Both strategies might end up producing the same outcome. Define a “Certified Political Belief” as a belief which satisfies the above standards. In my own case, I don’t actually have any strong political beliefs (>90% confidence) which I would claim are Certified (except maybe “liberal democracy is a good thing”).
In fact, a good exercise would be to take your strongest political beliefs, actually write down which academic articles you’ve read that support your position, and then go do a quick test (with a third-party referee) to see whether you’re ideologically Turing-capable. This sounds like a good way to get feedback to help you calibrate.
Both strategies might end up producing the same outcome. Define a “Certified Political Belief” as a belief which satisfies the above standards. In my own case, I don’t actually have any strong political beliefs (>90% confidence) which I would claim are Certified (except maybe “liberal democracy is a good thing”).
In fact, a good exercise would be to take your strongest political beliefs, actually write down which academic articles you’ve read that support your position, and then go do a quick test (with a third-party referee) to see whether you’re ideologically Turing-capable. This sounds like a good way to get feedback to help you calibrate.