| Sometimes I wonder if we should try building a news site optimised for seeing the effect of appeals to authority. To write an article for the site, we would need to: 1. Write a headline with no mentions of any experts. 2. Write another headline mentioning at least one expert in it. 3. Write the content without mentioning any experts. 4. Write the content and sprinkle names of experts as needed. 5. Publish. Now, the reader would then: 1. Be exposed to the no-experts version of the article - both headline and content. 2. Once finished, the reader will be prompted to write their thoughts on the article. 3. Click “Reveal”. 4. The reader would then skim or read the whole article again, but this time it would mention the experts. 5. Prompt the reader to evaluate how their thoughts had changed after reading the expert version of the article. I’m so gullible, seeing experts in anything especially when names of prestigious institutions or titles are tacked onto them, tend to shut down the reasoning part of my brain altogether. Bear in mind, the site I proposed is not a place to police how articles should be written; rather, it’s all about increasing its readers’ awareness on how much mentions of an authority can impact their initial reasoning and judgement and sometimes make them stop reasoning at all. My view is that mentions of an authority are useful for calibrating our judgements after we tried to reason on our own but not before that. And yeah, I have no opinion on the original post. Just like to go off on a tangent once in a while. |
The same goes for health advice but this time it's 99.9%+ - if you're not in the field you can just listen and hope you are good at estimating who is more credible or likely to do better research or more truthful claims. Trying to evaluate them yourself is a recipe for being wrong and creating your own bubble.
If the article says: random guy X says quantum computing is a scam because Y there is nothing I can take away from it because it's very easy to make Y both incorrect and plausible sounding to me. If I know it's Oxford physics professor who makes the claim I can learn that Y is at least serious enough reason to not be easily dismissed.
Appeal to authority is bad as an argument when people knowledgeable in the field try to debate a certain point. In other cases it's very useful to know who makes the claims and very often it's the only thing that gives the claims credibility.