.
One example that comes up in discussions on this is medical depression, which I have. From introspection, it feels like it is both true that I have control over my happiness and that it is not true that I have control over my happiness. I can recall occasions on which I have consciously chosen to lie in bed and be unhappy, and I can also recall occasions on which I have consciously chosen to uproot myself from misery. However, there are also occasions where I’ve attempted to do this but failed. I think the answer to our dilemma lies in compatibilism: we are in control in the sense that what happens inside our heads matters, but not in the sense that we can transcend our physical limitations and become omnipotent.
Also, it was listed as an instrumental rationality quote.
All of that said, I downvoted the original comment. While I think it is a defensible point of view, I want rationality quotes that are insightful and compelling, not ones that regurgitate conventional wisdom which some people will automatically believe while others will not.
It’s not true, epistemically, but is true instrumentally.
I explicitly wrote it was an instrumental rationality quote, not epistemically rational because of the kind of literalism you’ve so gratuitously supplied :)
I don’t think it’s true, period. It’s true that “No one is in control of your happiness but you”, but it does not follow that “therefore, you have the power to change anything about yourself or your life that you want to change”. And for it to be true instrumentally, it should give us a tip about how to control your happiness.
The tip is implicit.
-https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sleep_of_Reason_Produces_Monsters
That one makes the same or similar claim, but explicitly. Do you get it now?
Yeah, that one is better. :-)
-- Quentin and Alice in The Magicians by Lev Grossman