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And this is what Alex had to say about it to which you made no reply whatsoever: Obviously I can't be held accountable for other people's opinions in the comments. This is not a standard Scott would pass either, so the fact that it is being raised here feels like isolated demands for rigor.

Alexandros explicitly endorsed ("Liked by Alexandros Marinos") many of the disparaging comments I was talking about.

Cite a source for your claim.

I searched Google for "Scott Alexander wounds Rationalism!!!", and nothing came up.

It's the article I was responding to on Reddit, which I linked up above. The official title is "Scott Alexander corrects error: Ivermectin effective, rationalism wounded." In other words, according to Alexandros, Scott was so catastrophically negligent that he wounded Rationalism in its entirety. Combine this with the accusatory nature Alexandros' article, and it comes off like Alex wants to tarnish Scott's legitimacy beyond his Ivermectin take.

Does it appear that you can read the mind of Alex better than the rest of us? A far more plausible theory, if I were to engage in the same rhetoric, is that this community has a handful of members who hold Scott Alexander to be their darling, leader, or authority and thereby get upset if anyone fairly and squarely criticizes his opinions with valid points that cannot be refuted rationally.

If you're implying I'm a blind Scott fanboy then I categorically reject your assertion. Scott's just a smart guy who approaches a variety of topics from a rationalist perspective. Nothing more, nothing less. He's certainly capable of making mistakes, and the fact that he hosts a list of them is part of what makes him unique. He benefits from critiques like everyone else.

The issue with Alex he mixes good criticism, i.e. "here's where your analysis is wrong, and here's the stats to back it up", with bad criticism, i.e. "rationalism wounded" and other such nonsense attempting to draw meta-level conclusions on Scott's credibility from limited object-level events.