But the story Mason’s telling (about stats like those) is the US valuing risk/adventure less. That's what I'm expressing skepticism about, relative to other factors, like wage stagnation, rising education & health care costs, political polarization, immigration policy, etc.
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Replying to @juliagalef @tylercowen
I don't think these elements are unrelated. I actually suspect that rapidly increasing education costs are driving the culture shift, though I'm not confident about that!
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Replying to @webdevMason @tylercowen
Sure, but the question we're disagreeing about is whether there is a node in the causal graph titled "lower value on adventure/risk" that has an arrow pointing from it to some important outcome measures in the American economy/society
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In my model, there (probably) isn't -- so if increased education costs affect important outcomes in society, it isn't via a "lower value on adventure/risk" intermediate node
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... but one thing that could make me update towards your model is if Openness to Experience has gone down over time in the US. I don't actually know the answer to that. But maybe a personality researcher like
@hardsci does?1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes -
Depending on the meaning of risk-taking it may be more in the extraversion domain (sensation-seeking, boldness, impulsiveness, etc.). There's one study I know of showing later generations have gone *up* in extraversion - but I'm not sure I put a ton of stock in that study
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Replying to @hardsci @juliagalef and
Cohort effects on personality are much debated. I'm generally more persuaded by studies that show lots of them are null or very small, e.g. http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1745691609356789 … But tagging @NotoriousMBD
@BrentWRoberts who may be able to weigh in1 reply 1 retweet 4 likes -
Replying to @hardsci @juliagalef and
Having lived through a few generations now and having seen every younger one called out by old"er" folk usually based on anecdote rather than data, I'm beginning to see cohort arguments as intellectual amuse-bouches--puffs of indefensible statements that everyone likes...
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Replying to @BrentWRoberts @hardsci and
This is definitely the headline, but coming from one of those younger gens myself, *my anecdotal experience* is a lot more optimism for my generation coming from elders than the youth! I think "crotchety old folks disappointed with the kids" may itself be the big cultural myth.
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Replying to @webdevMason @BrentWRoberts and
The problem with anecdotal experience is that it almost always conflates aging with generations - like comparing old folks now to young folks now. And when it's not, it is vulnerable to memory biases instead (old folks remembering what they think they were like decades ago)
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This is relevant for answering the question "are the kids all right?" but not "do the elders currently think the kids are all right?"
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