The quality of the reasoning involved is debatable, and Leah’s apparent reluctance to say more about just how the reasoning went doesn’t seem like a good sign. (For the avoidance of doubt, I firmly agree that Leah is very intelligent and I’m sure she was trying to reason well. But even very intelligent people trying to reason well perpetrate bad reasoning sometimes.)
When I say good reasoning then I mean using the ideological turing test to decide which experts know most about the subject and then copying the judgement of those experts.
That’s not the only thing that Leah did, but bootstraping priors in that way is a pretty sophisticated way to reason. It’s an impressive example on focusing more on using a reasoning technique than focusing on achiving the generally accepted results that your social circle wants you to achieve.
As far as relucatance goes, I think most people aren’t fully transparent about all reasoning that goes into major belief changes in written articles.
using the ideological turing test to decide which experts know most about the subject and then copying the judgement of those experts
Although Leah hasn’t been terribly forthcoming about how her conversion happened, I think she’s said enough to be pretty sure that it wasn’t that. What makes you think it was?
Read the blog post you linked to. She doesn’t say anything about ideological Turing tests; she doesn’t say anything about deferring to the judgement of experts-on-religion; she says she had a lot of trouble figuring out how to make sense of ethics and decided that “Morality just loves me or something” provided the best explanation.
the generally accepted results that your social circle wants you to achieve
My understanding is that a lot of Leah’s social circle was RC even before she converted.
Leah ran an ideological Turing test, in which theists scored better than atheists, AND
Leah converted to Catholicism
with the false proposition
Leah ran an ideological Turing test, in which theists scored better than atheists, AND SO
Leah converted to Catholicism.
Wikipedia’s page
… also neither claims nor implies that Leah’s conversion was a result of her finding that Christians did better than atheists in her ideological Turing test.
The quality of the reasoning involved is debatable, and Leah’s apparent reluctance to say more about just how the reasoning went doesn’t seem like a good sign. (For the avoidance of doubt, I firmly agree that Leah is very intelligent and I’m sure she was trying to reason well. But even very intelligent people trying to reason well perpetrate bad reasoning sometimes.)
When I say good reasoning then I mean using the ideological turing test to decide which experts know most about the subject and then copying the judgement of those experts.
That’s not the only thing that Leah did, but bootstraping priors in that way is a pretty sophisticated way to reason. It’s an impressive example on focusing more on using a reasoning technique than focusing on achiving the generally accepted results that your social circle wants you to achieve.
As far as relucatance goes, I think most people aren’t fully transparent about all reasoning that goes into major belief changes in written articles.
Although Leah hasn’t been terribly forthcoming about how her conversion happened, I think she’s said enough to be pretty sure that it wasn’t that. What makes you think it was?
Read the blog post you linked to. She doesn’t say anything about ideological Turing tests; she doesn’t say anything about deferring to the judgement of experts-on-religion; she says she had a lot of trouble figuring out how to make sense of ethics and decided that “Morality just loves me or something” provided the best explanation.
My understanding is that a lot of Leah’s social circle was RC even before she converted.
She did elsewhere. She run the first ideological Turing test for religion. Theists scored better. A catholic scored best overall.
I didn’t reread the article. I just took the link from Wikipedia’s page on ideological turing tests that points to her moving to Catholics.
I think you are mixing up the true proposition
Leah ran an ideological Turing test, in which theists scored better than atheists, AND
Leah converted to Catholicism
with the false proposition
Leah ran an ideological Turing test, in which theists scored better than atheists, AND SO
Leah converted to Catholicism.
… also neither claims nor implies that Leah’s conversion was a result of her finding that Christians did better than atheists in her ideological Turing test.