From the popularity of the “Strangest thing an AI could tell you” post, and anosognosia tidbits in general, this topic seems to fascinate many people here. I for one would find it freakishly interesting to discover that I had such an impairment. In other words, I’d have motivation to at least genuinely investigate the idea, and even accept it.
How I’d come to accept it, would probably involve a method other than just “knowing it intuitively”, like how I intuitively know the face of a relative to be that of a relative, or how I know with utter, gut level certainty that I have three arms. Considering that we are, well, rationalists, couldn’t we be supposed to be able to use other methods, to discover truth, than our senses and intuitions ? Even if the truth is about ourselves, and contradicts our personal feeling ?
After all, it’s not like people in the early 20th century had observed tiny pictures of atoms, they deduced their existence from relatively nonintuitive clues glued together into a sound theoretical framework. Observing nature and deducing its laws has often been akin to being blind, and yet managing to find your way around by using indirect means.
If I had to guess, I’d still not be certain that, even being a rationalist using scientific methods and all those tools that help straighten chains of inference, as well as finding anosognosia to be more of a treat than a pain to be rationalized, would make it a sure bet that I’d not yet retain a blindspot.
Maybe the prospect of some missing things could be too horrid to behold, not matter how abstractly, perhaps beholding them may require me to think in a way that’s just too complicated, abstract and alien for me to ever notice it as being something salient, let alone comprehensible.
Still that’s really not what my intuition would lead me to believe, what with truth being entangled and so forth. And such a feeling, such an intuition, may be exactly part of the problem of why and how I’d not pay attention to such an impairment. Perhaps I just don’t want to know the truth, and willingly look away each time I can see it. Then again, if we’re talking rationalization and lying to oneself, that has a particularfeeling, and that is something one could be able to notice.
From the popularity of the “Strangest thing an AI could tell you” post, and anosognosia tidbits in general, this topic seems to fascinate many people here. I for one would find it freakishly interesting to discover that I had such an impairment. In other words, I’d have motivation to at least genuinely investigate the idea, and even accept it.
How I’d come to accept it, would probably involve a method other than just “knowing it intuitively”, like how I intuitively know the face of a relative to be that of a relative, or how I know with utter, gut level certainty that I have three arms. Considering that we are, well, rationalists, couldn’t we be supposed to be able to use other methods, to discover truth, than our senses and intuitions ? Even if the truth is about ourselves, and contradicts our personal feeling ?
After all, it’s not like people in the early 20th century had observed tiny pictures of atoms, they deduced their existence from relatively nonintuitive clues glued together into a sound theoretical framework. Observing nature and deducing its laws has often been akin to being blind, and yet managing to find your way around by using indirect means.
If I had to guess, I’d still not be certain that, even being a rationalist using scientific methods and all those tools that help straighten chains of inference, as well as finding anosognosia to be more of a treat than a pain to be rationalized, would make it a sure bet that I’d not yet retain a blindspot.
Maybe the prospect of some missing things could be too horrid to behold, not matter how abstractly, perhaps beholding them may require me to think in a way that’s just too complicated, abstract and alien for me to ever notice it as being something salient, let alone comprehensible.
Still that’s really not what my intuition would lead me to believe, what with truth being entangled and so forth. And such a feeling, such an intuition, may be exactly part of the problem of why and how I’d not pay attention to such an impairment. Perhaps I just don’t want to know the truth, and willingly look away each time I can see it. Then again, if we’re talking rationalization and lying to oneself, that has a particular feeling, and that is something one could be able to notice.