I agree that disagreement among philosophers is a red flag that we should be looking for alternative positions.
But again, I don’t feel like that’s strong enough enough. Nutrition scientists disagree. Politicians and political scientists disagree. Psychologists and social scientists disagree. Now that we know we can be looking for high-quality contrarians in those fields, how do we sort out the high-quality ones from the lower-quality ones?
Examples?
Well, take Barry Marshall. Became convinced that ulcers were caused by a stomach bacterium (he was right; later won the Nobel Prize). No one listened to him. He said that “my results were disputed and disbelieved, not on the basis of science but because they simply could not be true...if I was right, then treatment for ulcer disease would be revolutionized. It would be simple, cheap and it would be a cure. It seemed to me that for the sake of patients this research had to be fast tracked. The sense of urgency and frustration with the medical community was partly due to my disposition and age.”
So Marshall decided since he couldn’t get anyone to fund a study, he would study it on himself, drank a serum of bacteria, and got really sick.
Then due to a weird chain of events, his results ended up being published in the Star, a tabloid newspaper that by his own admission “talked about alien babies being adopted by Nancy Reagan”, before they made it into legitimate medical journals.
I feel like it would be pretty easy to check off a bunch of boxes on any given crackpot index...”believes the establishment is ignoring him because of their biases”, “believes his discovery will instantly solve a centuries-old problem with no side effects”, “does his studies on himself”, “studies get published in tabloid rather than journal”, but these were just things he naturally felt or had to do because the establishment wouldn’t take him seriously and he couldn’t do things “right”.
I don’t think “smart people saying stupid things” reaches anything like man-bites-dog levels of surprisingness. Not only do you have examples from politics, but also from religion. According to a recent study, a little over a third of academics claim that “I know God really exists and I have no doubts about it,” which is maybe less than the general public but still a sizeable minority
I think it is much much less than the general public, but I don’t think that has as much to do with IQ per se as with academic culture. But although I agree that the finding that IQ isn’t a stronger predictor of correct beliefs than it is is interesting, I am still very surprised that you don’t seem to think it matters at all (or at least significantly). What if we switched gears? Agreeing that the fact that a contrarian theory is invented or held by high IQ people is no guarantee of its success, can we agree that the fact that a contrarian theory is invented and mostly held by low IQ people is a very strong strike against it?
Proper logical form comes cheap, just add a premise which says, “if everything I’ve said so far is true, then my conclusion is true.”
Proper logical form comes cheap, but a surprising number of people don’t bother even with that. Do you frequently see people appending “if everything I’ve said so far is true, then my conclusion is true” to screw with people who judge arguments based on proper logical form?
Nutrition scientists disagree. Politicians and political scientists disagree. Psychologists and social scientists disagree. Now that we know we can be looking for high-quality contrarians in those fields, how do we sort out the high-quality ones from the lower-quality ones?
What’s your proposal for how to do that, aside from just evaluating the arguments the normal way? Ignore the politicians, and we’re basically talking about people who all have PhDs, so education can’t be the heuristic. You also proposed IQ and rationality, but admitted we aren’t going to have good ways to measure them directly, aside from looking for “statements that follow proper logical form and make good arguments.” I pointed out that “good arguments” is circular if we’re trying to decide who to read charitably, and you had no response to that.
That leaves us with “proper logical form,” about which you said:
Proper logical form comes cheap, but a surprising number of people don’t bother even with that. Do you frequently see people appending “if everything I’ve said so far is true, then my conclusion is true” to screw with people who judge arguments based on proper logical form?
In response to this, I’ll just point out that this is not an argument in proper logical form. It’s a lone assertion followed by a rhetorical question.
I agree that disagreement among philosophers is a red flag that we should be looking for alternative positions.
But again, I don’t feel like that’s strong enough enough. Nutrition scientists disagree. Politicians and political scientists disagree. Psychologists and social scientists disagree. Now that we know we can be looking for high-quality contrarians in those fields, how do we sort out the high-quality ones from the lower-quality ones?
Well, take Barry Marshall. Became convinced that ulcers were caused by a stomach bacterium (he was right; later won the Nobel Prize). No one listened to him. He said that “my results were disputed and disbelieved, not on the basis of science but because they simply could not be true...if I was right, then treatment for ulcer disease would be revolutionized. It would be simple, cheap and it would be a cure. It seemed to me that for the sake of patients this research had to be fast tracked. The sense of urgency and frustration with the medical community was partly due to my disposition and age.”
So Marshall decided since he couldn’t get anyone to fund a study, he would study it on himself, drank a serum of bacteria, and got really sick.
Then due to a weird chain of events, his results ended up being published in the Star, a tabloid newspaper that by his own admission “talked about alien babies being adopted by Nancy Reagan”, before they made it into legitimate medical journals.
I feel like it would be pretty easy to check off a bunch of boxes on any given crackpot index...”believes the establishment is ignoring him because of their biases”, “believes his discovery will instantly solve a centuries-old problem with no side effects”, “does his studies on himself”, “studies get published in tabloid rather than journal”, but these were just things he naturally felt or had to do because the establishment wouldn’t take him seriously and he couldn’t do things “right”.
I think it is much much less than the general public, but I don’t think that has as much to do with IQ per se as with academic culture. But although I agree that the finding that IQ isn’t a stronger predictor of correct beliefs than it is is interesting, I am still very surprised that you don’t seem to think it matters at all (or at least significantly). What if we switched gears? Agreeing that the fact that a contrarian theory is invented or held by high IQ people is no guarantee of its success, can we agree that the fact that a contrarian theory is invented and mostly held by low IQ people is a very strong strike against it?
Proper logical form comes cheap, but a surprising number of people don’t bother even with that. Do you frequently see people appending “if everything I’ve said so far is true, then my conclusion is true” to screw with people who judge arguments based on proper logical form?
The extent to which science rejected the ulcer bacterium theory has been exaggerated. (And that article also addresses some quotes from Marshall himself which don’t exactly match up with the facts.)
What’s your proposal for how to do that, aside from just evaluating the arguments the normal way? Ignore the politicians, and we’re basically talking about people who all have PhDs, so education can’t be the heuristic. You also proposed IQ and rationality, but admitted we aren’t going to have good ways to measure them directly, aside from looking for “statements that follow proper logical form and make good arguments.” I pointed out that “good arguments” is circular if we’re trying to decide who to read charitably, and you had no response to that.
That leaves us with “proper logical form,” about which you said:
In response to this, I’ll just point out that this is not an argument in proper logical form. It’s a lone assertion followed by a rhetorical question.