Premise denied. As a consequentialist, I don’t believe in “desert”.
Right, you just believe in concepts functionally isomorphic to desert, purport having achieved a kind of enlightened view by this superficial disavowal of desert, and then time-suck your opponents through a terminology dispute. Trap spotted, and avoided.
Seriously, have you ever considered being charitable? Ever? Such as asking what data might have generated a comment, not automatically under the assumption that your interlocutor (notice I didn’t say “opponent”) is interested only in signaling enlightenment?
This is Less Wrong. In case you forgot.
The point of the paragraph whose first two sentences you quoted was to answer your question about what the cost-benefit calculation is, i.e. what the purpose of pet-rapture-contracts/prediction markets is. The benefit is that accurate beliefs are encouraged. It isn’t (noting your edit) that those who start out with better beliefs get to have more money, which they can make better use of. (That could potentially be a side benefit, but it isn’t the principal justification.)
Right, you just believe in concepts functionally isomorphic to desert, purport having achieved a kind of enlightened view by this superficial disavowal of desert, and then time-suck your opponents through a terminology dispute. Trap spotted, and avoided.
Seriously, have you ever considered being charitable? Ever? Such as asking what data might have generated a comment, not automatically under the assumption that your interlocutor (notice I didn’t say “opponent”) is interested only in signaling enlightenment?
This is Less Wrong. In case you forgot.
The point of the paragraph whose first two sentences you quoted was to answer your question about what the cost-benefit calculation is, i.e. what the purpose of pet-rapture-contracts/prediction markets is. The benefit is that accurate beliefs are encouraged. It isn’t (noting your edit) that those who start out with better beliefs get to have more money, which they can make better use of. (That could potentially be a side benefit, but it isn’t the principal justification.)