I think you should not try to promote rationality this way. It’s tacky (it’s bad signaling (the reference class becomes all the other things which are promoted this way)).
I don’t think wearing slogans on shirts is much of a way to promote anything. It’s a signal of affiliation. Shirt slogans don’t change people’s minds, but they can help like-minded people recognize each other and view each other favorably.
Plus, as time goes on, the reference class of things which are promoted on shirts gets closer and closer to being all-inclusive.
I didn’t really have “promoting rationality” in mind; when I’m shirtmaking and not pressed for time, I aim most for “wearable and accurate self-expression”, followed by “maybe eliciting a flash of recognition from a very tiny percentage of people who see the shirt”.
For my own purposes, the ideal respondant to this prompt would have to be able to read my mind and see what I overlook, but any luminous aspiring rationalist might also be able to provide insight.
I think you should not try to promote rationality this way. It’s tacky (it’s bad signaling (the reference class becomes all the other things which are promoted this way)).
I don’t think wearing slogans on shirts is much of a way to promote anything. It’s a signal of affiliation. Shirt slogans don’t change people’s minds, but they can help like-minded people recognize each other and view each other favorably.
Plus, as time goes on, the reference class of things which are promoted on shirts gets closer and closer to being all-inclusive.
I didn’t really have “promoting rationality” in mind; when I’m shirtmaking and not pressed for time, I aim most for “wearable and accurate self-expression”, followed by “maybe eliciting a flash of recognition from a very tiny percentage of people who see the shirt”.
For my own purposes, the ideal respondant to this prompt would have to be able to read my mind and see what I overlook, but any luminous aspiring rationalist might also be able to provide insight.