Do I really need to explain why it’s bad for people to be wealthy and high status depsite never having produced anything of value, and spend all their time perpetuating what is essentially an information cascade?
It’s not just the fact that people have to be trained. After all, people must be trained in order to read or use a computer.
The problem is that there’s no clear standard for what counts as successful training. You can check for whether someone can read (at a given level) using tests that everyone will agree about for the results. How do you know when someone’s gotten the right “art appreciation training”? “Oh, well, you see, you have to join our club, and hand around only our people for years and years, and then we still get fooled by monkeys …”
Do I really need to explain why it’s bad for people to be wealthy and high status depsite never having produced anything of value, and spend all their time perpetuating what is essentially an information cascade?
Quite a judgment there, “nothing of value”! Because people have to be trained to appreciate it, it’s of no value?
It’s not just the fact that people have to be trained. After all, people must be trained in order to read or use a computer.
The problem is that there’s no clear standard for what counts as successful training. You can check for whether someone can read (at a given level) using tests that everyone will agree about for the results. How do you know when someone’s gotten the right “art appreciation training”? “Oh, well, you see, you have to join our club, and hand around only our people for years and years, and then we still get fooled by monkeys …”
How do you know there’s no clear standard? You’re not an artist.
Falsifiability, basically. Or lack thereof.
Well, my first hint was when the work of a monkey was mistaken for that of an award-winning artist...
I’m willing to give them the benefit of the doubt on this one. Why shouldn’t I?