Just a small, quick, bit of review. Does this thing make logical sense? Does it smell of any logical fallacies? What are the priors, or assumptions, that the argument is making?
I am not a fan of Scott Alexander, but he does at least give a fair amount of thought to his arguments and conclusions. However that doesn't mean much if the premise is flawed or his priors are miss calibrated. This goes for anyone. Just because the person you're looking up to has well reasoned arguments doesn't mean they're correct.
Aquinas started from the position that god exists and went from there. And while his arguments are really well reasoned and logical, they only make sense if you accept his priors.
Any given argument makes sense if your priors start in the right place for them. Euclidian Geometry works great, but if you throw out/modify the parallel postulate you can get wildly different answers for what makes sense. You can craft crazy mathematical worlds if you tweak ZFC, throw away the axiom of choice and some different stuff starts to happen.
Anyways, I hope you stop glazing scott, take everything you read with a grain of salt, and think for yourself.
I disagree, at least sometimes.
From some priors, you can logically and correctly reason to conclusions that are obviously wrong. (The most blatant way is when the conclusion contradicts the priors.)
Realizing that is a very valuable skill, and the more intelligent and logical you are, the more valuable it is. It saves you from the "my logic is right, so I have to believe the conclusion" trap. No, you don't have to believe the conclusion; keep some common sense in your toolkit.
PaulHoule•7h ago
gsf_emergency_2•34m ago