It could also be randomized.   Sure, there would still be some baby-obsessed 
rich people that would find ways to game the system, or just tolerate the 
costs, but I don’t think that wouldn’t significantly impact the effectiveness 
of the policy.

From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Eric Charles
Sent: Sunday, October 11, 2020 9:18 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] deductive fidelity (was Re: ideas are lies)

Indeed!

Modern liberals don't usually think obvious eugenics is ok... so I wasn't going 
to saddle uǝlƃ with that one... but it certainly is another option.



On Sun, Oct 11, 2020 at 11:48 AM Marcus Daniels 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Disincentivize reproduction, you didn’t mention that option.


On Oct 11, 2020, at 8:37 AM, Eric Charles 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Much delayed reply....

I'm not sure I'm overly obsessed with deduction. If anything, I probably think 
formal logic is overrated. In its place I prefer a rough notion of coherence. 
For example, let's say you had asked to evaluate the following argument:

  *   Two plus five times ten is an even number and is greater than 100.
  *   Trump hasn't started a war, which makes him the greatest president ever.
  *   If the Twin Towers had been built with wooden-high-rise 
technology<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GvHx_NS9wWw> they would have held up 
longer, allowing more people to escape, which means the Bush conspiracy started 
in the early 1970s, because why else would steel have been used?
  *   And that's why I conclude that everyone should have a front yard garden.
In the face of that, I would say that I agree more people should have front 
yard gardens, so the thrust of the conclusion seems ok. But also: 1) "Everyone" 
seems ok if we acknowledge it's hyperbole, but for sure not literally everyone. 
2) Each sentence before the conclusion is a weird mix of stuff that is right 
and wrong, and the transitions make no sense, and put together as a whole it 
isn't any better. 3) So, if you are asking what I think of the argument, then 
the answer I am going to tell you "it's crap."
   ---   ----   ----  ----     ----
"But what about the state dependencies part?", you ask. Which is good, because 
I still assert that is the much more interesting thing to discuss.

You claim that libertarianism is "at odds with reality" because human activity 
has path dependence and historicity. I would say that libertarianism is not at 
odds with that reality, it is at peace with it. Let's go with a concrete 
example - concrete for me, at least, because I dealt with directly for about 6 
years.


  *   Around 150 years ago a bunch of young adult's great-great-great-great 
grandparents decided to move from more rural parts of Appliacia to Altoona 
Pennsylvania, because it was a thriving train town and they didn't want to 
"waste their lives" milking goats like their parents had (while others stayed 
and took over the goat farms).
  *   For 3 or 4 generations the families were solidly middle class laborers in 
the locomotive industry, and hardly anyone left Altoona (but some did).
  *   By the 1930's the train jobs had finally dried up for good, and the 
modest fortunes fell (unless key family members had shifted to other jobs 
already).
  *   Nevertheless, the families decided to stay in Altoona (except the ones 
that didn't).
  *   Let's say that your father ended up a trucker driver, bossed around by a 
guy with a Penn State business degree. In fact, every one of your father's 
friends didn't have a degree, and spent most of their lives in a job where they 
were bossed around by someone who had a degree and made at least double what 
the workers made. So your dad and all of his friends told you that for sure you 
were going to college, because that was the golden ticket.
  *   Most (most) of your friends were told the same thing, and most (most) who 
were told that did go to college.
  *   Of the friends that headed that advice, most (most) ended up at the 
glorious Penn State Altoona, because you grew up hearing what a great college 
it was, and you could save money by living at home while you go there (i.e., by 
historic accident, it is the close). And you and your friends picked a wide 
variety of degrees, influenced by all sorts of path dependencies. And, of 
course, you can graduate with good grades from Penn State Altoona without 
really learning much, so for the vast majority of students you can't even make 
an "education for education's sake" argument (although a small number in every 
graduating class did manage to get a good education).
  *   And when you graduated you found out that the local area generally 
doesn't have many jobs (something that would have been obvious at any time in 
your life had you chosen to look, but you didn't). Worse, even the few jobs 
that are around aren't paying top dollar for theater or psychology majors. And 
even for your two friends who picked business and engineering, respectively, 
while there are some prospects, they aren't nearly as glorious as your parents 
expected them to be, because unlike when your parents were kids, the area is 
now flooded with people who have 4-year college degrees.
  *   And now you and your parents are $120K in debt (because they co-signed), 
and you need to decide whether to leave the Altoona region, where you can draw 
upon the support that exists by the historicity of 7 generations of your 
extended family staying put, and which you have never been more than 50 miles 
from in your whole life, in order to gamble for a better job and life 
elsewhere, or whether to stay in Altoona and take a job you could have had 
straight out of high school and be in crippling debt for your entire "young 
adult" life.
  *   And 70% of the kids from your elementary school are in basically the same 
situation, which is 60% of the grandkids of the last prosperous generation of 
city residents, which is 40% of the great-great-great-great grand kids of those 
who moved to Altoona in the 1880s.
  *   And out of all the choices that exist across all people in the country, 
by the time you are in your 30s, only 0.001% of those choices are available to 
you.
  *   And a decent chunk of the constraints on your choices were predictable 
based on your great-great-great-great grandfather's decision to leave the goat 
farm for Altoona.
There is nothing about any of the details in that example that is "at odds" 
with libertarianism. Because nothing about that is at odds with libertarianism, 
nothing about it is evidence that libertarianism is "false". We can only start 
to touch upon libertarianism when we try to figure out what to do about the bad 
situation those people find themselves in. Generally speaking, libertarianism 
is the position that the dilemma described is not a problem the government 
(particularly not the federal government) should be working to solve. It isn't 
kids starving to death because their families are destitute, it isn't fascism 
threatening to take over Europe, it is a large number of young adults finding 
themselves in a frustrating situation due to path-dependencies, historicity, 
and their own choices.

But we COULD try to fix it using federal intervention I suppose. What kind of 
policies could we have put in place to provide more options? If I was thinking 
about policies that had a serious chance of being effective, they would be 
things like this:

  *   We could have made your college free. That would relieve you of the 
crippling debt, but also make college attendance even easier such that even 
more people in the area who had a degree in hand would be doing jobs they 
didn't need degrees for (with the associated personal frustration, and the 
associated family strife because their truck-driver parents don't understand 
how that is possible). It also wouldn't fix the problem that most of your 
friends got through college not knowing much more than they did out of high 
school. But the lack of debt would be better, in some important sense, for you.
  *   We could federally mandate that colleges be more rigorous (by making more 
hard-core use of the existing college-accreditation system). If we did that, 
several of your currently "college educated" friends wouldn't have gotten in, 
and several of those who got in wouldn't have graduated, but also a greater 
number of your friends would have stepped up to the challenge and gained from 
the experience, at least education-wise. Their lack of job prospects would 
remain the same (unless they were willing to leave the area).
  *   We could have required an agreement that you would leave the area in 
pursuit of work, as a condition for college attendance.
  *   If the presence of family support is really as crucial as it seems, we 
could pass a rule that mandates that a minimum of 50% of each generation move 
away from the Altoona region, so your support network would be spread out more.
  *   We could do none of that and just go the Nick-Thompson route of 
randomizing babies at birth throughout the nation. Under that plan we would 
still have the same number of people facing the exact same constraints, but it 
would be the result of someone else's great-great-great-great grandfather's 
decision. I'm not sure how that helps anything, but several people on FRIAM 
seems to think it does.
  *   We could use federal funds to ensure that no industries fail, in which 
case Altoona could still have a thriving coal-locomotive-repair industry, 
providing the same jobs the great-great-great-great grandparents were happy to 
have.
  *   We could go the Soviet Russia route of guaranteeing all people (except 
the ruling oligarchs) get the same pay no matter what they do.
  *   We could also limit people's choices of degrees to things wise members of 
a federal committee deem useful, and then have a wise bureaucratic system that 
informs people which job they will be doing post-graduation, no matter where in 
the country the job is or who they would be working for. And we could design 
such a system to maximize the income-based opportunities available to people on 
average.
Are any of those the type of federal regulation you are thinking of?  If not, 
what government-run programs would you suggest we implement in order to fix 
this very real predicament faced by a large number of 5th, 6th, and 7th 
generation Altoonans?

Out of all of those, I would be most in favor of stepping up the college 
accreditation rigour. Un-accredited colleges could still exist, but would have 
to make that reality clear in their promotional material, and they wouldn't be 
eligible for federally-backed student loans.

Eric C




On Tue, Sep 29, 2020 at 10:31 AM uǝlƃ ↙↙↙ 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Well, the reason I titled the post "ideas are lies" was in part due to our 
faith in deduction. If only we could hammer out the credibility of each 
sentence, we could automatically transform one truth into another truth. But we 
cannot. So, your radical skepticism regarding each sentence *facilitates* 
motivated reasoning. You can doubt the conclusion solely because you hold up 
deduction as ideal.

But that's not how humans work. Human deduction is a dangerous idea. And it's 
just as much a lie as the free market or the orthogonality of social systems. 
Deduction is nicely computational. And many of us would love to live in a 
computational Utopia.

Instead, humans are driven by consequence, constraint solving, as opposed to 
deduction. We arbitrarily (not randomly) *sample* the spaces in which we find 
ourselves. In this context, too, the assumptions of libertarianism are at odds 
with reality because libertarianism assumes a well-behaved *space* for us to 
explore. It's not a matter of individual free will. It's a matter of path 
dependence and historicity. Joe Sixpack's available space, like everyone 
else's, was bound by constraints before he ever *had* free will in the first 
place. Yes, the choices he makes at age 30 constrain/guide the possible choices 
he can make at age 50. But similarly, the choices he makes at age 0.1 
constrain/guide the choices he can make at age 30.

Most importantly for libertarianism's falsity, the choices Joe Sixpack can make 
at age 0.1 are constrained/guided by choices made by those in his various 
communities (geographic, informational, etc.), 30 years before Joe was ever 
born. Socialist systems like anarcho-syndicalism attempt to *design* society to 
optimize for freedom and competence. Individualist systems like libertarianism 
abdicate any responsibility to design society and then blame the victim for not 
solving problems it never had the chance to solve.

If you want individuals to spend less time in space X, then *minimize* the size 
of space X. Don't blame the individuals born inside space X for their failure 
to escape that space. Buck up and start *designing* the world. Even Hayek would 
advocate that *where* you know how to do it, then do it. That's what justified 
his naive arguments that where you *don't* know how to do it, don't do it.

Of course, because we only have 1 world, we have limited protocols by which to 
experiment. And most experiments are unethical. So we have to a) be 
manipulationist/perturbationist and b) quickly admit mistakes and re-manipulate 
when our actions cause more pain. Or we can simply plunge our heads in the 
sand, rationalizing our luck with post-hoc delusions about our own competence 
and "well-made decisions" while the unlucky riffraff suffer in droves around us.


On 9/28/20 5:33 PM, Eric Charles wrote:
> To Glen's point.... it's hard to evaluate the overall argument of a piece 
> when almost every factual claim seems factually wrong, and a decent chunk of 
> those claims are in my area of ostensible expertise... The entire 
> "evolutionary psychology" part is just bunk...  I've also had enough training 
> in economics, anthropology, philosophy, and other areas to suspect that much 
> of the coverage of that is bunk..... so even if I could wade through enough 
> to judge the conclusion, there is definitely no world in which I agree with 
> the argument. When I say I'm suspicious of most sentences, that includes the 
> transition sentences that create "the narrative." He says "X. And X therefore 
> Y. So Y, and if Y we should definitely Z", and I not only think X is wrong, 
> but also that even if X were true it would /not /necessitate Y; and even if Y 
> was necessitated, that wouldn't mean we should Z.
> <mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
>
> I think the comment about Libertarians assuming decoupling is /much /more 
> interesting than all points in the original article put together. Well worth 
> breaking out into a different thread, level interesting. That would be a way, 
> way better discussion.... in contrast with trying to figure out what it would 
> mean for evolution (?) to favor (?) a 
> massive-fiction-masquerading-as-a-Machiavellian-lie that either originated in 
> the 1770s or in the late 1940s (unclear which).
>
> You said: Libertarians aren't "even questioning why Joe Sixpack would prefer 
> to watch The Voice and drink Budweiser over inventing mouse traps in his 
> basement, after having spent the last 8 hours being ordered around by someone 
> half his age in a flourescent lit cubicle."
>
> And, like, yeah, clearly those are related. But I would phrase the issue 
> slightly differently. I would say that one fundamental issue with Libertarian 
> thinking is that it assumes something akin to old fashioned "free will." It 
> would point out that SOME people do work on the mouse traps, and that while 
> watching The Voice and drinking Budweiser might be an understandable response 
> to cubicle drudgery, it is also "a choice the person makes." Some 
> libertarians will go all abstract in their claims about what someone could or 
> could not choose to do, that's very true. However, more grounded ones are 
> referencing actual people doing the things they are talking about, to push 
> back against claims that such behavior is somehow impossible.
>
> It is quite possible that such a claim is functionally identical to 
> acknowledging "dependencies" or "coupling", we'd have to dive in deeper for 
> me to figure that out. Maybe "free will" isn't the issue as much as some 
> notion of "self-directedness." We all know that some percentage of poor 
> people get out of poverty. A larger percentage don't. Out of those who don't, 
> we have a lot who seem to be perennially making bad choices, which isn't very 
> interesting in the context of this discussion (but could be in the context of 
> other discussions). More interestingly, we also know that some percentage of 
> poor people seem to make similar decisions to those who get out of poverty, 
> but the dice never quite roll in their favor. So there is coupling, and there 
> are probabilistic outcomes, and all that stuff. But even after acknowledging 
> all that, the question remains to what extent the choices made by the 
> individuals in question affect their outcomes.
>
> And, of course, none of that is closely related to whether the cost of tree 
> trimming is made cheaper by there being more than one person offering such 
> services (a basic free market issue), nor whether or not a wealthy baron of 
> industry should support random moocher relatives in luxury when it doesn't 
> even make him happy to do so (a classic Rand example)

--
↙↙↙ uǝlƃ

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