It’s still pretty interesting if it turns out that the only clear example to be found of T.C. admitting to error is in a context where everyone involved is describing errors they’ve made: he’ll admit to concrete mistakes, but apparently only when admitting mistakes makes him look good rather than bad.
(Though I kinda agree with one thing Joseph Miller says, or more precisely implies: perhaps it’s just really rare for people to say publicly that they were badly wrong about anything of substance, in which case it could be that T.C. has seldom done that but that this shouldn’t much change our opinion of him.)
Deep Research found this PDF. Search for “I was wrong” in the PDF.
This seems to be a really explicit example of him saying that he wss wrong about something, thank you!
Didn’t think this would exist/be found, but glad I was wrong.
It’s still pretty interesting if it turns out that the only clear example to be found of T.C. admitting to error is in a context where everyone involved is describing errors they’ve made: he’ll admit to concrete mistakes, but apparently only when admitting mistakes makes him look good rather than bad.
(Though I kinda agree with one thing Joseph Miller says, or more precisely implies: perhaps it’s just really rare for people to say publicly that they were badly wrong about anything of substance, in which case it could be that T.C. has seldom done that but that this shouldn’t much change our opinion of him.)
Btw, for Slatestarcodex, found it in the first search, pretty easily.
Sure, but plausibly that’s Scott being unusually good at admitting error, rather than Tyler being unusually bad.