You could try to bite bullets and believe the inconvenient facts.
You could try to find the facts and change your politics to fit.
You mention that you “feel committed to the last”. If you had used the word “beliefs” instead of “politics,” I would endorse and agree with your commitment. Given that you used the word “politics,” though, I’m inclined to believe that the better path is somewhere between the two positions quoted above.
I agree that “[for] almost any political position, there is at least one inconvenient fact.” (Or, at least, I think I agree; I think that you are using the terms “political position” and “inconvenient” in the way that is intuitive to me.) But political positions are only sufficiently powerful enough to enact change when multiple people believe in them, or believe in something close enough that they can work together. There are inconvenient facts that I’m aware of which cast doubt on some of my political positions, but the doubts are small enough that I believe it better to hold onto the imperfect position than to abandon it. Politics is not a game of finding optimum solutions; it is a game of coalition-building, of incremental change, of pushing for policies that are better than what existed before. (I would imagine that this fact is part of the source of the frustration many aspiring rationalists feel toward politics. I know that I feel this frustration.)
So let’s set aside politics for the moment, because you seem to use the term roughly interchangeably with “belief”, e.g. “whatever you wish to believe, there is, somewhere, a fact that will cast doubt on it.”
But my beliefs are probabilistic in nature. Seemingly contradictory facts are not enemies—to the contrary, they are expected. If I believe that a die is weighted such that the number six will show up 25% of the time, I will bet on each roll coming up on six. 75% of the time, the facts will appear to be against me—and yet, if I bet at the right odds, I’ll still expect to win in the long run. It is my intuition that this stance lies closer to “[trying] to bite the bullets and believe the inconvenient facts” than “[trying] to find the facts and [changing] my [beliefs] to fit.”
Of course, I should still update the probability based on each roll I see, so maybe that counts as “[changing] my [beliefs]”? I’m not sure. Maybe my point is just that I’m not clear on what difference you’re making between those two options. Really, your first option, “[taking] a stance of strong epistemic and moral modesty, and never [taking] a position with confidence,” could also describe the situations I touched on above.
When I say “your politics”, I mean something composed of several related beliefs, entangled with culture, values, judgments about the best policy, and, usually, tribal affiliation and sense of identity. I could also say “memeplexes”, possibly, but that would include some things I don’t think it applies to, like Empiricism.
You mention that you “feel committed to the last”. If you had used the word “beliefs” instead of “politics,” I would endorse and agree with your commitment. Given that you used the word “politics,” though, I’m inclined to believe that the better path is somewhere between the two positions quoted above.
I agree that “[for] almost any political position, there is at least one inconvenient fact.” (Or, at least, I think I agree; I think that you are using the terms “political position” and “inconvenient” in the way that is intuitive to me.) But political positions are only sufficiently powerful enough to enact change when multiple people believe in them, or believe in something close enough that they can work together. There are inconvenient facts that I’m aware of which cast doubt on some of my political positions, but the doubts are small enough that I believe it better to hold onto the imperfect position than to abandon it. Politics is not a game of finding optimum solutions; it is a game of coalition-building, of incremental change, of pushing for policies that are better than what existed before. (I would imagine that this fact is part of the source of the frustration many aspiring rationalists feel toward politics. I know that I feel this frustration.)
So let’s set aside politics for the moment, because you seem to use the term roughly interchangeably with “belief”, e.g. “whatever you wish to believe, there is, somewhere, a fact that will cast doubt on it.”
But my beliefs are probabilistic in nature. Seemingly contradictory facts are not enemies—to the contrary, they are expected. If I believe that a die is weighted such that the number six will show up 25% of the time, I will bet on each roll coming up on six. 75% of the time, the facts will appear to be against me—and yet, if I bet at the right odds, I’ll still expect to win in the long run. It is my intuition that this stance lies closer to “[trying] to bite the bullets and believe the inconvenient facts” than “[trying] to find the facts and [changing] my [beliefs] to fit.”
Of course, I should still update the probability based on each roll I see, so maybe that counts as “[changing] my [beliefs]”? I’m not sure. Maybe my point is just that I’m not clear on what difference you’re making between those two options. Really, your first option, “[taking] a stance of strong epistemic and moral modesty, and never [taking] a position with confidence,” could also describe the situations I touched on above.
When I say “your politics”, I mean something composed of several related beliefs, entangled with culture, values, judgments about the best policy, and, usually, tribal affiliation and sense of identity. I could also say “memeplexes”, possibly, but that would include some things I don’t think it applies to, like Empiricism.