The paper that Wei-Dai reviews is “The Absent-Minded Driver” by Robert J. Aumann, Sergiu Hart, and Motty Perry. Wei-Dai points out, rather condescendingly:
(Notice that the authors of this paper worked for a place called Center for the Study of Rationality, and one of them won a Nobel Prize in Economics for his work on game theory. I really don’t think we want to call these people “crazy”.)
How is Wei Dai being condescending there? He’s pointing out how weak it is to dismiss people with these credentials by just calling them crazy. ETA: In other words, it’s an admonishment directed at LWers.
I’m sure it would be Wei-Dai’s read as well. The thing is, if Wei-Dai had not mistakenly come to the conclusion that the authors are wrong and not as enlightened as LWers, that admonishment would not be necessary. I’m not saying he condescends to LWers. I say he condescends to the rest of the world, particularly game theorists.
No. Not at all. It is because he disagreed through the wrong channels, and then proceeded to propose rather insulting hypotheses as to why they had gotten it wrong.
Just read that list of possible reasons! And there are people here arguing that “of course we want to analyze the cause of mistakes”. Sheesh. No wonder folks here are so in love with Evolutionary Psychology.
Ok, I’m probably going to get downvoted to hell because of that last paragraph. And,
you know what, that downvoting impulse due to that paragraph pretty much makes my case for why Wei Dai was wrong to do what he did. Think about it.
Ok, I’m probably going to get downvoted to hell because of that last paragraph. And, you know what, that downvoting impulse due to that paragraph pretty much makes my case for why Wei Dai was wrong to do what he did. Think about it.
Interestingly enough I think that it is this paragraph that people will downvote, and not the one above. Mind you, the premise in “No wonder folks here are so in love with Evolutionary Psychology.” does seem so incredibly backward that I almost laughed.
No. Not at all. It is because he disagreed through the wrong channels, and then proceeded to propose rather insulting hypotheses as to why they had gotten it wrong.
I can understand your explanation here. Without agreeing with it myself I can see how it follows from your premises.
Are you saying that you read him differently, and that he would somehow be misinterpreting himself?
The thing is, if Wei-Dai had not mistakenly come to the conclusion that the authors are wrong and not as enlightened as LWers, that admonishment would not be necessary.
The admonishment is necessary if LWers are likely to wrongly dismiss Aumann et al. as “crazy”. In other words, to think that the admonishment is necessary is to think that LWers are too inclined to dismiss other people as crazy
I’m not saying he condescends to LWers. I say he condescends to the rest of the world, particularly game theorists.
I got that. Who said anything about condescending to LWers?
Are you saying that you read him differently, and that he would somehow be misinterpreting himself?
Huh?? Surely, you troll. I am saying that Wei-Dai’s read would likely be the same as yours: that he was not condescending; that he was in fact cautioning his readers against looking down on the poor misguided Nobelists who, after all, probably had good reasons for being so mistaken. There, but for the grace of EY, go we.
Condescension is a combination of content and context. When you isolated that quote as especially condescending, I thought that you read something within it that was condescending. I was confused, because the quote could just as well have come from a post arguing that LWers ought to believe that Aumann et al. are right.
It now looks like you and I read the intrinsic meaning of the quote in the same way. The question then is, does that quote, placed in context, somehow make the overall post more condescending than it already was? Wei had already said that his treatment of the AMD was better than that of Aumann et al.. He had already said that these prestigious researchers got it wrong. Do you agree that if this were true, if the experts got it wrong, then we ought to try to understand how that happened, and not just dismiss them as crazy?
Whatever condescension occurred, it occurred as soon as Wei said that he was right and Aumann et al. were wrong. How can drawing a rational inference from that belief make it more condescending?
In this light I can see where ‘condescension’ fits in. There is a difference between ‘descending to be with’ and just plain ‘being way above’. For example we could label “they are wrong” as arrogant, “they are wrong but we can empathise with them and understand their mistake” as condescending and “They are wrong, that’s the kind of person Nobel prizes go to these days?” as “contemptuous”—even though they all operate from the same “I consider myself above in this instance” premise. Wei’s paragraph could then be considered to be transferring weight from arrogance and contempt into condescension.
(I still disapprove of Perplexed’s implied criticism.)
Okay, I can see this distinction. I can see how, as a matter of social convention, “they are wrong but we should understand their mistake” could come across as more condescending than just “they are wrong”. But I really don’t like that convention. If an expert is wrong, we really do have an obligation to understand how that happened. Accepting that obligation shouldn’t be stigmatized as condescending. (Not that you implied otherwise.)
the question then is, does that quote, placed in context, somehow make the overall post more condescending than it already was?
“They are probably not crazy” strikes me as “damning with faint praise”. IMHO, it definitely raises the overall condescension level.
Whatever condescension occurred, it occurred as soon as Wei said that he was right and Aumann et al. were wrong.
No. Peons claim lords are wrong all the time. It is not even impolite, if you are willing to admit your mistake and withdraw your claim reasonably quickly.
Condescension starts when you attempt to “charitably” analyze the source of the error.
Do you agree that if this were true, if the experts got it wrong, then we ought to try to understand how that happened, and not just dismiss them as crazy?
Of course. But if I merely had good reason to believe they were wrong, then my most urgent next step would be to determine whether it were true that they got it wrong. I would begin by communicating with the experts, either privately or through the peer-reviewed literature, so as to get some feedback as to whether they were wrong or I was mistaken. If it does indeed turn out that they were wrong, I would let them take the first shot at explaining the causes of their mistake. I doubt that I would try to analyze the cause of the mistake myself unless I were a trained historian dealing with a mistake at least 50 years old. Or, if I did try (and I probably have), I would hope that someone would point out my presumption.
How is Wei Dai being condescending there? He’s pointing out how weak it is to dismiss people with these credentials by just calling them crazy. ETA: In other words, it’s an admonishment directed at LWers.
That, at any rate, was my read.
I’m sure it would be Wei-Dai’s read as well. The thing is, if Wei-Dai had not mistakenly come to the conclusion that the authors are wrong and not as enlightened as LWers, that admonishment would not be necessary. I’m not saying he condescends to LWers. I say he condescends to the rest of the world, particularly game theorists.
Are you essentially saying you are nauseated because Wei Dai disagreed with the authors?
No. Not at all. It is because he disagreed through the wrong channels, and then proceeded to propose rather insulting hypotheses as to why they had gotten it wrong.
Just read that list of possible reasons! And there are people here arguing that “of course we want to analyze the cause of mistakes”. Sheesh. No wonder folks here are so in love with Evolutionary Psychology.
Ok, I’m probably going to get downvoted to hell because of that last paragraph. And, you know what, that downvoting impulse due to that paragraph pretty much makes my case for why Wei Dai was wrong to do what he did. Think about it.
Interestingly enough I think that it is this paragraph that people will downvote, and not the one above. Mind you, the premise in “No wonder folks here are so in love with Evolutionary Psychology.” does seem so incredibly backward that I almost laughed.
I can understand your explanation here. Without agreeing with it myself I can see how it follows from your premises.
I’m having trouble following you.
Are you saying that you read him differently, and that he would somehow be misinterpreting himself?
The admonishment is necessary if LWers are likely to wrongly dismiss Aumann et al. as “crazy”. In other words, to think that the admonishment is necessary is to think that LWers are too inclined to dismiss other people as crazy
I got that. Who said anything about condescending to LWers?
Huh?? Surely, you troll. I am saying that Wei-Dai’s read would likely be the same as yours: that he was not condescending; that he was in fact cautioning his readers against looking down on the poor misguided Nobelists who, after all, probably had good reasons for being so mistaken. There, but for the grace of EY, go we.
Or was I really that unclear?
Condescension is a combination of content and context. When you isolated that quote as especially condescending, I thought that you read something within it that was condescending. I was confused, because the quote could just as well have come from a post arguing that LWers ought to believe that Aumann et al. are right.
It now looks like you and I read the intrinsic meaning of the quote in the same way. The question then is, does that quote, placed in context, somehow make the overall post more condescending than it already was? Wei had already said that his treatment of the AMD was better than that of Aumann et al.. He had already said that these prestigious researchers got it wrong. Do you agree that if this were true, if the experts got it wrong, then we ought to try to understand how that happened, and not just dismiss them as crazy?
Whatever condescension occurred, it occurred as soon as Wei said that he was right and Aumann et al. were wrong. How can drawing a rational inference from that belief make it more condescending?
In this light I can see where ‘condescension’ fits in. There is a difference between ‘descending to be with’ and just plain ‘being way above’. For example we could label “they are wrong” as arrogant, “they are wrong but we can empathise with them and understand their mistake” as condescending and “They are wrong, that’s the kind of person Nobel prizes go to these days?” as “contemptuous”—even though they all operate from the same “I consider myself above in this instance” premise. Wei’s paragraph could then be considered to be transferring weight from arrogance and contempt into condescension.
(I still disapprove of Perplexed’s implied criticism.)
Okay, I can see this distinction. I can see how, as a matter of social convention, “they are wrong but we should understand their mistake” could come across as more condescending than just “they are wrong”. But I really don’t like that convention. If an expert is wrong, we really do have an obligation to understand how that happened. Accepting that obligation shouldn’t be stigmatized as condescending. (Not that you implied otherwise.)
“They are probably not crazy” strikes me as “damning with faint praise”. IMHO, it definitely raises the overall condescension level.
No. Peons claim lords are wrong all the time. It is not even impolite, if you are willing to admit your mistake and withdraw your claim reasonably quickly.
Condescension starts when you attempt to “charitably” analyze the source of the error.
Of course. But if I merely had good reason to believe they were wrong, then my most urgent next step would be to determine whether it were true that they got it wrong. I would begin by communicating with the experts, either privately or through the peer-reviewed literature, so as to get some feedback as to whether they were wrong or I was mistaken. If it does indeed turn out that they were wrong, I would let them take the first shot at explaining the causes of their mistake. I doubt that I would try to analyze the cause of the mistake myself unless I were a trained historian dealing with a mistake at least 50 years old. Or, if I did try (and I probably have), I would hope that someone would point out my presumption.