少点错误 2024年11月25日
Crosspost: Developing the middle ground on polarized topics
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本文探讨了在面对争议话题时,如何避免陷入简单化的二元对立,以及如何保持理性的思考和行动。作者指出,人们往往会将对事实的认知直接关联到特定的行动,忽略了中间地带的存在。文章以气候变化和智商等话题为例,说明了在讨论争议话题时,保持开放的心态,探索事实真相,而非急于得出结论的重要性。此外,作者也强调了在讨论过程中,要警惕将观点与不良行为关联起来的误区,并鼓励人们勇于表达自己的观点,同时反对将观点作为实施不道德行为的借口。

🤔 **避免二元对立,探索中间地带:** 作者认为,在许多争议话题上,人们容易陷入“是”或“否”的简单化思维,忽略了中间地带的存在。例如,讨论气候变化时,不应只局限于“否认”或“必须立即采取极端措施”,而是要探索各种可能性和应对策略。

⚠️ **警惕观点与不良行为的关联:** 文章指出,人们可能会将某些观点与不良行为关联起来,从而导致对持有该观点的人的误解和偏见。作者以智商话题为例,说明了即使有人认为智商很重要,也不代表他们必然会支持侵犯人权的行为。

🗣️ **鼓励理性表达,反对观点滥用:** 作者鼓励人们勇于表达自己的观点,但同时也强调要反对将观点作为实施不道德行为的借口。例如,即使有人认为自己智商较高,也不能以此为理由实施犯罪行为。

🤝 **重视中立观点,促进理性讨论:** 作者认为,在争议话题中,中立观点往往被忽视,而更多的是由立场鲜明的双方收集和呈现证据。鼓励更多的人关注争议话题,并以开放的心态探寻事实真相,有助于推动理性讨论,避免陷入极端立场。

🤔 **学习Kelsey Piper和Bryan Caplan的理性态度:** Kelsey Piper在讨论生育率问题时,强调了支持家庭的重要性,以及构建支持儿童成长的社区的重要性。Bryan Caplan则反对将智商作为实施不良行为的借口,呼吁人们保持基本的道德底线。

Published on November 25, 2024 2:39 PM GMT

Crossposted from Otherwise

 

I was once in a group discussion about whether wild animals might be having net negative lives. One person didn’t want to consider that possibility, essentially because “then people would want to kill all the wild animals.”

Hold on! You can evaluate the question of “What is life like for wild animals” without jumping to “And if they’re having bad lives, we should try to kill them all.” There’s a kind of tunnel vision here, as if having a belief about facts must necessarily channel you to only one action. 

If you want people to honestly consider “Is climate change real?” it matters a lot if the only options are “No” and “Yes, so you must stop using airplanes and clothes dryers,” or if there are other possible responses.

I’d like to see more scout mindset here, figuring out what the facts might be before jumping to policy conclusions.


On the other hand, I get why people are alarmed when they realize they’re interfacing with someone who holds a belief that’s associated with policies they find appalling.

Bryan Caplan on the kinds of people who want to discuss IQ:
“I’ve got to admit: My fellow IQ realists are, on average, a scary bunch.  People who vocally defend the power of IQ are vastly more likely than normal people to advocate extreme human rights violations.”

And people with beliefs that others find horrifying might not admit to the most unpopular of their beliefs.

So I can see why onlookers who see someone advocating idea X might say: “Sure, they only mentioned X, but people who support X often turn out to support Y and even Z. Read between the lines!” If someone voices “IQ is real and important,” you should have a higher prior that they might support human rights violations on that basis. This is especially true if you don’t know them and don’t have time to evaluate what they’ve said and written in the past.

Another approach is “Let’s not judge people guilty by association. There’s nothing inherently wrong with believing X. They didn’t say anything about Y or Z, or maybe they even argue against Y and Z.”

This can be a more useful approach when someone has an extensive history of public writing and speaking that indicates they’re not into human rights violations, etc.


The more polarized an idea is, the harder it will be to think clearly about it. Often for controversial belief X, the spread looks like

If you want to explore the facts on X, it’s especially hard because neutral people don’t research the topic. Much of the evidence is collected by people with strong feelings in one direction or the other. 

But I think there are often a fair number of people in that silent middle zone. 

I’d like to have more people saying “X is an important topic, and I want to form a clearer picture of it.” This might allow people to explore steps G, W, R, or no action at all, rather than only Y.

Kelsey Piper’s piece “Can we be actually normal about birthrates?” is an example of this:
“There’s something that feels ugly around proclamations about what the population or the birth rate “should” be — especially given the horrific history of mass sterilizations conducted in the name of “fixing” high birth rates for the sake of the world. . . .  

What I want is a cultural and policy conversation about how to support families that starts by addressing these problems, beginning with simple premises I think most people agree on: that having children can be awesome and a source of great joy and meaning in life, though it’s far from the only source of joy and meaning in life; that we could do a lot more to build communities in which children are supported, welcomed, and have meaningful independence; that people who don’t want kids shouldn’t have them but that people who do want kids should be supported in making that a priority.”

I also value it when people say “Hey, I believe X and firmly reject Y.” 

Caplan’s post on intelligence continues: 
“If someone says, ‘I’m more intelligent than other people, so it’s acceptable for me to murder them,’ the sensible response isn’t, ‘Intelligence is a myth.’ The sensible response is, ‘Are you mad?  That doesn’t justify murder.’
….here’s what I say to every IQ realist who forgets common decency: You embarrass me. You embarrass yourself.”


Exploring the middle zone, even privately, won’t be a good fit for everyone. It’s reasonable that a lot of people won’t want to spend their energy or their weirdness points on this. Declining to develop an opinion on whether dragons exist is often the option that lets you move ahead with your life and spend less time in internet arguments.

But I’m sad about that. And I appreciate it when people like Kelsey Piper and Bryan Caplan say “Are you mad?” to the people proposing awful things, and explore other ways forward.



Discuss

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争议话题 理性思考 中间地带 观点表达 道德底线
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