I don’t know what definition of politics the mods will use, but recently I came up with an interesting definition for my own use, and this margin is just wide enough to share it :-)
Basically I think the predicate “is it political?” doesn’t apply to beliefs. All beliefs are value-neutral, even the most controversial ones. Only arguments for or against beliefs can be political or not. Political arguments are based on who benefits and who loses from a belief. As opposed to rational arguments, which are based on evidence about the belief’s truth or falsity.
Examples:
“Views like yours have been historically used to justify horrible things, so I’d like to civilly ask you to consider the connotations”—political argument, makes life worse for everyone
“You’re a fucking moron, google this study by Joe Scientist that says your braindead opinion is incompatible with basic facts”—rational argument, makes life better for everyone
This is slightly exaggerated, but close to what I actually believe. Or at least I can breathe easily in a group of people talking like #2, while remarks like #1 feel like a poisonous fog to me even coming from my side.
Though I’m not sure I’d adopt this as a norm for moderation. Some beliefs seem to attract political arguments so strongly that it’s easier to just stop people from discussing them here.
Thanks! I’m trying to return to a more active commenting lifestyle.
Yours is a reasonable definition of “is it political?” but I think it’s a very different sense from that which was forbidden on LW 1.0, as I understood it. The idea there was to avoid discussing any subject that was a live political debate (implicitly: in the US), because those are the debates that seemed most likely to become mindkilling.
So it was fine to say slavery and Nazism are bad, because (in the US) these are politically settled subjects, even though they’re very political in themselves. And it was also fine to argue for very far-outside-the-mainstream ideas like UBI or cryonics, because they are so fringe that there’s no politically or culturally active movement attacking them. But it probably wouldn’t be fine to argue about abortion rights or open borders.
Dan, great to see you on LW2.0!
I don’t know what definition of politics the mods will use, but recently I came up with an interesting definition for my own use, and this margin is just wide enough to share it :-)
Basically I think the predicate “is it political?” doesn’t apply to beliefs. All beliefs are value-neutral, even the most controversial ones. Only arguments for or against beliefs can be political or not. Political arguments are based on who benefits and who loses from a belief. As opposed to rational arguments, which are based on evidence about the belief’s truth or falsity.
Examples:
“Views like yours have been historically used to justify horrible things, so I’d like to civilly ask you to consider the connotations”—political argument, makes life worse for everyone
“You’re a fucking moron, google this study by Joe Scientist that says your braindead opinion is incompatible with basic facts”—rational argument, makes life better for everyone
This is slightly exaggerated, but close to what I actually believe. Or at least I can breathe easily in a group of people talking like #2, while remarks like #1 feel like a poisonous fog to me even coming from my side.
Though I’m not sure I’d adopt this as a norm for moderation. Some beliefs seem to attract political arguments so strongly that it’s easier to just stop people from discussing them here.
Thanks! I’m trying to return to a more active commenting lifestyle.
Yours is a reasonable definition of “is it political?” but I think it’s a very different sense from that which was forbidden on LW 1.0, as I understood it. The idea there was to avoid discussing any subject that was a live political debate (implicitly: in the US), because those are the debates that seemed most likely to become mindkilling.
So it was fine to say slavery and Nazism are bad, because (in the US) these are politically settled subjects, even though they’re very political in themselves. And it was also fine to argue for very far-outside-the-mainstream ideas like UBI or cryonics, because they are so fringe that there’s no politically or culturally active movement attacking them. But it probably wouldn’t be fine to argue about abortion rights or open borders.