Obviously a private enterprise won’t publicly disclose the subscription status of its members.
He can publicly state whatever he wants regarding whether he changed his mind or not, no matter what he actually did. He can publicly state whatever he wants regarding whether he actually cancelled his subscription, no matter what he actually did.
If you assume OP wouldn’t actually publicly lie (but still be subject to motivated cognition, as you said in the grandparent), then my previous comment is exactly right. You don’t avoid any motivated cognition by adding an action which is still contingent on the problematic “change your mind” part.
In the end, you’ll have to ask him “Well, did you change your mind?”, and whether he answers you “yes or no” versus “I cancelled my subscription” or “I did not cancel my subscription” comes out to the same thing.
When Alcor was fact checking my article titled Cryonics and the Singularity (page 21) for their magazine they said they needed some public source for everyone I listed as a member of Alcor. They made me delete reference to one member because my only source was that he had told me of his membership (and had given me permission to disclose it).
Obviously a private enterprise won’t publicly disclose the subscription status of its members.
Not so obvious to me. CH could write to Alcor/CI explaining what he’s done, and tell them he’s happy for them to disclose his subscription status for the purpose of verification. (Even if they weren’t willing to follow through on that, CH could write a letter asking them to confirm in writing that he’s no longer a member, and then post a copy of the response. CH might conceivably fake such a written confirmation, but I find it very unlikely that CH would put words in someone else’s mouth over their faked signature to save $500.)
Obviously a private enterprise won’t publicly disclose the subscription status of its members.
He can publicly state whatever he wants regarding whether he changed his mind or not, no matter what he actually did. He can publicly state whatever he wants regarding whether he actually cancelled his subscription, no matter what he actually did.
If you assume OP wouldn’t actually publicly lie (but still be subject to motivated cognition, as you said in the grandparent), then my previous comment is exactly right. You don’t avoid any motivated cognition by adding an action which is still contingent on the problematic “change your mind” part.
In the end, you’ll have to ask him “Well, did you change your mind?”, and whether he answers you “yes or no” versus “I cancelled my subscription” or “I did not cancel my subscription” comes out to the same thing.
When Alcor was fact checking my article titled Cryonics and the Singularity (page 21) for their magazine they said they needed some public source for everyone I listed as a member of Alcor. They made me delete reference to one member because my only source was that he had told me of his membership (and had given me permission to disclose it).
Good article, you should repost it as a discussion topic or in the open thread.
Not so obvious to me. CH could write to Alcor/CI explaining what he’s done, and tell them he’s happy for them to disclose his subscription status for the purpose of verification. (Even if they weren’t willing to follow through on that, CH could write a letter asking them to confirm in writing that he’s no longer a member, and then post a copy of the response. CH might conceivably fake such a written confirmation, but I find it very unlikely that CH would put words in someone else’s mouth over their faked signature to save $500.)