Well, if by “no model” you mean something like the contemporary folk model of biology (“Blood is what keeps you alive, we’re not quite sure how though, but in general try not to lose your blood”), then elan vital is definitely worse, in that it (a) adds no new information but (b) sounds wiser, and therefore harder to unseat.
the contemporary folk model of biology (“Blood is what keeps you alive, we’re not quite sure how though, but in general try not to lose your blood”),
This sounds sensible, though it should be mentioned that bloodletting (hm, there’s clearly too much blood here) seems like a candidate for folk biology as well.
(I once had a small, dark bruise underneath a partially healed cut- so it looked like there was this black thing inside my finger, though I was reasonably confident it was just a pool of blood. The urge to cut it open and drain it was unbelievably strong, and I had to put a bandaid on it just so that I couldn’t look at it. After that I had a lot more sympathy for people who thought bloodletting was a sensible treatment. I suspect that particular incident was an anti-parasite impulse which mistakenly pattern-matched the pool, and I imagine most bloodletting was inspired by “you’re way redder than is healthy- let’s fix that!”.)
It may make sense to apply some penalty to the logodds of “profound ideas”, to compensate for the bias.
Likewise, maybe we should assume that beautiful people are stupid to compensate for the halo effect—though that one is a bit trickier, because IQ actually is correlated with attractiveness, just not as strongly as people tend to assume.
Well, if by “no model” you mean something like the contemporary folk model of biology (“Blood is what keeps you alive, we’re not quite sure how though, but in general try not to lose your blood”), then elan vital is definitely worse, in that it (a) adds no new information but (b) sounds wiser, and therefore harder to unseat.
This sounds sensible, though it should be mentioned that bloodletting (hm, there’s clearly too much blood here) seems like a candidate for folk biology as well.
(I once had a small, dark bruise underneath a partially healed cut- so it looked like there was this black thing inside my finger, though I was reasonably confident it was just a pool of blood. The urge to cut it open and drain it was unbelievably strong, and I had to put a bandaid on it just so that I couldn’t look at it. After that I had a lot more sympathy for people who thought bloodletting was a sensible treatment. I suspect that particular incident was an anti-parasite impulse which mistakenly pattern-matched the pool, and I imagine most bloodletting was inspired by “you’re way redder than is healthy- let’s fix that!”.)
Are you suggesting that we apply a punishment to any theory that sounds wise? Or that we apply a punishment only for those that also satisfy (a)?
It may make sense to apply some penalty to the logodds of “profound ideas”, to compensate for the bias.
Likewise, maybe we should assume that beautiful people are stupid to compensate for the halo effect—though that one is a bit trickier, because IQ actually is correlated with attractiveness, just not as strongly as people tend to assume.
Well, ideally we ignore b and focus only on a. B only matters in the context of being a more virulent meme.