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Culture War Roundup for the week of July 24, 2023

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Oh, absolutely. Speaking Truth to Power is no longer fashionable - it's illegal and demonized. As @official_techsupport mentioned elsewhere, the fashion is now to speak Power to Truth.

How could you say something so controversial, yet so brave?

“Speaking truth to power” became a cultural touchstone precisely because it was always demonized. It is social technology, and like any technology, there is an immense hindsight bias. Of course firms which implemented Stop Work Authority outperformed those which didn’t. Of course armies which lost turned out to be full of yes-men. Winning ideas are oh so obvious in hindsight.

As a corollary, no one* tries to “speak power to truth.” It is unfashionable, and to most Americans, signals something akin to a cult.

Curiously, cults continue to exist. Overbearing workplaces were never eliminated. People kept doing things they knew were wrong untrue, because social incentives are a helluva drug. This was true for every decade which could later be praised as the peak of freedom.

What do you think is so special about this one?


* Yeah, yeah. I’m sure there’s at least one countersignaling contrarian who disagrees. And they’re probably on this board.

As a corollary, no one* tries to “speak power to truth.” It is unfashionable, and to most Americans, signals something akin to a cult.

I think you can make a compelling case that the suppression and treatment of HBD et al as a field constitutes speaking power to truth. HBD theories aren't suppressed because they're wrong - rather, they would not need to be suppressed if they were wrong.

Is it really more likely that academics believe HBD but resolve to fight it anyway? I think genuine disbelief is more parsimonious. That would include feeling motivated not to look too closely.

Is it really more likely that academics believe HBD but resolve to fight it anyway?

Yeah, when surveyed anonymously only about 15-20% believe that there's no genetic component in the Black-White achievement gap in the US.

http://lepo.it.da.ut.ee/~spihlap/snyderman@rothman.pdf - 1987 survey.

https://sci-hub.st/https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0160289619301886 - 2020 survey.

This contrasts with practically nobody saying this in public and consequently the public (exemplified by you here) believing that this reflects on the actual privately held beliefs of scientists.

And, specifically, if you want to see how an example of speaking power to truth looks like in this context, https://www.chronicle.com/article/racial-pseudoscience-on-the-faculty (paywall bypass: https://archive.li/ZxVYk)

If you genuinely believe X -- as in, all the evidence you've seen points towards X, you have no inkling that X might be false, you would be willing to bet at strong odds that X is true -- then there may not be any motivation to look any more closely but there certainly isn't any motivation to avoid looking closely -- because what's the worst that can happen? You find more evidence that you're right?

In order to know that you need to be motivated to not look to closely, you need to know that there's at least a significant chance of learning that a thing you want to be true is not true. And that means you know that you already know there's at least a significant chance of this thing not being true. At this point, if you act as if you "believe" X with any confidence then you are merely acting.

Genuine (dis)belief and motivated reasoning do not fit together.

Sure there is. You’ve got a limited amount of time on this earth, and aren’t obligated to spend it debating people you think are trolls or at least cranks. The worst that can happen is you waste your time, feel stupider for having engaged, or encourage your opponents. It’s also possible to tar yourself as an outsider, because tribalism isn’t always (ever?) open-minded.

There is some level of belief where it becomes rational to write off the rest as a rounding error, rather than spend time on it. There is a lesser level at which most people start to do this!

If I think something is 99% likely to be true, and I don’t want to spend time debating heretics, it’s still fair to say that I believe that thing.

You’ve got a limited amount of time on this earth, and aren’t obligated to spend it debating people you think are trolls or at least cranks. [...] There is some level of belief where it becomes rational to write off the rest as a rounding error, rather than spend time on it.

This is justification for not having any motivation to talk to them. It is not motivation to avoid looking more closely at your beliefs.

I believe the earth is round. I could be wrong, but I find it sufficiently unlikely that I'm going to learn anything worthwhile from the average flat earther that I'm not really interested in debating them. However, if I ever find myself wanting to debate them, and also feeling like I need to avoid doing that, then that's a sign that something about what I claim to believe is wrong.

Having watched a couple actual debates on this topic, it's often that the "round earther" has no idea how to justify their (correct, IMO) beliefs, and instead of honestly admitting that they are essentially taking people's words for it, are trying to pretend that they actually understand things more than they do. That cognitive dissonance doesn't necessarily mean you're wrong on the object of contention, but it's a pretty good bet that you're wrong somewhere (perhaps in how confident and justified you actually are), and this sign marks the trailhead.

feel stupider for having engaged, or encourage your opponents.

These are both signs that your story isn't adding up. Why did you feel tempted to do something stupid? What roped you in?

Why would your opponent leave feeling "encouraged" rather than humiliated? If you actually know the topic so well, and their beliefs so dumb, shouldn't you be able to address their points so well that they are the ones that leave feeling dumb?

If I think something is 99% likely to be true, and I don’t want to spend time debating heretics, it’s still fair to say that I believe that thing.

That's 99% fair. And that 1% lie can be an acceptable rounding error.

But that 1% lie can also be a part of a much bigger lie to avoid having to deal with the fact that it's a hell of a lot more than 1% motivated and likely to be false.

Any time you find yourself actively wanting to avoid engagement (and not simply lacking motivation to engage), you're actively up against the part of your belief which isn't genuine. Even if it's only 1%, it's proven that it's not small enough to be irrelevant. And if it's making itself relevant, that's good evidence that it isn't really as small as you might like to believe.

they would not need to be suppressed if they were wrong.

This isn't true.

For instance, the British in India faced a rumor that cartridges were greased with pig and cow fat, which helped start an uprising. It was wrong, but it needed to be suppressed.