Robin wrote: “Martial arts can be a good training to ensure your personal security, if you assume the worst about your tools and environment.” But this does not mean that martial arts cannot also be good training if you assume a more benign environment. Environments are known to be unpredictable.
One of the most important insights a person gains from martial arts training is to understand one’s limits—which relates directly to the bias of overconfidence. If martial arts training enables a person to project an honestly greater degree of self confidence, then the signaling benefit alone may merit the effort. Does rationality training confer analogous signaling benefits?
One of the most important insights a person gains from martial arts training is to understand one’s limits—which relates directly to the bias of overconfidence.
Good point. Fortunately, I think the OB and LW blogs have helped me understand my limits, in the sense that it showed me many errors-in-rationality in the ways I used to (and unfortunately, currently do still) think.
If martial arts training enables a person to project an honestly greater degree of self confidence, then the signaling benefit alone may merit the effort. Does rationality training confer analogous signaling benefits?
It probably does. If you go to cocktail parties tossing around terms like “Bayesian updating with Occam priors” or “Epistemic rationality” and sound like you really know what you’re talking about, then you’ll probably exude this signal of being a fairly smart person.
But you have to ask yourself if your goal is to sound smart, or to actually be smart.
Robin wrote: “Martial arts can be a good training to ensure your personal security, if you assume the worst about your tools and environment.” But this does not mean that martial arts cannot also be good training if you assume a more benign environment. Environments are known to be unpredictable.
One of the most important insights a person gains from martial arts training is to understand one’s limits—which relates directly to the bias of overconfidence. If martial arts training enables a person to project an honestly greater degree of self confidence, then the signaling benefit alone may merit the effort. Does rationality training confer analogous signaling benefits?
Good point. Fortunately, I think the OB and LW blogs have helped me understand my limits, in the sense that it showed me many errors-in-rationality in the ways I used to (and unfortunately, currently do still) think.
It probably does. If you go to cocktail parties tossing around terms like “Bayesian updating with Occam priors” or “Epistemic rationality” and sound like you really know what you’re talking about, then you’ll probably exude this signal of being a fairly smart person.
But you have to ask yourself if your goal is to sound smart, or to actually be smart.