Hence TakeOnIt, a database of expert opinions. Over the last few hours I’ve peen entering in all the expert opinions on cryonics that people have been posting links to:
My point is that the same infrastructure can be used to capture any debate, whether its the current cryonics debate or other various debates in the past. The good thing about having a database of expert opinions is it makes questions like the one you asked easier.
Infrastructure is really not anything like the limiting factor. I’d donate pencils and paper too if that would help, but it won’t. Beware overrating the stone in stone soup.
Hence TakeOnIt, a database of expert opinions. Over the last few hours I’ve peen entering in all the expert opinions on cryonics that people have been posting links to:
Cryonics debate: http://www.takeonit.com/question/318.aspx
FYI—Robin Hanson’s opinions on TakeOnIt: http://www.takeonit.com/expert/656.aspx
Sorry, that’s just not the same thing at all.
My point is that the same infrastructure can be used to capture any debate, whether its the current cryonics debate or other various debates in the past. The good thing about having a database of expert opinions is it makes questions like the one you asked easier.
Infrastructure is really not anything like the limiting factor. I’d donate pencils and paper too if that would help, but it won’t. Beware overrating the stone in stone soup.
It’s a start. If it became popular and scaled up, it would provide that dataset.
I misread the last line, and briefly imagined you had a page for “Is TakeOnIt a useful resource?”.