I don’t see how he has encouraged people to pay attention to forecasting track records. People who have encouraged that norm make public bets or go on public forecasting platforms and make predictions about questions that can resolve in the short term. Bryan Caplan does this; I think greg Lewis and David Manheim are superforecasters.
I thought the upshot of this piece and the Jotto post was that Yudkowsky is in fact very dismissive of people who make public forecasts. “I consider naming particular years to be a cognitively harmful sort of activity; I have refrained from trying to translate my brain’s native intuitions about this into probabilities, for fear that my verbalized probabilities will be stupider than my intuitions if I try to put weight on them.” This seems like the opposite of encouraging people to pay attention to forecasting but is rather dismissing the whole enterprise of forecasting.
I don’t see how he has encouraged people to pay attention to forecasting track records. People who have encouraged that norm make public bets or go on public forecasting platforms and make predictions about questions that can resolve in the short term. Bryan Caplan does this; I think greg Lewis and David Manheim are superforecasters.
I thought the upshot of this piece and the Jotto post was that Yudkowsky is in fact very dismissive of people who make public forecasts. “I consider naming particular years to be a cognitively harmful sort of activity; I have refrained from trying to translate my brain’s native intuitions about this into probabilities, for fear that my verbalized probabilities will be stupider than my intuitions if I try to put weight on them.” This seems like the opposite of encouraging people to pay attention to forecasting but is rather dismissing the whole enterprise of forecasting.