Person A says “Based on my 20 years of experience in industry X, it seems to me that Y”. Persons B, C, D, and E all take the mike and say “IAWYC, and/but __”.
I imagine myself assuming B, C, D, and E have additional evidence. I imagine myself increasing my confidence in conclusion Y. Do you expect to respond differently in this case, SA, or do you expect to respond the way I would in this case but believe this case is unrepresentative?
It doesn’t seem at all clear to me that persons B through E have additional evidence, no, and I would not adjust my confidence on that basis (unless they then indicate some form of evidence in their later statement after the “IAWYC and/but”, of course).
However, I likely would increase my confidence in conclusion Y to some degree, depending on the statements these people made, because each person remarking on the conclusion without pointing out a catastrophic flaw in the reasoning is (weak) evidence to me that such a flaw does not, in fact, exist.
How about metoo or rockon?
These may not be quite the terms we want, but I’d bet that natural language already has a solution to both the phantom evidence/updating problem and avoiding jargon.
Person A says “Based on my 20 years of experience in industry X, it seems to me that Y”. Persons B, C, D, and E all take the mike and say “IAWYC, and/but __”.
I imagine myself assuming B, C, D, and E have additional evidence. I imagine myself increasing my confidence in conclusion Y. Do you expect to respond differently in this case, SA, or do you expect to respond the way I would in this case but believe this case is unrepresentative?
It doesn’t seem at all clear to me that persons B through E have additional evidence, no, and I would not adjust my confidence on that basis (unless they then indicate some form of evidence in their later statement after the “IAWYC and/but”, of course).
However, I likely would increase my confidence in conclusion Y to some degree, depending on the statements these people made, because each person remarking on the conclusion without pointing out a catastrophic flaw in the reasoning is (weak) evidence to me that such a flaw does not, in fact, exist.
How about metoo or rockon? These may not be quite the terms we want, but I’d bet that natural language already has a solution to both the phantom evidence/updating problem and avoiding jargon.