[Previous] David Deutsch Smears Ayn Rand | Home | [Next] FI Posting Tips

Fallible Ideas Post-Mortems

This is a guest post by Alan Forrester.


This is a list of ppl who had discussion contact with FI and then stopped. It focuses on ppl who claimed some interest in FI, Popper, reason, etc. It has a short summary of what happened with each person. It would be good to find patterns about what goes wrong. That would help people find out what the common mistakes are and avoid making them, and it'd help with organizing discussion to avoid some of the problems. People who left are welcome to come back and try again.

Ron Garret

Interest: David Deutsch

Garret had a blog post discussing David Deutsch’s book “The Fabric of Reality” and criticising chapter 2 of the book. https://blog.rongarret.info/2015/03/why-some-assumptions-are-better-than.html

Elliot offered to criticise Garret’s post. Garret posted on FI between 13 and 15 May 2019. During the discussion he posted misquotes. When posters criticised him for misquoting he stopped posting. A quote from Garret’s last post:

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/fallible-ideas/r9KDPJUwg88/QeMz7sJGAAAJ

You have misquoted people and said you’re careless. These are substantive problems. If you think they’re not substantive problems that in itself is a substantive disagreement. And for reasons pointed out above, these problems would make discussion of other problems more difficult. So fixing your carelessness and misquoting is more important int eh current context than your views on other topics.

I didn’t misquote people, I misquoted myself. And the “misquote” was substituting the word “dispute” for “deny” (or maybe it was the other way around, I don’t recall, and I don’t feel like looking it up). If you think the difference between “dispute” and “deny” is substantive, well, we’ll just have to agree to disagree about that. I intended them to be synonyms.

We’re having a substantive disagreement about the importance of accurate quoting.

No, we are having a stupid disagreement about whether or not “deny” and “dispute” mean the same thing. I neither deny nor dispute that accurate quoting is important in general. I deny and dispute that it matters in this particular instance.

You know what? This is a waste of time. I’m done.

Fred Welf

Interest: David Deutsch

Welf posted to the Beginning of Infinity Group about liberalism between 13 and 15 June 2017 claiming that liberalism led to bad policies. His posts were criticised and he stopped posting.

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/beginning-of-infinity/jCRJad0SNWY/7a_q0kPdAAAJ

A quote from Welf’s last post:

These are some of the nonsense consequences which were directly stated in my initial post. I wonder if you decided they were not stated as if you had read carefully or were blinded by your own overreaction to the first few sentences!!

Welf has posted some material about banks on the internet without discussing it with FI or the BoI group, see

https://tc.academia.edu/FredWelf


David Winslow

Interest: Objectivism

David Winslow can to the Fallible Ideas list from the Harry Binswanger list.

A quote from one of Winslow’s posts:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/19334

The combination here of there being a purpose to believing
something exists (explains sightings of apple trees, explains how apples are
produced, etc. and also no criticism of claiming it exists is adequate to say
it exists.

Your consensus methodology has little to do with either a scientific or
philosophical proof.

Existence is covered in more detail in DD's books. http://beginningofinfinity.com/books

I have no interest in hearsay.

Blue Yogin

Interest: behavioural genetics

Blue Yogin posted to the FI list in December 2013 and January 2014. He tried to promote human behavioural genetics. A quote from one of his posts:

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/fallible-ideas/8_RLCxNQ_LI/EwgBx3JIcacJ

Hi. I am the original asker of this question, and I'm new to the list. Happy to be here. Some of the context was lost here - we had been talking about the heritability upper and lower bounds for some common phenotypes, chief among them intelligence. (Or, if you prefer, "the ability to do well on IQ tests"). Whenever I talk about this I try to switch to sports analogies as quickly as possible. I think we have better intuitions about athletic ability than about mental ability, and they have the same basic statistical properties, so it's easy to switch between them.

So your approach to the subject is to stop considering it, and start arguing by analogy, as quickly as possible?

Yes.

To make this question harder and to avoid sneaking away from the pain I'm trying to inflict, allow me to add another proviso. Suppose that any good idea in football can be quickly copied by other teams.

How will supposing something vague, and seemingly false, get us anywhere?

Thus, though individual coaches might have some good ideas about how to train better or play better, whenever a good idea like that is shown to be successful, it quickly sweeps the entire league, and the game returns to an equilibrium state in which every team employs the best training and playing strategies, so that the only difference between teams are physical differences that can't be easily copied.

So you only want to approach the subject via unrealistic analogy?

It's not unrealistic. Strategies in football are in actual fact routinely copied whenever they work. Major league teams employ scouts whose full-time job is to figure out what training routines and play strategies the other teams are practicing. Trainers and coaches routinely switch from team to team and cross-pollinate their institutional knowledge. Whenever a team loses to a significantly new strategy, everyone in the entire league studies that play on their iPads in the week after the game and either adopts or develops a counter strategy.

One day he just stopped replying to posts.

Tom Robinson

Interest: TCS

Tom Robinson vaguely hung around the TCS/ FI scene for years.

His last post in March 2015 rejected FI without offering any way to make progress on disagreements:

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/beginning-of-infinity/fRVLfpN8jDc/IgNgCaWwpW4J

I watched the first 10 seconds and it looks super annoying to watch and really trendy, and screams unseriousness. Which fits with the 2 million views.
[...]
If you’re guessing why, instead of him knowing something more than an assertion, I’m not impressed.
[...]
it doesn’t matter if he’s the 10th best person in the world, it wouldn’t be good enough.

When I wrote that post I was interested in memes and writing mainly for my own benefit. By comparison, issues about how to make videos, who is impressed and who is the best at philosophy are boring and off-topic. They don't lie at The Beginning of Infinity. To paraphrase Ayn Rand, the proper business of man is the conquest of nature, not the conquest of other men.

Richard Crawley

Richard posted from late May 2018 to September 2018. One of Crawley’s friends informed him of the list cuz Crawley was interested in addiction. He stopped replying to messages without saying why he stopped. A quote from his last message:

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/fallible-ideas/2HlwpBFm4ME/TMmNRKVkCQAJ

Minimum wage laws are a price control on the price of labor. Any comment on those?

I have no problem with a minimum wage. I'm not sure I's call it the
"price of labour" in that way as that sounds like work is a commodity to
be sold, like a tin of beans, whereas in fact the operation is the other
way round.

The minimum wage was introduced to ensure that workers didn't get ripped
off. Unfortunately, the labour market isn't such that if you don't like
one employer you can just go and get another; despite what the
governments tell us, there are not swathes of companies desparate for
employees.

King of kings

This person posted two messages and didn’t reply to criticisms at all.

A representative quote from one of his messages:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/topics/1655

We become the caretakers and defenders of all life as we know it thus far. We knw life is always at risk on the micro scale here on earth one species to the next. Whether they be plants, animal, or cell life. All life.

Kevin

Kevin posted twice in September 2013, asking about how to deal with criticism. A representative quote:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/topics/1340

When you come up with a new idea, the first thing you would do is consider if this actually solves the problem you have. If your idea doesn't solve the problem, you can always think some more about why it doesn't and make alterations to it until it does.

Suppose you think the idea might solve the problem. Do you then look for external criticisms to the idea? Or do you come up with your own criticisms of the idea to see if it does indeed work?

When you're consciously thinking about an idea, you've already criticized it and rejected many variants. The idea couldn't be any good otherwise. Criticism is necessary to get halfway decent ideas.

People would typically call this "unconscious criticism" or maybe "subconscious criticism". I don't think most thinking on those topics is very good. Maybe a better concept would be: criticism that you weren't paying active attention to. I don't think that's perfect either but it has advantages.

So in this context, the issue is more like: there is a constant stream of internal criticism going on and at what point do you try to add in some external criticism? And at what point do you pay more active "conscious" attention to the internal criticism?

There isn't a one size fits all non-contextual answer to that. But as a rule of thumb, if you're wondering whether to get an idea some external criticism, then the answer is that you should.

What if I want external criticisms a lot? What if I keep thinking my ideas aren't very good, and I should keep looking for more available criticisms?

anurnimuss

anurnimuss posted a few messages to the FI group in February 2014 and then stopped. A short sample of his writing:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/topics/2253

Is there a rational way of deciding whether someone should be allowed to acquire control of a dangerous object that belongs to a particular class of destructive capability?

I think that as a weapon or object becomes more dangerous to more people, we should become proportionately more critical of who has signaled an interest in taking control of it. This implies that we should scrutinize would-be knife owners less than gun owners, and gun owners less than bomb owners, and bomb owners less than missile owners, etc.

Matjaž Leonardis

Interest: TCS

Leonardis posted on the BoI group from 2011 to 2012. He stopped posting with no explanation. A short sample of his writing:

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/beginning-of-infinity/cpi1SAqJEO0/jPSWqTeUmFgJ

Universality is when a particular solution solves all of the problems in a given domain. So, for example, the Arabic numeral system is universal for doing addition, subtraction and multiplication with positive integers. By contrast, tally marks are useless for doing those things except for very small numbers.

But you can do multiplication, addition and subtraction between positive integers with tally marks.

When you add you concatenate the two strings together, when you subtract you shorten the first string by the length of the second, and when you multiply you concatenate one copy of the first string for each tally mark in the second.

There is no reason why you can't do this (in principle) with arbitrary large integers.

It is true that the Arabic system is way more efficient but even it becomes useless for sufficiently large integers.

So I'm not 100% clear what exactly is the domain where the Arabic system is universal and the tally mark system isn't.

Leonardis posts on Twitter, including a post about a woman being fascinating based solely on a single photo:

https://twitter.com/MatjazLeonardis/status/1137422078590803968

Jude Stull

Jude posted to the FI group in June and July 2013 and stopped posting without any explanation. A sample of Jude’s writing:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/355

2) instead of giving out direct contact info, have some public email list, discussion group, forum, or whatever, which you monitor. you do not have to read everything there. let other people discuss it. then look over the topics that get the most attention, that your allies don't know how to fully answer, that your allies think have merit, and so on.

what are "allies"?

If we are truly in the business of constructing a greater truth by openly proffering and then vetting fallible ideas, why would we need "allies"?

If allies reflexively side with you in the event of a debate with a non-allied outsider, wouldn't this sully the potential of the debate to attain truth?

zyn evam

zynevam posted in the FI group from November 2011 to May 2018. A short sample of his writing:

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/fallible-ideas/mCSmFn87daU/pVMu_wRRBQAJ

2017-05-26 22:25 GMT+01:00 Elliot Temple:

On May 26, 2017, at 1:59 PM, Zyn Evam wrote:

2017-05-26 20:29 GMT+01:00 Elliot Temple:

On May 26, 2017, at 11:55 AM, Zyn Evam wrote:

2017-05-25 23:54 GMT+01:00 Elliot Temple wrote:

On May 25, 2017, at 3:45 PM, Zyn Evam wrote:

Is FI the best place to make progress in solving AI?

FI is crucial for this, and for critical discussion generally.

for AI to work it'll have to be Popperian.

This is what I would like to implement: popperian epistemology applied
in the context of neural nets.

Then my guess is you should learn way more epistemology.

I guess that is so too.

Also you shouldn't start with a preconceived notion that Popperian epistemology will apply to some existing AI programming paradigm like neural nets.

Yes, that could be so. However in terms of knowledge representation I
think neural nets work really well. The problem is knowledge creation,
which neural nets do not really do at all. In supervised learning
paradigms we feed all the knowledge to the nets, they do not create
new knowledge, just good representations to do the particular tasks we
want them to do. I haven't done much in reinforement learning though.
But still there we specify what we want the neural nets to learn. It
is still us who specify which score the neural nets shall maximize.

i think the really hard problem is criticism. until you figure out how to deal with criticism, you don't know what knowledge representations are good. you need a knowledge representation that facilitates your approach to criticism.

in supervised learning settings humans have to supply the information (criticism) which enables error correction. for instance in image recognition humans have to label images as belonging to different categories. in imagenet (http://image-net.org/challenges/LSVRC/2017/) for instance there are 1000 categories with 1000 examples each. a neural net starts with randomly initialized weights (analogous to synapses which will store knowledge) and receives raw pixel values (e.g. 0s and 1s) as inputs. as activation runs through its weights given an input sample it produces a random guess initially. then we have to tell the network if its guess has been correct or not (hence we need labels). based on this the network changes its weights so that next time its guess will be closer to the correct output. in the end we test it on 150,000 images it has never seen.

all of this requires 0 human knowledge going into the design of the network (we initialize the weights randomly). the only point where human knowledge feeds into it is that we have to tell what is the correct output. the error correction afterward is general and automatic.

the reason I mentioned knowledge representation is solved with neural nets, is that with the exact same method can be applied to any domain, such as speech recognition, text classification, odor classification, or whatever you can think of.

Larry Mason

Larry Mason posted on the BoI list from April to May 2013. He stopped posting with no explanation. A sample of his writing:

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/beginning-of-infinity/SUUPbUWAnNw/hhhiJ9qhyioJ

In my system when a luxury is bought, the money ceases to exist. The producers of the luxury will receive some money soon (within a month?) for that benefit and may receive more later if other benefits become apparent later.

Adding a month delay to many financial transactions would be an economic catastrophe. (Plus the uncertainty about how much you will be paid.)

In my system, financial transactions are purchases of luxuries. Hardly something that can cause an economic catastrophe. But with physical object money financial transactions are the heart and soul of most economic catastrophes.

In my system, only your luxury income is at risk. With physical object money, how much you will be paid is not only unknown but if huge importance. (Just ask those folks who don't know whether they'll have a job next month or those who have lost their jobs.)

The more you write the more you make the case that physical object money economics is a horror show.

He has a website at https://nopomstuff.info/

Rafe Champion

Interest Karl Popper

Rafe Champion was a critical rationalist who posted on the FI group from June 2013 to October 2014. A sample of his writing:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/222

A problem that is identified becomes a problem that can be worked on. Taking one issue at a time and having the same struggle each time suggests that he was not getting the STRUCTURE of the ideas so that each one he mastered should have made it easier to take the next steps.

An example would be in cooking where you don't understand that the different kinds of cooking - boiling, frying, baking are all based on a similar process to get from a raw product to a cooked product by applying heat in different ways.

Similarly in languages where you try to learn without any grasp of grammar that enables you to take something from one language to the next (in the same linguistic family).

And the problem of getting justificationists to see that the same intractable problems turn up in each situation where they take that approach rather than the alternative.

He left the FI group without giving an explanation. Elliot Temple discussed some of his problems in this email:

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/fallible-ideas/WPMaB2kAr8g/EXc_51ppQWQJ

His website is here

http://www.the-rathouse.com/

Damián Gil

Gill was on the BoI list from July to August 2017 arguing against Yes or No Philosophy:

https://yesornophilosophy.com/

A sample of his writing:

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/beginning-of-infinity/qxmi02BkTiU/W5gMfAq9AQAJ

What do you care about "more degree of confidence" or "the more confidence you'll have that the man is cheating and the die is not fair"? (These quotes are from the post included below.) Is it an imprecise statement about what bets you would and wouldn't take?

Remember I'm not a native english speaker. I don't know if "what do you care about" is a slang phrase or something. Talking literally, what I care about is no one's business. The relevant thing is that the degree of confidence can increase or decrease, not if I care much about it or not.

The confidence someone has in a statement can be very imprecise, like in the case of a common man treating a difficult problem; or very precise, like in the case of a bayesian statistician treating a very simple problem, like the hypothetical die. A statistician can state his degree of confidence in a very precise, numerical way. For example, he can assume initially that the die is fair, and the proportion of sixes must be 1/6. Each time the die is rolled, the statistician can give you the exact posterior odds ratio. Say he calculates it after quite a lot of sixes and the result is 5:1. That means that, given his current knowledge (I insist that probability is subjective, it depends of the state of knowledge of the observer, so different observers can precisely calculate different probabilities for the same event) cheating is exactly five times more probable than innocence. But all of this is irrelevant. The degree of confidence in a statement can be vague or precise, but the point is that it exists. It's not illogical to talk about it.

Logan Chipkin

Chipken posted a few times in March 2019 and stopped without giving any reason. A sample of his writing:

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/fallible-ideas/gWCrQqS2XBM/bPREYAC2BQAJ

A study from Harvard University found that, once contextual factors are taken into account, no racial differences emerged in the data on lethal shootings. As the author notes, “In the end, however, without randomly assigning race, we have no definitive proof of discrimination”.

I don't think one quote from an unnamed study, and a statement of the
conclusion, without a citation, is convincing enough. It's not
presenting them with a bunch of counter evidence.

So I thought the article hyped up data but then didn't have a lot. Too
much setting the stage and conclusions, and too little of what I thought
would be the main course or meat of the article, IMO.

He has a twitter account where he has posted more recently https://twitter.com/chipkinlogan

Abraham Lewis

Lewis posted on the FI list once in 2017. A sample of his writing:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/19868

I was using understanding your ideas about marriage as an example and saying that in spite of the fact that it's very important with lots of value to be had, it can still be rational and good that people don't pursue it, because of opportunity cost.

i'm not aware of any actual cases where the opportunity cost makes it not worth it. i'm sure you could invent some with e.g. a married couple who are both 105 years old and about to die of cancer, so there isn't time to make progress and then benefit from that progress. but in normal situations for people with decades ahead of them, i don't see the case that this stuff isn't worth the cost.

But that's from the vantage point of someone who already accepts its
value. Other people are surrounded by people claiming to have ideas or
criticisms that will help them improve their marriage. Depending on
the person, it is highly likely that most wont. The opportunity cost
to pursue all of those avenues, let alone every other area in which
people are claiming to have good ideas that will improve them is very
high.

Bruce Nielson

Nielson posted on the FI list from July to October 2018 and then stopped without explanation. A sample of his writing:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/28392

I don't think that e.g. Marxism or environmentalism spread by offering value or by rational persuasion. They're irrational movements which pressure and manipulate people.

Hmmm... I actually said "meaning" not "value." I'm suggesting the Left is very good at creating meaning for people (like religion does). I'm not claiming that the meaning being created is valuable to anyone but (perhaps) the individual it created meaning for.

Meaning is valuable to people. Even if it's only valuable to one person, that's still offering value to that person, from his perspective.

I've rolled this discussion back to before it went off the rails. It took me forever to even find the right spot to jump back in. I tried to respond back in September but couldn't find the right spot to fix the conversation.

Anon, I have a concern here. I'm reading you a certain way and I'm struggling to read you a different way. The problem is that it really seems to me like I said something that makes sense and that your response must somehow misunderstand it. But maybe you really and truly understood me and were appropriately responding back to me.

I'm making the following claims -- very limited claims:
1. There are people that find "Leftism" personally meaningful. And by that I mean very specifically "they get meaning internally over it in a subjective way."
2. I wasn't insisting that we call "meaning" the same as "valuable" since the word "valuable" has a range of meanings that may or may not
include the sort of short term value that one gets out of 'personal meaning.'

Does that make sense?

I'm not claiming anything else here.

I screwed up the quoting really back back when we had this exchange.But let me recreate it here to illustrate my concern with your response:

Bruce: So it's not at all clear why 'the religion of the left' even works in the first place as a way of creating such strong meaning for people as a replacement for traditional religion. Thus this is the mystery I'm trying to solve for myself. Also, I want to know this because I'm convinced once I know how the Left is creating so much meaning for people, I'll know how to counter it without destroying the parts of the Left that I appreciate and like.

Captain Buckwheat

Buckwheat posted on the FI list from August 2013 to March 2014. A sample of his writing:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/1652

FH:

But there were men who were impressed by the simple fact that Roark had built a place which made money for owners who didn’t want to make money; this was more convincing than abstract artistic discussions. And there was the one-tenth who understood. In the year after Monadnock Valley Roark built two private homes in Connecticut, a movie theater in Chicago, a hotel in Philadelphia.

Why does AR think it's one-tenth? Does she ever argue for that anywhere? Do you think it's one-tenth? If not, what's a more accurate figure?

I don't quite see what she meant there. One-tenth of what? I guess it could mean Roark's ratio of actual clients to potential clients in a given year. This doesn't make sense, though, because it means that one-tenth of people looking to build something in that year preferred to have it built by Roark. Surely more than 40 new buildings were erected that year, so that would mean Roark was turning away clients who "understood". This isn't mentioned in the book.

For comparison, an optimistic guess is that 1/1000 people each year buy a book by Ayn Rand. (*) Buying a book is a lot less of a commitment than buying a house, so we can take that as an upper bound on Roark's ratio of potential clients to actual clients. The actual figure would have been much smaller, maybe 1/10,000 or 1/100,000.

(*) Atlas Shrugged sold 7,000,000 copies in the 56 years since it was first published in 1957, which averages out to 125,000 per year. The US population averaged around 250 million people over that time, so if we optimistically assume all the sales were in the US, that's 1/2000 people each year. If we count all her books, the number of sales each year might double (again being very optimistic), which would work out to 1/1000.

I think Ayn Rand meant 1/10 of 1/4 of those who read the article that Austen Heller wrote about Roark. Just three paragraphs before the quote mentioned above it reads:

”Howard," Mallory said one day, some months later, "you're famous." "Yes," said Roark, "I suppose so."
“Three-quarters of them don't know what it's all about, but they've heard the other one-quarter fighting over your name and so now they feel they must pronounce it with respect. Of the fighting quarter, four-tenths are those who hate you, three-tenths are those who feel they must express an opinion in any controversy, two-tenths are those who play safe and herald any 'discovery,' and one-tenth are those who understand. But they've all found out suddenly that there is a Howard Roark and that he's an architect..."

Destructivist

Interest:critical rationalism

Destructivist posted on the FI list from June 2013 to January 2016 and then stopped without explanation.

A sample of his writing:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/topics/13819

God is a bad explanation. If you want to explain some issue X using god, then there are two possibilities. Either X is the way it is just because god says so, in which case we might as well say “shit happens”. Or X is the way it is because god has a reason Y for liking it that way. In that case, any mechanism that respects the principle Y will do just as well as god, so god is not necessary. For example, if god happens to favour the existence of genes that copy themselves in their environment, then natural selection explains the attributes of genes better than god. So god can be rejected since it is no good as an explanation. Since god can be eliminated from any worthwhile explanation, god is a bad explanation and we can do without god. So the objective truth is that god doesn’t exist.

You say "for example", but I don't see how the example conforms to what you talked about before. Let's consider the situation where god has a reason Y for liking X to be a certain way. Your example says that god happens to favor the existence of genes that copy themselves in their environment. So that's the way he likes them. Cool. But where (in your example) do you give his reason for liking them to be that way?

Max Kaye

Max Kaye posted on the FI list from August 2017 to January 2019. A sample of his writing:

when ppl ask questions, usually they barely care. so if i think about
it much, or put much energy into the issue, i get out of sync with
them. they don’t keep up.

they do not label their questions as “barely care”, which is
dishonest of them.

How would people know if they really care? If it's shown by long term
action, research, persistence through indirection, etc, then most people
don't really care about anything.

I agree it's dishonest, but it feels like honesty is a really hard skill
to learn (for an adult in our society). Most ppl think it's just "don't
lie", but it's clear to me (particularly after reading FH) that this is
only the most superficial way to look at it.

If they're not able to be honest more generally, how could they label
their questions accurately or even know if they really do care or not?

My guess is the main thing they're not able or willing to do is estimate
up-front how much time, energy, and indirection they're willing to put
in/tolerate to answer a question. These are hard skills to learn! And
it's much easier to be a little dishonest (this is how it seems to them)
than acknowledge they lack these skills and can't give a good answer.

He stopped discussing without saying why.

Brett Hall

Brett Hall posted on the FI list from June to August 2015. He posted about a variety of topics including AI. A sample of his writing:

Don't you TEACH epistemology – so it's your job to know it better? (That's what your twitter says: https://twitter.com/tokteacher ).

I teach what is called "Theory of Knowledge". Which should be epistemology. It's actually philosophy-lite with lots of lefty relativism and other nonsense. Which you would expect: from a standard curriculum.

So, you teach bad ideas, from a position of authority, to vulnerable students. Fuck you.

Not all schools are alike. The students know what I think of the bad ideas. Typically they come away from discussions about those ideas with better ideas. Better than they would have, if someone else was trying to present that material.

Richard Fine

Interest: TCS

Richard Fine posted on the FI group from July 2013 to June 2016 and he was on the TCS list before that.. A sample of his writing:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/16380

How do guns work?

you press the trigger and it swings a piece of metal at the back of the bullet. the back of the bullet is gunpowder which blows up. the explosion pushes the rest of the bullet forward. the bullet is in a metal tube (barrel of gun) which controls what direction the bullet goes. (normally if you just had an explosion it'd be hard to control the direction it makes stuff go.)

BTW the idea of 'explosion' + 'tube to control the direction' is also how car engines work.

Instead of hitting gunpowder with metal to make the explosion, they set gasoline on fire with an electric spark; and instead of the explosion pushing a bullet, it pushes a big chunk of metal (a piston) along a tube. The piston is connected to mechanisms (a crankshaft) that turn the pushing motion into a turning motion for the wheels. Then the piston moves back along the tube to be 'fired' again by another explosion. When the car's going fast, this is happening many times a second.

I think it's pretty cool that the same idea that makes guns work also makes cars work.

Lulie Tanett

Interest: TCS

Lulie posted on the FI list from August 2013 to January 2016 and she was on the TCS list before that.. A short sample of her writing:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/3103

If you have unconventional views on relationships/friendships, like that it's good to act on mutual self-interest rather than altruism, how do you manage the clash of different expectations?

Like, it's reasonable to expect people will usually behave according to society standard. Most people don't know of other ways of behaving.

Or they think that you can either agree with them or be a bad person. So if you seem like a good person, people think that you're just doing the conventional thing.

Even if you tell them you believe in selfishness, they typically have no idea what that means (unless they've read Ayn Rand or similar). So they assume you just follow convention but say fancy things which don't make a difference in practice.

Do you have to just be super aware of when they might be doing things contrary to your views -- like self-sacrifice, assuming obligations, etc. -- and avoid or stop the problem interaction?

Sounds like a lot of effort thinking about convention. But how else can you avoid being misleading to people?

Even if you didn't have a responsibility to not be misleading to people, if you're often misleading then problems will come up. (People will be like, hey I've been super selfless, why aren't you repaying me with selflessness?)

The problem is that saying explicitly that you don't believe in obligations, self-sacrifice, etc. won't help because they simply won't understand what you're referring to without learning a lot about the subject.

stop doing tons of conventional social signalling and most of the
problems go away

if you don't signal you are normal, people won't expect you to act
normal so much

What is conventional social signalling and how do you not do it?

Wouldn't acting weird make the problem worse, because then people
won't know what to expect of you and won't like that? Would be accused
of things like "hard to read" or "hard work"?

Lulie still likes to write, but she doesn’t like criticism:

https://conjecturesandrefutations.com/2019/03/16/lulie-tanett-vs-critical-rationalism/

Becky Moon

Interest: TCS

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/topics/495

Becky Moon posted to the FI group between June and July 2013 and she was on the TCS list before that.. A sample of her writing:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/504

David once gave me a simple counter-example about what's wrong with induction - something along the lines of a chicken being fed every day by a farmer and expecting to continue being fed but then one day ends up being the farmer's dinner.

That is Bertrand Russell's example. One Russell quote googling turns up is, “The man who has fed the chicken every day throughout its life at last wrings its neck instead, showing that more refined views as to the uniformity of nature would have been useful to the chicken.”

I have read a little Bertrand Russell. I can't remember whether I ran across the example there as well. David may have even mentioned where he got the story. It was 8 or more years ago. :P

While I agree that induction isn't preferable to a good explanatorytheory, I still think it might frequently be useful.

The way I'm thinking of it, though, might have a different term that applies and might not really be what people mean by induction...

I think of it as a sort of pre-theory knowledge - noticing that there is a pattern.

Noticing which pattern(s)?

It was meant generally. There are a lot of patterns - as I see you mention
below.

The sun appears to rise and set daily. The moon appears to rise and set most evenings. The weather tends to get warmer overall and then cooler overall. I've heard in some places there are even distinct seasons - winter, spring, summer, fall. ;) If plants don't receive water, eventually, they dry up and stop growing. Animals (and people) tend to start off small and get bigger over time and then seem to level off. If one lets go of an object in midair, it usually tends to fall although there are a few unusual items that don't fall or fall very very slowly (balloons, feathers). Water when exposed to certain cold enough temperatures seems to become a solid. I could go on indefinitely with examples.

Dan Frank

Dan Frank posted on the FI list from June 2013 to August 2014 and he was on other BoI related lists before that. A sample of his writing:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/1305

On Mon, Sep 9, 2013 at 5:46 PM, Elliot Temple wrote:

On Sep 9, 2013, at 3:29 PM, Dan Frank wrote:

On Mon, Sep 9, 2013 at 11:09 AM, Elliot Temple wrote:

On Sep 9, 2013, at 6:15 AM, Anontwo Too wrote:

On Mon, Sep 9, 2013 at 12:59 PM, Jordan Talcot wrote:

On Sep 9, 2013, at 1:33 AM, Anontwo Too wrote:

Won't they [children] be interested at one point [in letters and reading], when they notice that they are
useful to people?

There are a lot of things that are useful to people. Why are you assuming that all children will notice that letters in particular are useful? Do you think that all children will notice ALL useful things? Do you think that there is something in the letters themselves that will make children notice them?

Because letters are very fucking useful. A big deal. Not just a tiny bit useful.

It's like a girl getting a period and not finding tampons or sanitary
towels useful. "Oh, I'm not bothered, I'll just bleed over the place."

Or like most people making philosophical mistakes that massively fuck up most of their lives, and not finding philosophy useful and interesting? "Oh, I'm not bothered, I'll have a string of failures for my life."

Except, that happens... That is what most people actually do.

Just because some knowledge would be extremely valuable to someone, and they have a pressing need of it, and it's available, does NOT mean they will automatically find it, want it, value it, figure out how to learn it, learn it, etc, etc

They need to be persuaded by something that this knowledge is actually
valuable to them. In our culture, though, there is some knowledge
that is much more "obviously" valuable than others. e.g. here is a
good way to deal with a cut on your hand: stop the bleeding with
something like a paper towel or a napkin or gauze, and then maybe
putting some antiseptic and/or bandage on it if it is a large enough
cut. Or doing the first part and then going to an emergency room to
get it stitched if it's even larger. Is this controversial?

It's unclear to me that that that knowledge is particularly valuable to personally, individually have.

First of all, how often do you cut your hand? Big enough to need to do anything?

Second, if you are incompetent about hand cuts, so what? Someone will help you. Maybe you're alone and can't quickly get someone (but still who cares, no problem, google it or phone someone to tell you what to do). But most people most of the time have reasonably quick access to someone IRL who would help them with a cut.

You can be like "omg i cut my hand. omg omg wtf do i do? it hurts it hurts!! please help me" and people will be like "don't worry, just calm down, it'll be fine. here let me wash that off for you and get you a bandaid" or whatever. people are nice and helpful about that kind of thing, so you don't really have to know much yourself.

I do think some knowledge about this is worth having yourself but I could easily see someone disagreeing, and I don't think it makes that much difference either way.

Interesting. I think that our culture makes it pretty easy-to-get
info and the cost of learning it is very low, so it's worth getting
(including getting knowledge like "I don't know much about what is a
bad cut or not, but this is still bleeding a lot after five minutes so
I'm going to go to an expert just in case," which is a form of
knowledge about cuts that I'm talking about).

Even if you don't cut your hand often. Like the way that knowledge
about what to do if someone steals your car is really easy to get in
our culture (call 911.) even though you don't often need it.

(And there's also the issue of when to learn it. I think many people delay learning about how to handle cuts until after having more than one cut. Then they end up learning it cause they go through the process multiple times and remember some stuff or ask questions about what's happening, not because they ever decided that today is the day to go spend 15 minutes studying how to deal with hand cuts)

Agreed. People can begin learning to read the same way, can't they?
Even in mainstream coercive culture isn't this a common way people
learn some reading? e.g. "read this book to me." and then they
remember some stuff and on the fifteenth or hundredth time they ask
some questions about what's happening and then they learn a bit. They
don't have to decide "today is the day" to go spend 15 minutes
learning to read.

Not too long after this they are typically coerced to do just that, of
course. But even in many conventional households the other way of
learning reading often happens first, for a year or two at least.
Maybe not in the really hardcore "you must read by age 4" households
or whatever? But it's not uncommon.

Guilherme Neto

Guilherme Neto posted on the FI group from April 2018 to November 2018. A sample of his writing:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/28710

http://curi.us/1443-children-dont-exist

When a child doesn't like school, it certainly never occurs to parents that they are dealing with a person who has a preference and a life, and perhaps should have some control over his life.

Parents do think that kids will eventually have preferences and a
life. Its like kids are only potential people.

Instead, all that exists to them is a ball of clay which has the potential to be an adult with the skill to run its own life, and will get there not by practicing doing that but by molding.

Its interesting how parents expects their kids to be independent and
how the road to it is not only centered on dependency but averse to
independence.

People are supposed to became capable of running their own life by
spending their first years ignoring their own judgment and following
the orders of authorities.

The Bitty Guy

The Bitty Guy posted on the FI group from April 2014 to January 2018. The following message by Elliot Temple shows some representative quotes from The Bitty Guy:

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/fallible-ideas/conversations/messages/3246

On Apr 30, 2014, at 6:49 PM, The Bitty Guy wrote:

On Wed, Apr 30, 2014 at 7:24 PM, Elliot Temple wrote:

On Apr 30, 2014, at 6:56 AM, The Bitty Guy wrote:

Why is it at all necessary to call me, or my ideas, 'left-wing' or 'antisemitic'?

If I showed you a factually accurate map of the Middle east, would you
call that antisemitic as well?

No.

Although the jury is out as to whether your posts qualify as 'high quality', they are still definitely above average; among the best I have yet to find, in the limited time I have to look.

In all events, I do respect the time and discipline devoted to this listserve/blog. For now, at least (until I can find that elusive place in the bloggosphere that categorically discourages all personal attacks, ad hominem and otherwise), I value this one.

Importantly, having my 'talking points' accepted by any of my readers, with or without debate, is not my primary purpose for being here. I am open to changing my opinions, and, with participation in the realm of ideas, hope to learn a thing or two that will improve my philosophy and knowledge of world events.

Furthermore, despite your unfortunate attacks,

i'm not sure what attacks you're referring to.

Are you really, honestly not aware that inserting anti-semite into the
dialogue constitutes an attack? Maybe it would help to remind you if
you used the word "anti-jew bigot" instead.

It is the Anti-Semite Smear. Given the frequency with which you bring
it up, and in keeping with your convention of using acronym for
commonly used terms, how about if I simply call it the "A.S.S.
attack"? Do you honestly not know that it constitutes a personal
smear, that can have social, professional, and even legal consequences
for the victim? In many cases, possibly yours included, this venomous
bite is precisely why the term is used, and how it shapes and silences
debate.

Do you believe that

1) some things are anti-semitic and calling them as such is reasonable

or

2) nothing is anti-semitic, and the term is always and only a smear

?

If (1), would you agree that therefore some kind of argument or explanation is necessary to differentiate between smears and non-smears, before you can assume it's a smear? And you didn't provide such an differentiating explanation.

And do you believe that

1) using quotes improves discussion

or

2) refusing to use exact quotes of things you are complaining about is a better approach

?

if you thought "left-wing talking point" is a personal attack, i disagree. i consider it a factually accurate descriptive statement about the text/ideas you posted (not about you as a person).

Are you serious? The 'left-wing talking point' is irrelevant. Who
really cares about that? No one is fired, sued, or removed from office
over that (quite the opposite)...it's the A.S.S. attack I was
referring to... Don't A.S.S. me, bro!

Yes I seriously, honestly find it hard to tell what you are referring to when you refuse to use quotations or carefully explain. We see the world differently. Your choices are to communicate or not be understood.

Elliot Temple
www.fallibleideas.com
www.curi.us

Kristen Ely

Kristen Ely posted from May 2013 to March 2017. A sample of her writing:

On Nov 4, 2015, at 10:13 PM, Leonor Gomes wrote:

2015-11-05 2:43 GMT+00:00 Rami Rustom:

On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 4:39 AM, Leonor Gomes wrote:

2015-11-04 10:23 GMT+00:00 Rami Rustom:

On Tue, Nov 3, 2015 at 9:42 AM, Leonor Gomes wrote:

but at least tries to have some original ideas of his own.

this isn't a goal. at least it's not a GOOD goal.

one should go after the best ideas, whether he originated them or not.

go after? or learn them? think about them?

yes.

caring that one's ideas are original is a status-seeking mistake.

why is it a status seeking mistake?

i thought you meant something to the effect of: ignoring tradition and
doing your own thing for the sake of being ORIGINAL.

Howard Roark did that.

I don’t think he did.

He wasn’t trying to be original for the sake of being original. He wanted to build in ways that make sense, that fit the purpose of the building, using his own standards, his own judgment, to the best of his ability.

He did say:

I inherit nothing. I stand at the end of no tradition.

And that may be a mistaken way of thinking of tradition. But I don’t think he actually did ignore tradition. He looked at traditions in architectural design and criticized them. He didn’t want to do things just because they had always been done that way.

And he didn’t ignore good traditions of structural engineering.

Joao Duarte

Duarte posted on the FI list from February to May 2019. A sample of his writing:

On Fri, May 17, 2019 at 6:57 PM anonymous FI wrote:

On May 17, 2019, at 7:50 AM, João Duarte wrote:

On Thu, May 16, 2019 at 11:44 PM Elliot Temple wrote:

https://blog.rongarret.info/2009/04/on-shadow-photons-and-real-unicorns.html?showComment=1557966795815#c1990820171770996365

I understand not knowing this stuff. But something is going really
wrong when people’s attempt at reading involves making up nonsense
that just isn’t in the paper. He can’t tell what it says, but
instead of realizing he doesn’t understand he just makes wild
guesses. The stuff RG has come up with goes beyond misreadings of the
paper to making stuff up that has nothing to do with the paper. I
think people learn this method in school, where it’s common.

RG wants to hear none of this, which is part of how he stays so wrong
and confused (and is why I’m posting here instead of another reply
on his blog). When I told him a subset of the problems, he said, "I'm
sorry, Elliot, but I just can't deal with your level of nit-pickery.
Good bye.”

I tried to be helpful to him initially by writing a long, serious,
edited explanation of some CR material. His response was to delete
all of it and never engage with any of how CR works, and instead to
alternate between claiming to agree with me and claiming i’m wrong
(while also misquoting and making other errors).

If anyone has any ideas about how to help such a person, or how to
find better people, please share!

I think you could give some caveats when you criticize things that can
be seen as trivial. Or you could say beforehand that you, sometimes,
can be misjudged as someone who is acting in bad-faith. You can be
clear about your intentions before you start a discussion (this could
have helped when he thought you were trying to be intellectually
superior to him). Because you are uncommonly critical, people can have
a bad perception. I had that "feeling" before and now I think you are
really trying to help and learn.

You didn't say what caveats to say or what to say about intentions. You
didn't give any sentences that you think would help, which could be
tried or criticized.

This advice can be tried without giving examples. Just be honest about the intentions you have when having a discussion for the first time if they are often misinterpreted. The caveat is to say why the thing ET is criticizing although may seem irrelevant it isn't. It's difficult sometimes to know when the other person will think that. But it's better to be safe.

Balázs Fehér

Balázs Fehér posted on the FI list from June 2013 to April 2014. A sample of his writing:

2014-04-29 10:25 GMT+02:00 Alan Forrester:

On 28 April 2014 22:48, Balázs Fehér wrote:

2014-04-28 19:28 GMT+02:00 Alan Forrester:

On 28 April 2014 16:12, Balázs Fehér wrote:

From BOI chapter one terminology:

"Principle of induction: the idea that 'the future will resemble the past', combined with the misconception that this asserts anything about the future."

I would have a question. I understand that the idea that the future will resemble the past is contradicted, for example, each time a new design of microchip is created. However i don't understand the second part. Why 'the future will resemble the past' does not assert anything about the future? Theories about the future are the same as theories about the past (in case of universal theories, which are time invariant).

A universal theory makes predictions about the past and the future and so says that the past and the future are alike in the sense that they both follow the theory.

Yes.

This is totally irrelevant to the controversy over induction because induction is not supposed to be about what you can know when you have a theory, it is supposed to be about how theories are created and confirmed.

So the second part of DDs sentence is irrelevant? Or it refers to something else than what I implied?

Inductivism is a variety of justificationism so it is about how to justify stuff. Justifying anything is impossible but the point of the terminology snippet is to explain how the inductivists think about what they're doing. The inductivists think that idea that the future resembles the past would not be enough on its own to show that you can justify universal theories using information about the past. To justify induction they think you would have to add that information about the past somehow justifies the future implications of universal theories we have come up with today, hence the second part of the sentence.

I see, thanks!

But as DD points out in part of that chapter, it doesn't really matter for inductivism that the future resembles the past: such a principle will not save inductivism.

It's a better idea to actually quote and discuss arguments rather than the terminology part of the book which serves at best as a quick reminder of some argument you already understand. If you don't understand an argument the terminology section will not help you and there is no point in discussing it.

Yeah, I guessed the argument was in the chapter, I just did not remember so asking was faster :)

Dennis Hackethal

Interest: critical rationalism

Dennis came to FI with an interest in Popperian epistemology and artificial intelligence. He currently has a podcast about AI:

https://soundcloud.com/dchacke

He posted between December 2018 and April 2019. A sample of his writing:

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/fallible-ideas/wjMd33c5Jnw/eRJrzf5kBgAJ

I was struggling the other day to explain to someone why the growth of knowledge is inherently unpredictable. I think I can explain it in terms of “it’s a generic algorithm, and a genetic algorithm has unpredictable output”, but unless the other party is already familiar with the concept of knowledge being the result of a genetic algorithm, that doesn’t go very far. It also made me think that a genetic algorithm is unpredictable to a degree. If someone runs a genetic algorithm for eg the traveling salesman problem, they know it’s going to return a solution to the problem in terms of distances etc, and not something completely unexpected. So there’s at least some way to constrain the space of possible answers. I don’t think it’s possible to constrain human answers in this way, but I don’t think I understand why. I also don’t know if probabilistic = unpredictable (my guess is “no”).


This post was written by Alan Forrester.


Update 2020-09-18: I removed all email addresses from the post due to complaints. I think people are wrong about their email spam concerns, and these emails were people's handles they used to post on a public forum with archives, but whatever. I also renamed the post and removed the word "evader". FWIW, I originally suggested this project to Alan. My idea was to try to look for patterns in discussion problems. I don't think this post does a great job at that but I do think it's better than nothing. I didn't expect anyone to care about this post.


Elliot Temple on September 2, 2019

Messages (65)

There are some problems with the first two paragraphs.


Anonymous at 3:53 AM on September 3, 2019 | #13431 | reply | quote

The quotation levels seem wrong in the Brett Hall segment. Things at the same level appear to be written by different people.


Anne B at 6:46 AM on September 3, 2019 | #13432 | reply | quote

A who's who of interesting and creative people. Thankfully, your coercive methods did not kill their sparks!


Anonymous at 7:57 AM on September 3, 2019 | #13433 | reply | quote

What's the purpose of making the list? Are there patterns you can see when looking at all this stuff together?


Anne B at 11:48 AM on September 3, 2019 | #13434 | reply | quote

#13434 Yeah, looking for patterns was the primary purpose.


curi at 12:01 PM on September 3, 2019 | #13435 | reply | quote

The last quote on the Brett Hall part should be:

>>So, you teach bad ideas, from a position of authority, to vulnerable students. Fuck you.

>

>Not all schools are alike. The students know what I think of the bad ideas. Typically they come away from discussions about those ideas with better ideas. Better than they would have, if someone else was trying to present that material.


Anonymous at 12:18 PM on September 3, 2019 | #13436 | reply | quote

#13436 It is.


Anonymous at 2:18 PM on September 3, 2019 | #13437 | reply | quote

> Chicken posted a few times in March 2019 and stopped without giving any reason.

Might have been the farmer :) But I think you mean "Chipkin".


Anonymous at 1:09 AM on September 4, 2019 | #13439 | reply | quote

remove my name from your list, orange bro.


kevin at 11:00 AM on September 12, 2019 | #13494 | reply | quote

#13494 No?


curi at 11:05 AM on September 12, 2019 | #13495 | reply | quote

TheCriticalRat Reddit Message

TheCriticalRat sent me a concluding message on reddit regarding quitting FI.

---

**Did you figure it out eventually?**

That Discord Warrior was a troll? You were so caught up in attacking me that I guarantee you missed him being the troll I recognized him to be.

If I am right that he was a troll that means I was superior at social stuff than you. If he was not a troll that means you were right and I was being intolerant of so-called right wing values. (Which were not the basis of my deeming him a troll. I am well aware that people hold the values that man pretended to hold.)

You were right that I can't take criticism without getting angry, so Philosophy might not be for me. However, you were wrong to think you understand social dynamics as well as you think you do.

I take back the autism accusation, I think it is more of a narcissistic thing with you. I really hope that you learn from this experience because so many people seem to look to you for advice. In the realm of social dynamics you are overreaching. I am confident that you could learn to not alienate people who want to learn CR while not betraying CR values. A problem you ought to work on solving if there ever was one.

I don't expect you to admit you were wrong about Discord Warrior if indeed he turned out to be a troll. That would require you admitting to be wrong for once and me right for once. But a girl can dream eh?

FWIW I did learn a lot while I was at FI and my failure to move forward is largely my own. Thanks for your help, and I deeply hope that you figure out a way to teach people without insulting them.

Peace.

---

Note that TheCriticalRat is lying about his/her main argument. S/he specifically claimed that Discord Warrior's political views were a parody, not genuine, and that was the only reasoning s/he explained regarding the trolling claim:

> Seems like he is playing a character, a parody of what he thinks a Trump supporter acts like.

And it was specifically in regards to politics and Trump supporters that I denied Discord Warrior was trolling. I had actually already accused Discord Warrior of trolling earlier in the conversation, but then his political views seemed serious, normal, moderate, mixed, and nuanced – no signs of trolling, and would be hard to fake for a leftist because they weren't just following stereotypes or a party line. E.g. he was a Trump supporter but not a fan of Trump's proposed border wall. (I'm not saying that's a good nuance, but it's not a parody of a Trump fan chanting #BuildTheWall either.)


curi at 11:59 AM on September 21, 2019 | #13577 | reply | quote

> You were right that I can't take criticism without getting angry, so Philosophy might not be for me.

That means TheCriticalRat needs philosophy *more*. If you're irrational, that is *more reason*, not less, to study how to be more rational.


Dagny at 12:36 PM on September 21, 2019 | #13578 | reply | quote

I didn't actually quit

So actually I haven't quit the group. I'm still subscribed. I've merely not posted in quite a while. My semester started and I had to take a break and then it was months later and I made several attempts to jump back in (i.e. wrote some posts I was planning to post) but then never ended up doing so for a reason that I suspect will seem fairly benign to you (if embarrassing for me).

So if you'll recall, I never figured out the quoting thing. Don't get me wrong here, I like the basic idea and can totally understand why you want people to do it. But I think you guys underestimate the level of social pressure you put on people to follow it right off the bat and thus the steeper learning curve that a group like this has compared to the average group.

I don't intend that as a criticism. I feel like a group like this has every right to set it's own standards. But every time I started to write a quick message (including one thanking Elliot for his feedback on my first post -- I ended up incorporating a bunch of it into a presentation) I'd realize that I wasn't quite ready to spend the time figuring out why my quoting never seemed to work right.

I mean it's probably a learning curve of 30 minutes, or maybe 60 minutes at the most, but not on a topic that I'm that interested in. So I kept telling myself I'd go through the learning process tomorrow... and then tomorrow... and then finally I started to realizes that it had been so long I wasn't even sure people would remember me and that maybe I'd be starting over at this point. For all I knew the group had changed and everyone would be new. Etc.

So I had this plan to instead do some blog posts and then post those and just ask for criticism on them. (Like I did previously.) But I never actually made the time for the blog posts because I was busy with something else. Etc. You get the idea.

But I actually still consider myself part of the group and enjoyed my time there and the feedback. (Though I didn't agree with all of it, of course, though nothing wrong with that. I didn't expect to.) And so much of the feedback was so helpful. So I'd use you guys again in a heartbeat to criticize my posts and make them better.

I like the group and I will return to it eventually when it bubbles up to the level where I end up wanting to take the time to over coming my apparently computer illiteracy on quoting.

You said you made this post to try to find a pattern... I sort of doubt my reason matches anyone elses... but I'd love to offer advice / criticism of how you might make the learning curve of your group maybe easier on new comers. (The quoting thing is only one thing that makes it steep -- I just didn't have as much trouble with the other items.)


Bruce Nielson at 7:39 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13850 | reply | quote

#13850 My video guide to posting covers how to do quoting properly. Maybe you will find it helpful: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y21zEm00Mwg&feature=youtu.be


Justin Mallone at 7:44 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13851 | reply | quote

Thanks

#13851 Thanks. I'll check it out. Though, to be honest, I think my problem was that I couldn't figure out how to delete stuff correctly in a text format which is the only format that worked for me. (I kept trying to shorten it down the stuff I was responding to because, to be honest, I got lost when the message was too long.) So I probably need to spend the time to practice it and get feedback from someone until it 'clicks.' Just haven't made the time yet.


Bruce Nielson at 7:51 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13852 | reply | quote

Email

Hey, would you guys do me a favor of removing the link on my email address and (if it's okay) putting a space in front of the @ so that bots can't read it easily? I realize my email is out on the web due to being in the group already, but I see no reason to make it easier for the spam bots.

If I'm asking to much, let me know.


Bruce Nielson at 7:53 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13853 | reply | quote

You can post on the curi.us website if you don't want to learn to use email yet. We're well aware that it's a barrier to entry.

> You said you made this post to try to find a pattern... I sort of doubt my reason matches anyone elses...

What you're expressing is that a small barrier to entry is larger than the amount you value rational philosophy discussion. Disinterest in reason, lack of curiosity, not caring that much about truth, and that sort of thing, is one of the common patterns for why people don't participate. Many people say they value those things, but then their actions show they do not value them much *relative to* other activities, projects, goals and values that they have (which are where they put their time and effort instead). So I do think your situation is similar to many other people.

I don't think you're in a position to offer useful criticism or advice re learning curve because you have not yet learned it yourself (so you can't speak to how to teach it correctly), don't have much understanding of the purpose and values of quoting (and therefore what would be an acceptable alternative), and you are unfamiliar with what we already know about the matter, what feedback we've already gotten, or what alternatives we've already considered.

re bots, I don't think you have a correct understanding of how they are coded and what defenses are effective.


curi at 7:57 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13854 | reply | quote

No worries

>> I sort of doubt my reason matches anyone elses...

I only meant I doubt there are that many that quit over quoting.

>> Many people say they value those things, but then their actions show they do not value them much *relative to* other activities, projects, goals and values that they have (which are where they put their time and effort instead).

How do you know that? Might I just not be yet interested enough in the group itself given my very short time with it? (That's not intended as an insult, but rather as just a reality of the fact that we're all time constrained and have to choose between things we enjoy.)

But maybe you're right. I might just value other things in my life more than rationality. I honestly don't consider myself all that rational, so you might be correct. I don't even really believe I know my own motives all that often.

Or maybe I just didn't spend enough time yet to realize how valuable the group is (keep in mind that I valued it, but I'm saying maybe I should have valued it more) so I didn't yet realize I should spend more time on it. As you just pointed out, I'm not really all that rational since I'm a beginner so why would you expect me to figure this out quickly? And wouldn't that be an example of how you guys are maybe expecting a lot of beginners btw?

>> I don't think you're in a position to offer useful criticism or advice re learning curve because you have not yet learned it yourself

That's fine. I was just offering to help if I could. But maybe I can't. Up to you guys of course. Doesn't bother me one way or the other.

>> re bots, I don't think you have a correct understanding of how they are coded and what defenses are effective.

Actually, please explain it to me. I'm honestly interested.


Bruce Nielson at 8:41 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13855 | reply | quote

> How do you know that? Might I just not be yet interested enough in the group itself given my very short time with it?

Are you trying to imply that you did other non-FI activities to pursue reason? E.g. you posted at some other group? You studied and wrote about some important texts? What did you do?


Anonymous at 8:53 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13856 | reply | quote

Question

Btw, curi and Elliot are the same person, right?


Bruce Nielson at 8:54 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13857 | reply | quote

Answer

>> Are you trying to imply that you did other non-FI activities to pursue reason? E.g. you posted at some other group? You studied and wrote about some important texts? What did you do?

I am working on a master's degree in computer science for no reason other than I wanted to learn computer science better after reading BoI and FoR. So studying one of the 4 strands (or something as adjacent as I could get given the limited nature of formal education) consumes a LOT of my time. Even when I was on a break, I spent a great deal of my time reading Popper and studying computer science on my own.

I've currently prioritized my studies over the FI group for sure. Again, that isn't meant as at all an insult. And I'm not claiming I've made the right choice. Just explaining what I'm currently spending my time on.


Bruce Nielson at 9:02 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13858 | reply | quote

Btw

>> What you're expressing is that a small barrier to entry is larger than the amount you value rational philosophy discussion.

Btw, that's why I said I'm embarrassed about it. :) It doesn't strike me as a particularly good reason either. I'm a very fallible person for sure.


Bruce Nielson at 9:04 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13859 | reply | quote

> I am working on a master's degree in computer science for no reason other than I wanted to learn computer science better after reading BoI and FoR.

Why use a university if your goal is to learn? They are for social networking/climbing and credentialing.

Have you done anything to get external checks on the truth of what your professors tell you, or to make yourself aware of rival ideas in the field?


Anonymous at 9:56 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13860 | reply | quote

Credentialling

>> They are for social networking/climbing and credentialing.

Well, I don't have time right now to fully explain my current career strategy. And I have to go. (I'm studying for a test right now.) I will try to check back later when I have time and when my interests shift back this direction.

But let me just say that a) you're right, b) that's one of the reasons I'm pursuing a degree. I'm in a current situation where my career goals will likely benefit from credentialing / social networking.

I'm not advocating formal schooling for everyone (or even most people necessarily) but it seems to be a good fit for my unique circumstances. I got a chance to learn more about more than one subject that I was interested in and was planning to study anyhow while also happening to pick up a credential that would allow me to make some necessary career shifts that might be hard (for me, not necessarily someone else) at the same time. A win-win for my unique situation. (Or perhaps I should say, as best I could judge, it seemed like a win-win, but of course I might have made a mistake.)

I should also note that I study what I'm interested in at the moment. For example, I'm really excited to (in the future) take a computer vision class even though I know it's not really related to the 4 stands. But that doesn't mean it's not interesting in it's own right and worthy of learning if I'm feeling interested in it. Also, any class that helps me learn programming is at least indirectly helping me towards my goals with learning more about the 4 strands. (Or more specially one of the 4 strands.)

>> Have you done anything to get external checks on the truth of what your professors tell you, or to make yourself aware of rival ideas in the field?

Well, yes. I've checked up on a number of ideas and tried to find various views.

But I'm kind of wondering if I'm not understanding you here. To use the computer vision example, I'm not necessarily going to try to find out if what my professor of computer vision taught me was 'true' or not.

I'm not even sure what that means in this context. He's teaching interesting techniques as a good starting point to learning more later. And maybe I'll even help improve upon them later once I'm ready. But I'm not sure there is some sense in which I'd think of the techniques as 'true' vs 'false.'

Do you mean like am I finding out if the techniques are the best ones or if he's teaching them in a poor way? I'm just not sure if I understand what you mean here.


Bruce Nielson at 10:42 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13861 | reply | quote

Anonymous

Btw, since many of these posts are "Anonymous" I'm unclear if I'm talking to one or multiple people. It would actually be helpful if that was clear (so I don't assume you know what I'm talking about when it was really a post to someone else and you didn't read it.)


Bruce Nielson at 11:01 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13862 | reply | quote

> Well, I don't have time right now to fully explain my current career strategy

OK so when you said (emphasis added):

> I am working on a master's degree in computer science *for no reason other than* I wanted to learn computer science better after reading BoI and FoR.

That was false? It being part of a career strategy is a reason other than.

I didn't ask about this primarily to debate whether social climbing is a good idea, but because you'd denied that you had that as a reason at all.

> Do you mean like am I finding out if the techniques are the best ones or if he's teaching them in a poor way?

The proper purpose of an education in computer science is to understand concepts, not to learn specific techniques which, in general, you can quickly learn on your own after you understand the concepts. The point is to learn how to think about computer programs. Certain methods of organizing, designing and reasoning about computer programs are better than others, are important, and so on. Learning what they are, and how to use and apply them (instead of just holding them as abstractions), is crucial.

The result should be that you can write paragraphs of reasoning related to your understanding of computer science topics, including general concepts and also, secondarily, some specific examples.

So e.g. a well-educated graduate might be able to think intelligently about the the differences between paradigms like functional programming and OOP, or about the dangers and benefits of mutable state and the ways of mitigating that danger. As far as I know, and judging by the state of the industry, the schools are failing rather badly at such topics. Many graduates don't even understand recursion well and have little ability to organize and reason about their code.

The FI community has many skilled programmers. If you have conceptual thoughts related to your understanding of the field, you could write them in English, share them and discuss them.

You seem kinda unaware that your field contains disagreements, errors, and controversies, and that you could look up rival viewpoints and compare them to those you're taught. Your response sounds like basically that you're just learning particular algorithms instead of how to think effectively about the field. Even if that's the focus of classes, you are no doubt also picking up opinions, perspectives, theories, etc., but not necessarily very critically.

---

I wrote #13856 and #13860

Also, yes, ET and curi are the same person.


Dagny at 11:23 PM on October 19, 2019 | #13863 | reply | quote

#13850

Bruce, I'm glad you are still on the FI email list. The same goes for anyone else out there who is reading it but not posting. There's value in just reading.

Do you know about the Fallible Ideas Discord? There are no formatting guidelines there and the chat is more informal than on the email list. Go to

https://curi.us/more

and click on Public Discord Chatroom. If you have trouble joining from that link you can ask for help.


Anne B at 2:11 AM on October 20, 2019 | #13865 | reply | quote

Quick Response

>> That was false? It being part of a career strategy is a reason other than.

I'm sorry I can't keep responding, but will quickly respond to this.

I suppose a more truthful way of putting it would have been "I am working on a master's degree in computer science that I started looking into for no reason other than I wanted to learn computer science better after reading BoI and FoR. However, as I thought through the pros and cons of that decision, I realized that I didn't know what the future would hold and if I played my cards right I might even be able to use it to do a career switch that got me closer to studying computer science/computational theory for a living. However, I'm honestly not sure that's anything but a pipe dream and so I haven't made that a central part of my reason for working on this degree and have contented myself with the idea that I might just be getting this degree for no reason other than a desire to study interesting subjects and if that is the case, I'm fine with it. If it also assists me in make a career switch that gets me closer to my desire to study computer science/computational theory more, than that is a bonus. So it seemed like working on the degree was worth it whether or not I went on to utilize the credentials/social networking or not."

That did seem a bit long and maybe not yet warranted by the original context of my comment. But hopefully this now clarifies for you.

>>> The result should be that you can write paragraphs of reasoning related to your understanding of computer science topics, including general concepts and also, secondarily, some specific examples.

Hopefully you're right.

>>> As far as I know, and judging by the state of the industry, the schools are failing rather badly at such topics.

Probably true.

The simple truth is, I'm a non-programmer that suddenly decided to pursue a master's in computer science. I hope to eventually get to exactly what you're talking about. But I'm pretty excited right now to be learning basic techniques to build up my conceptual library. Learning Harris Corner detection and getting to use it really is interesting and valuable given my current state of knowledge.

Perhaps you're right that "[I'm]... kinda unaware that [Harris Corner detection] contains disagreements, errors, and controversies, and that [I] could look up rival viewpoints and compare them to those [I'm] taught." (To apply your criticism to a specific example). But honestly, that's just not where my interests lie at the moment. In the future it likely will.

You seem like you intended to make a point to me, though to be honest, I'm not sure what it was. Go ahead and explain what you're getting at. I'm sincerely interested in what you have to say.


Bruce Nielson at 7:23 AM on October 20, 2019 | #13866 | reply | quote

#13866 In short I'm saying that CS is a discussable topic and you ought to be learning some things worth discussing (especially concepts rather than specific algorithms). The FI community has plenty of CS expertise. You could discuss CS instead of waiting until after your degree. You could also discuss CS anywhere else and share links with us.


Dagny at 11:00 AM on October 20, 2019 | #13867 | reply | quote

Still there?

Anyone still there? I have a question.


Bruce Nielson at 7:29 PM on January 14, 2020 | #15100 | reply | quote

Elliot in particular

My question is to Elliot in particular.


Bruce Nielson at 7:31 PM on January 14, 2020 | #15101 | reply | quote

You should just ask it instead of writing 2 posts with zero content.


Anonymous at 8:44 PM on January 14, 2020 | #15102 | reply | quote

Request

I am nicely asking that you take my name and email down from this list. Or at least the email. (I would prefer both.) Will you please do that for me.


Bruce Nielson at 7:49 AM on January 15, 2020 | #15104 | reply | quote

Why?


Anonymous at 10:51 AM on January 15, 2020 | #15105 | reply | quote

Why?

Shouldn't it be the other way around? Now that I've made it clear that I do not want my personal information here, isn't it up to you to explain to me why you want to leave it here and don't you need to persuade me to change my mind?


Bruce Nielson at 12:31 PM on January 15, 2020 | #15106 | reply | quote

No.


Anonymous at 12:37 PM on January 15, 2020 | #15107 | reply | quote

> Shouldn't it be the other way around? Now that I've made it clear that I do not want my personal information here, isn't it up to you to explain to me why you want to leave it here and don't you need to persuade me to change my mind?

If 1) you **choose** to post on a public forum, 2) using your real name and 3) personal email address, (instead of using, say, a pseudonym on an anonymous account) then you have made an association between your name, email address, and some writing *public information* by your own act and choice. It's unreasonable to demand that others perform work for you cuz you later decide you regret having done this, especially without being willing to offer an explanation of your demand. It's a bit like publishing a book and then demanding people not comment on it using your name and expecting immediate compliance without explanation (not exactly like that, but similar).

I'm a different anon than the one who asked "Why?" btw.


Anonymous at 12:44 PM on January 15, 2020 | #15108 | reply | quote

Explanation

Well, this seems to be a request for less work than it took to respond to me. And I did alraedy give two fairly good explanations above. One of which is that I never left the group, so this is actually incorrect information. So I'm trying to help you not have false information on your webpage.


Bruce Nielson at 1:58 PM on January 15, 2020 | #15109 | reply | quote

Demand?

Also, you falsely represented my request as a 'demand'. Would you agree that that was a misrepresentation of the polite *request* that I made?


Bruce Nielson at 2:06 PM on January 15, 2020 | #15110 | reply | quote

Winning

This place is not about common decency, but about truth, grammar and the relentless pursuit of winning. Seems like you've reached an impasse. If you make your case and win you might have your way (not my call, just an outsider), but you need to study the rules of engagement and the document on paths forward. Anything less is whim-worship.


Anonymous at 10:56 PM on January 15, 2020 | #15114 | reply | quote

> Well, this seems to be a request for less work than it took to respond to me.

Two false assumptions here: #1, that the anon you are replying to is in a position to do the work you want (this is false cuz I am not curi and cannot edit his blog); #2, that someone should be indifferent between work that he sees the point of (such as explaining another person's errors) and work that he doesn't see the point of (such as complying with demands that have not been explained to the satisfaction of the person who is being asked to do stuff)

> > And I did alraedy give two fairly good explanations above. One of which is that I never left the group, so this is actually incorrect information.

What is "this"? The claim you're an evader? Do you think being a member of a mailing list rebuts that claim?

> So I'm trying to help you not have false information on your webpage.

So you *do* think I am curi (I'm not).

> Also, you falsely represented my request as a 'demand'. Would you agree that that was a misrepresentation of the polite *request* that I made?

No.

You said:

> Shouldn't it be the other way around? Now that I've made it clear that I do not want my personal information here, isn't it up to you to explain to me why you want to leave it here and don't you need to persuade me to change my mind?

That indicates that you made your "request" as if by right and expected compliance by default.

First definition I get on google for "demand" is:

> an insistent and peremptory request, made as if by right.


#15108 anonymous at 5:40 AM on January 16, 2020 | #15115 | reply | quote

My last post had an extra quote level sneak in for one quote for some reason


#15108 anonymous at 5:42 AM on January 16, 2020 | #15116 | reply | quote

> What is "this"? The claim you're an evader?

Are you saying that the purpose of this post is to punish people for being 'evaders'? That's funny, that's not what the post itself said it was about:

> It would be good to find patterns about what goes wrong. That would help people find out what the common mistakes are and avoid making them, and it'd help with organizing discussion to avoid some of the problems.

So are you saying the post is lying about its purpose?

If this post were really about what it said it was, then there would be no perception at all that a request to take down a name (or at least an email) because the person is still in the group -- just lurking and reading instead of responding. In fact, a chance to rectify the truth would have been jumped on.

But if the post is lying about its purpose, then your behavior makes perfect sense. If your argument is correct, it would seem the idea that the post was being truthful has just failed to survive criticism. But that means that the request was a correct request after all because this post is a case of "initial use of force." So either way, it looks like you just lost that argument. The request was an appropriate request either because it correct false information or because the whole post was lying in the first place.

Also, a refusal of this request is inconsistent with the proclaimed purpose of the post, isn't it? In fact, it's a case and point of the very problem the post claims to be trying to solve.

> That indicates that you made your "request" as if by right and expected compliance by default.

But does it have to be taken that way? Or are you just reading in because it's convenient to you? Seeing as it was a question about who owed who the explanation, it can't really be said to be a demand. You are clearly reading in something that wasn't in the request.

> but about truth

That's what your arguments just called into question, isn't it?

> It's a bit like publishing a book and then demanding people not comment on it using your name and expecting immediate compliance without explanation

Actually, the request was to take down the name or *at least to remove the email.* Your analogy shows the problem here: there is no reason at all to include emails if the purpose of the post was to just determine why people are leaving and you are just quoting them. The email being included only makes sense if we assume the post is lying about its purpose and really it's about punishing people for leaving the group and wanting to dox them. Otherwise the request to at least take down the email would have been accepted as valid even if you felt the name and quote still belonged. (Which it doesn't for someone that is lurking in the group and hasn't actually left.)

> So you *do* think I am curi (I'm not).

We all know Elliot is reading this and is choosing to not respond. Whether or not you happen to be Elliot hardly matters.

Besides, the "you" in the original quote could have plausibly just referenced the site and the community, of which you personally have a part.

I believe I just refuted every point you've made.

Also, it seems to me that you are not giving your best to this discussion. Your claim that it was a demand (when it was phrased as a question and was rather polite) for example. Most people would have immediatley seen that it can't be called a demand and would have not made such a mistake. I do not feel you are serious about this discussion and that you are trying to read in things that aren't there to go for an 'easy win' rather than taking the discussion seriously.


Anonymous at 6:33 AM on January 16, 2020 | #15117 | reply | quote

>> What is "this"? The claim you're an evader?

> Are you saying that the purpose of this post is to punish people for being 'evaders'? That's funny, that's not what the post itself said it was about:

>> It would be good to find patterns about what goes wrong. That would help people find out what the common mistakes are and avoid making them, and it'd help with organizing discussion to avoid some of the problems.

> So are you saying the post is lying about its purpose?

No. Try again.


#15108 anonymous at 6:43 AM on January 16, 2020 | #15119 | reply | quote

punish?

>> What is "this"? The claim you're an evader?

> Are you saying that the purpose of this post is to punish people for being 'evaders'?

how did you get the idea that the purpose of the post is to punish? I reviewed the discussion and it seems to me that you saw the word "evader" and jumped to the conclusion that the purpose of the post is to punish.

note that this is no different than calling someone out for lying. if personA thinks that personB lied, and personA says so and explains why he believes it, that's not punishment (hurt). It's help.

Only through a win/lose perspective will people view that as punishment.


44783 at 10:41 AM on January 16, 2020 | #15120 | reply | quote

#15106 Bruce, your name and email address are hardly secrets. After all, you yourself intentionally used them to identify yourself in *public* mailing list messages. When you do that, you should realize that other people may in the future use those identifiers to publicly refer to you and your writing.

If this article's statements about you are *true*, then why should they be retracted? (If they were *false*, that would be a different matter, but you haven't argued that.)


Alisa at 2:00 PM on January 16, 2020 | #15124 | reply | quote

Impersonating people, as well as doxing, are initiation of force. They are absolutely forbidden here. I hid a comment. Cease immediately.

In case this is a matter of ignorance: doxing either is a crime where you live or should be, as is identity theft. It's not a joke or prank, it's the kind of thing that merits jail time. It's an attack on the civilized world, with its law and order, just like stealing property or assaulting someone. Civilization depends on refraining from violating the rights of others, and police, courts and jails are the appropriate response to violators.

Some people believe they're safe online and can't get caught, and that nothing can be done to fight back against their crimes. I suggest they look up examples of online criminals getting caught. It happens all the time.


curi at 6:18 PM on January 16, 2020 | #15129 | reply | quote

#15129 Interesting, so when people do it to you, you immediately take action. But when you do it to others, it's totally fine.

How hypocritical of you.

If you want me to respect you and your minion's private information. I suggest you take steps to do the same for others.


Howard Roark at 6:34 PM on January 16, 2020 | #15130 | reply | quote

Bruce's name and email are public information. He used them to send email to a public group with archives. His email is publicly available on the Google Groups website among other places. People quoting public statements, correctly attributing them to the author information that's publicly available, are not doing anything wrong. If you respond that you don't understand the difference, you're a lying criminal.

You have just threatened to commit additional acts of force unless I do what you want. You don't seem to understand the seriousness of what you're doing. This is not a negotiation. Last warning. Goodbye.


curi at 6:39 PM on January 16, 2020 | #15131 | reply | quote

#15131

Ha, what happened? Did someone give you a taste of your own medicine or something?

Why don't you just respect people's wishes and not use force against them like this?

I thought only SJW's talked in terms of force when no force was used. I guess generic shit tier bloggers do too!

I see no reason for #15130 to respect your privacy if you don't do the same for others.

I know your giant ego blinds you to the fact that you're not special and shouldn't receive special treatment.

Think about it shit tier blogger. Personally, I hope you keep getting a taste of your own medicine. :)


Anonymous at 7:32 PM on January 16, 2020 | #15132 | reply | quote

#15132

> Ha, what happened? Did someone give you a taste of your own medicine or something?

> Why don't you just respect people's wishes and not use force against them like this?

These are fake questions. He’s not actually interested in knowing the answers to these questions.

> I thought only SJW's talked in terms of force when no force was used. I guess generic shit tier bloggers do too!

This is just social attacks. No criticism or anything valuable.

> I see no reason for #15130 to respect your privacy if you don't do the same for others.

This is so dishonest. He’s acting like the situation is symmetric, like both Bruce and Elliot did the same thing. It’s not symmetric at all. Not even close. Elliot posted public stuff to another public place. That is legal. And the purpose is moral. If anyone was actually interested in this, they’d read the blog post where it explains the purpose of the post.

> I know your giant ego blinds you to the fact that you're not special and shouldn't receive special treatment.

More dishonest bullshit.

> Think about it shit tier blogger. Personally, I hope you keep getting a taste of your own medicine. :)

So he thinks he was attacked and he thinks the way to deal with that is to attack back. That’s revenge and it’s evil. Often times when people do revenge, they misinterpreted the earlier action as an attack when it wasn’t. So they are doing revenge to somebody that didn’t attack them.


44783 at 5:38 PM on January 17, 2020 | #15136 | reply | quote

Bruce, if you want to get anywhere with this, you have to be a lot clearer about what specifically you want me to do and why. I don't know what the problem is. Stop assuming you have any rights to control my free speech regarding what I do with public info on my blog. I don't have to justify myself. If you tried to cooperate, explain and ask for help, instead of being demanding and argumentative, you might get somewhere. And you're posting under your real name repeatedly here and you have real name along with other info on your Twitter:

https://twitter.com/bnielson01

> Bruce Nielson

> @bnielson01

> Georgia Tech MS Student specializing in Machine Learning. Interested in AGI via study of Popper/Deutsch epistemology. Four Strands Community Manager.

Also, may I join the Four Strands groups (it's a slack and a google group, right?)?


curi at 1:30 PM on January 18, 2020 | #15144 | reply | quote

Since it doesn't make a large difference anyway, I went ahead and changed the contact info for Bruce from his email to his Twitter.


curi at 7:22 PM on January 19, 2020 | #15164 | reply | quote

Evade means "avoid facing up to something".

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/fallible-ideas/c4exGq9nTBU/8tgIjjbpBAAJ

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/fallible-ideas/62scFDqeBJE/clnqOTbpBAAJ

Factually, Bruce has not faced up to these replies he received over a year ago.

In those replies, curi wrote things like:

> If Bruce knows of anything I’m mistaken about (one of those many things he disagrees with), I would be eager to hear it.

and

(curi, then Bruce, then curi):

>>> Or if you completely ignored discussion methodology, stopped reading negative into anything that isn’t a topical mistake, and just took things literally at face value, that could maybe work too (that’s hard and I’m not recommending attempting it).

>> I do not agree with this either. I think there is a real discussion

problem here. I'm just not convinced it's me.

> I believe Bruce’s choices are:

> 1) to discuss the discussion problem in order to improve it

> 2) to tolerate the discussion problem with no hard feelings

> or

> 3) to have hard feelings (leading to leaving)

> These choices are independent of whose fault it is.

Bruce didn't face up to explaining something curi is mistaken about nor to choosing between the 3 options (or coming up with an alternative).


Anonymous at 10:49 PM on January 21, 2020 | #15192 | reply | quote

#15194

Why do you care?


Anon2224 at 9:35 AM on January 22, 2020 | #15196 | reply | quote

I added this sentence near the top of the post:

> *People who left are welcome to come back and try again.*

Maybe they didn't realize that?


curi at 1:53 PM on January 23, 2020 | #15220 | reply | quote

take off their emails

By posting their emails in plain text on a public site you're subjecting these people to spam from spambot web crawlers. That's not very nice.


Dan Elton at 8:07 AM on August 29, 2020 | #17656 | reply | quote

FTR I'm fine with being on this.


Max Kaye at 7:12 PM on September 17, 2020 | #18055 | reply | quote

Post Edited

I removed all email addresses from the post due to complaints. I think people are wrong about their email spam concerns, and these emails were people's handles they used to post on a public forum with archives, but whatever. I also renamed the post and removed the word "evader". FWIW, I originally suggested this project to Alan. My idea was to try to look for patterns in discussion problems. I don't think this post does a great job at that but I do think it's better than nothing. I didn't expect anyone to care about this post.


curi at 1:51 AM on September 18, 2020 | #18059 | reply | quote

If this kind of list scares you, *do not post here under your real name*. And maybe don't post anywhere else online under your real name, either.

And you can pick a unique name for posting at FI and curi that you don't use on other sites.


curi at 2:03 AM on September 18, 2020 | #18060 | reply | quote

> I didn't expect anyone to care about this post.

This seems like a bad mistake. I don't buy it.

What are you doing editing your post? What's your policy on this? And are you no longer going to call evaders "evaders"? WTF? I don't think your heart's in this - that's why you ended up misspelling "Popper" in the rewrite.

> If this kind of list scares you,

It seems like you got scared of your own list.


Anonymous at 2:22 AM on September 19, 2020 | #18068 | reply | quote

#18068 Due to ongoing harassing from sock puppets and the negativity in your comment, I will only discuss this if you identify yourself to me. https://curi.us/2288-identification-policy


curi at 11:56 AM on September 19, 2020 | #18073 | reply | quote

Want to discuss this? Join my forum.

(Due to multi-year, sustained harassment from David Deutsch and his fans, commenting here requires an account. Accounts are not publicly available. Discussion info.)