|
|
|
|
|
by nradov
2101 days ago
|
|
Could you give us some examples of misrepresented facts? I've only listened to a few episodes but most of the interview content seemed like stories and opinions rather than something represented as factual. How does one distinguish a pseudo-intellectual from a real intellectual? |
|
> How does one distinguish a pseudo-intellectual from a real intellectual?
Well, that's certainly not something I'm qualified to answer. However, I was reading "Thinking Fast and Slow" recently and one of the heuristics for identifying if there can be real expertise formed in a subject or not is if it has regularity. IE, you can't have expertise if the outputs of some process are dominated by chance. I'd start there.
The problem is people who use cargo cult science as a selling point for their particular ideas which are usually political in nature or maybe have to do with startups or the stock market. Things that if they were a truly decided science, we wouldn't be arguing over in the first place. They take bad results with tiny sample sizes and pawn them off as fact and then because "facts don't care about your feelings" they feel justified calling anybody that doesn't believe in whatever it is they're selling an idiot.
[1] https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/9kv9qd/the-joe-rogan-expe...