This does not seem psychologically realistic. Humans aren’t built to arrive at conclusions through rational evaluation of multiple independent lines of evidence
That seems to have an implied ”… so every time I argue with a human, I should never assume that the human has more than one reason for something”. I hope you can see how that will go seriously wrong when the human actually does have more than one reason, and particularly on LW-style topics.
This is true, but ignores skeptical_lurker’s point that any civilization capable of resurrection is likely to be post-scarcity.
If the civilization is post-scarcity, then making money from TV rights to the first Pharaoh is not useful as an analogy; the future civilization never does one thing because it gets them more of something than another thing does.
That seems to have an implied ”… so every time I argue with a human, I should never assume that the human has more than one reason for something”.
Absolute claims are almost never correct. Replace the “never” in your statement with “usually not, especially when discussing politically charged, or better yet, weird-sounding topics” and you’ve got yourself a deal.
You’re refusing to address someone’s stated argument, and in fact, are saying something that is nonresponsive if he means what he is actually saying.
Yes, sometimes you have to do that. But making it your default behavior when addressing all people in the real world who don’t agree with you is a bad idea.
But making it your default behavior when addressing all people in the real world who don’t agree with you is a bad idea.
Who said anything about making it your default behavior? There’s a difference between “many” and “most”, and an even bigger difference between “many” and “all”.
That seems to have an implied ”… so every time I argue with a human, I should never assume that the human has more than one reason for something”. I hope you can see how that will go seriously wrong when the human actually does have more than one reason, and particularly on LW-style topics.
If the civilization is post-scarcity, then making money from TV rights to the first Pharaoh is not useful as an analogy; the future civilization never does one thing because it gets them more of something than another thing does.
Absolute claims are almost never correct. Replace the “never” in your statement with “usually not, especially when discussing politically charged, or better yet, weird-sounding topics” and you’ve got yourself a deal.
You’re refusing to address someone’s stated argument, and in fact, are saying something that is nonresponsive if he means what he is actually saying.
Yes, sometimes you have to do that. But making it your default behavior when addressing all people in the real world who don’t agree with you is a bad idea.
Who said anything about making it your default behavior? There’s a difference between “many” and “most”, and an even bigger difference between “many” and “all”.
Okay, change that statement to include the word “most”.
Making it the default behavior for when addressing most people who don’t agree with you is still a bad idea.