No, you can never blame people for acting on what they know and believe. But I should have known better, I am often just not aware and self-aware enough to act on reasonable expectations of consequences instead of impulses and value-based intuitions.
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Replying to @Plinz
Doesn’t that go for all of us? I can’t think of a single human being incapable of learnings (or “mistakes” as they are commonly called).
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Replying to @geheimwerk
Yes, but it is always a step-by-step process. You only learn based on the current state mental, the resulting loss function, and the ability to find a new state that improves the model in the direction of a global optimum.
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Replying to @Plinz
Absolutely. Maybe I am naïve, but I would have hoped that people in the Chaos community have at least some degree of openness.
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Replying to @geheimwerk
They absolutely do, and I have received tremendous amounts of kindness and support. Probably even more than in any other community I am vaguely part of.
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Replying to @Plinz
Specifically: is there no way to clear up the misunderstandings that led to this serious gap in the Fahrplan? Your last talk was packed!
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Replying to @geheimwerk
The perception of undeserved appropriation of authority may actually have been part of the problem.
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Replying to @Plinz
Understandable. But in one of the Q&As you replied to someone questioning your authority on the subject, that it was your own perspective.
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Replying to @geheimwerk
The problem is that I have no intuitive concept of authority at all, because I don't have the cognitive sensorium to perceive it. I don't see myself or others as authorities, and fail to account for how others do it. To me we all just look like people talking about ideas.
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Replying to @Plinz
That touches the core issue with autism: people on the spectrum tend not to perceive parts of “social reality” (Lisa Feldman Barrett).
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Yes, and neurotypicals tend be unable to see that social construction is not reality. I honestly don't know which inferential distance to ground truth is larger and harder to cross!
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Replying to @Plinz
There is some degree of “willful blindness” (Margaret Heffernan) involved. Harari argues that this setup is required for mass cooperation.
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