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by fc417fc802
370 days ago
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> it overlooks the fact that what triumphs in the long run is simply reproductive fitness. Why can't that observation be taken into account? Isn't the entire point of the approach accounting for all inputs to the extent possible? I think you are making invalid assumptions about the motivations or goals or internal state or etc of the actors which you are then conflating with the approach itself. That there are certain conditions under which the approach is not an optimal strategy does not imply that it is never competitive under any. The observation is then that rationalism requires certain prerequisites before it can reliably out compete other approaches. That seems reasonable enough when you consider that a fruit fly is unlikely to be able to successfully employ higher level reasoning as a survival strategy. |
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Of course it can be. I'm saying that AFAICT it generally isn't.
> rationalism requires certain prerequisites before it can reliably out compete other approaches
Yes. And one of those, IMHO, is explicit recognition that rationalism does not triumph simply because it is rational, and coming up with strategies to compensate. But the rationalist community seems too hung up on things like malicious AI and Roko's basilisk to put much effort into that.