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Friday Fun Thread for February 3, 2023

Be advised: this thread is not for serious in-depth discussion of weighty topics (we have a link for that), this thread is not for anything Culture War related. This thread is for Fun. You got jokes? Share 'em. You got silly questions? Ask 'em.

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If I were a perfect bayesian updater then I could consider all the relevant factors, weigh hypotheses, etc. and update my beliefs by 0.01% towards believing that women dream more than men

I don't like 'bayesian thinking' as an idea (and think 'thinking's bayesianness is overstated in rationalism). It's entirely possible to see something, and then say 'huh, that could be true, and it'd be interesting if it was', and then spend time evaluating how plausible it is / looking for more evidence for it without that corresponding to a probability. You can be smart enough to consider unlikely hypotheses without it contaminating your probabilities. And this still adds up to 'the results haven't told me anything new of meaning' for me anyway.

Even if these surveys really were 'coloring your beliefs', I think the best move would be to read so many of them that you viscerally notice the contradictions and absurdity, and then stop having them color your beliefs. Otherwise, all sorts of random things people say will 'color your beliefs', even if you don't seek them out.

It's entirely possible to see something, and then say 'huh, that could be true, and it'd be interesting if it was', and then spend time evaluating how plausible it is / looking for more evidence for it without that corresponding to a probability.

Yeah, and this is pretty much what I'm referring to when I say it's not worth the time. The responses in the survey are of so little value to me, and so unlikely to be related to the truth, that I don't want to spend any cognitive energy investigating them. I'd spend more time/energy on them if I had more, the data seemed more valuable, or the conclusions lined up in interesting ways with things I already believed.

I don't like 'bayesian thinking' as an idea (and think 'thinking's bayesianness is overstated in rationalism).

Mostly agreed here--it's one of many useful cognitive tools, nothing more. I like it more as a means of informing my normal thinking process than as an actual way to think.

Even if these surveys really were 'coloring your beliefs', I think the best move would be to read so many of them that you viscerally notice the contradictions and absurdity, and then stop having them color your beliefs.

I already do, and I did scan through this latest survey, I just don't think its results should rise to the level of "this could be true and it would be interesting if it was." Investigating these hypotheses takes cognitive energy which could be spent on more worthwhile hypotheses. That's what I mean when I say we should ignore the results. Surely most of them are true but that alone doesn't give the study any value; it has to actually be insightful somehow.

I mostly agree - I just think it's because of the surveyness of it, as opposed to the selection-biasedness of it. If this chaos survey had a representative sample, that wouldn't really change my estimate of it. I think reading its results is significantly less useful than reading reddit.com/r/all/new if you want to learn random facts or patterns about people (although mostly because I think the latter is somewhat useful).