The most basic rationalist precept is to not forcibly impose your values onto another mind.
What? How does that make any sense at all? The most basic precept of rationality is to take actions which achieve future world states that rank highly under your preference ordering. Being less wrong, more right, being bayesian, saving the world, not imposing your values on others, etc. are all deductions that follow from that most basic principle: Act and Think Such That You Win.
I find it useful to distinguish between epistemic and instrumental rationality. You’re talking about instrumental rationality – and it could be instrumentally useful to convince someone of your beliefs, to teach them to think clearly, or to actively mislead them. Epistemic rationality, on the other hand, means trying to have true beliefs, and in this case it’s better to teach someone to fish than to force them to accept your fish.
What? How does that make any sense at all? The most basic precept of rationality is to take actions which achieve future world states that rank highly under your preference ordering. Being less wrong, more right, being bayesian, saving the world, not imposing your values on others, etc. are all deductions that follow from that most basic principle: Act and Think Such That You Win.
I find it useful to distinguish between epistemic and instrumental rationality. You’re talking about instrumental rationality – and it could be instrumentally useful to convince someone of your beliefs, to teach them to think clearly, or to actively mislead them.
Epistemic rationality, on the other hand, means trying to have true beliefs, and in this case it’s better to teach someone to fish than to force them to accept your fish.