Maggie's FarmWe are a commune of inquiring, skeptical, politically centrist, capitalist, anglophile, traditionalist New England Yankee humans, humanoids, and animals with many interests beyond and above politics. Each of us has had a high-school education (or GED), but all had ADD so didn't pay attention very well, especially the dogs. Each one of us does "try my best to be just like I am," and none of us enjoys working for others, including for Maggie, from whom we receive neither a nickel nor a dime. Freedom from nags, cranks, government, do-gooders, control-freaks and idiots is all that we ask for. |
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Monday, October 20. 2008Groupthink: Normative and Informational ConformityThe article in Zombietime, The Left's Big Blunder, is about the famous Asch experiments on conformity.
I suppose the Dems' efforts to portray Obama as inevitable and wildly popular are an effort to exploit the conformist tendencies in people, but this seems rather usual in politics. However, the article offers a good depiction of how conformity can distort our thinking and cause us to doubt ourselves and our lyin' eyes. The desire to fit in and to be accepted is strong in all of us. It's important for survival, but we need to try to make room for thinking for ourselves too, based on our experience and not on received opinion. Wednesday, September 10. 2008Attribution Error, Freud, and Peter GayWe somehow lost the original of this post, with its comments. Sorry - If I see you run through a stop sign once, my tendency - or bias - is to assume that you are a jerk who does things like that all the time.
Posted by Dr. Joy Bliss
in Fallacies and Logic, Our Essays, Psychology, and Dr. Bliss
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20:30
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Sunday, August 24. 2008A re-post: The Risks of Action vs. Inaction, Part 2 of 3: Appendicitis, False Positives, False Negatives, and Type l and ll ErrorsJust as professional journals and newspapers are more interested in printing pieces that support hypotheses rather than papers with negative findings, so we all tend to spend more time discussing the risks of action rather than the risks of inaction. That seems to be human nature, but it ain't rational and, fortunately, people vary across a spectrum of activity/passivity. Passive people worry about the risks of action. Active people worry about the risks of inaction. I am more-or-less in the middle. To discuss that half-intelligently, though, I first need to review the notion of Type 1 and Type 2 errors, now that we have taken a look at the null hypothesis a couple of days ago. A Type 1 error, also known as False Positive, is the error of erroneously rejecting the null hypothesis. In other words, it supports a connection which does not really exist. A Type 2 error, or False Negative, is the error of wrongly accepting the null hypothesis. In other words, it says nothing is there, when it is, in fact, there. For example, a blood test which has a 10% False Positive rate will wrongly tell you that there is an abnormality 10% of the time. A blood test with a 10% False Negative rate will miss an abnormality 10% of the time. For another example, convicting an innocent person is a Type 1 error; letting a guilty person go free is a Type 2. Depending on the matter at hand, either sort of error could have worse consequences. A Type 1 error in a death penalty case is a grievous error. But sometimes you need Type 1 errors. My favorite example of a good Type 1 error is in the emergency treatment of appendicitis. Since medical diagnosis contains both art and luck as well as science, some error rate is inevitable unless you have the diseased organ in hand. But since a False Negative diagnosis would have dire consequences (ruptured appendix), it is necessary to do some unnecessary appendectomies on patients who might have appendicitis, but do not turn out to. In the case of emergency appendectomies: one study indicates that the Type 1 error rate is around 10%, with 18% False negatives. I would have guessed that the False Positives would be higher, and you could argue that there is room for them to go higher. The point is that, with appendicitis, you want to minimize your False Negatives by having more False Positive diagnoses - by being deliberately biased against the Null Hypothesis that there is nothing there, but without cutting open everyone with a bad stomach ache. Thus that is the opposite of what you want in a justice system, where the null hypothesis of innocence is presumed in order to minimize False Positives.
Posted by The Barrister
in Fallacies and Logic, Medical, Our Essays, Politics
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12:10
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Saturday, August 23. 2008Diagnostic Errors: A re-postDiagnostic errors remain the leading reason - or excuse - for medical malpractice lawsuits by the swarms of hungry sharks which parasitize American's fine physicians - the best physicians in the world. Kevin, MD. All the more reason for docs to be irrational - or rationally irrational - in spending your money (either yours directly, or the insurance company's money - which was your money). If you have a headache, I am going to order an MRI of your head which will cost you between $700-1100 in my area. I know darn well that you don't have a tumor, but I could be wrong 0.3% of the time. So I'll order the MRI, because you will want me to, and my law suit defensiveness will want me to. Still, I will know that it is poor medicine. Indeed, I know that your particular pattern of headache, and your exam shows it to be a Common Migraine, and not a tumor, not an aneurysm, not a stroke or subdural, etc. And I know that all sorts of guidelines have been constructed, such as these. Well, you can toss the guidelines for all I care. The Barrister's recent series on error (Part 1 - Fun with the Null Hypothesis, applies beautifully to modern medicine. There is almost no end to the amount of your money we can spend to try to reduce our False Negative rates - our Type 2 errors. And they will occur, regardless. It is very unpleasant to be sued. It damages a doctor's enjoyment of his art, it absorbs huge amounts of time and energy, and it damages his relationships with all of his patients. And, finally, it has nothing to do with his competence and everything to do with the greed and litigiousness of his patient. I pay 42,000/year for malpractice insurance as a GP, and I have never been sued. I know guys who pay 160,000. You are paying those bills.
Posted by The Old Doc
in Fallacies and Logic, Medical, Our Essays
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12:12
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Monday, August 11. 2008The Law of Unintended Consequences
Excellent example of that law re buybacks of old cars, at Marginal Revolution.
Friday, July 25. 2008Fallacies of the Day: Probabilities and Decision-making - and the Conjunction FallacyFrom Wiki:
Thus is the brain seduced by detail. All writers know this fact. Which works best: "Dick wore a hat." or "Dick wore a green felt hat with a pheasant-feather hatband." One of my favorite sites to visit, Overcoming Bias, wonderfully discusses When not to use probabilities. He says:
Those algorithms are "gut feelings." Often wrong, often accurate. There is one thing that I know for certain: the more time I have to think about how to hit a tennis ball, the more likely I am to blow the shot. He also says:
Friday, July 18. 2008Fallacy of the Week: Argument ex silentio and chirping cricketsAn argument ex silentio claims "You respond with silence, thus I am proven right." From Wiki:
Of course, there are many reasons for silence besides an inability to make a counterpoint, including a simple lack of interest in pursuing a line of discussion or, as I have often found myself doing in debates with Liberals, reverting to silence out of a feeling of futility. In the blog world, the common expression "crickets chirping" is a cute way of implying an ex silentio argument. Sometimes it's right, sometimes an error. Augean Stables has a pretty good example of this fallacy in a debate he is engaged in about the al Durah affair. Monday, May 19. 2008Fallacious thinking and Spencer's Law
Herbert Spencer was a giant of his time. His socio-political "law" is discussed at Cafe Hayek. You have the best, most modern, and most widely available medical care in the world? But it's terrible - because some few fall through the cracks! You have terrible storms, with wind and rain? Surely governments or the UN can fix that! Spencer's Law surely applies to many areas of life today. Sunday, May 18. 2008Fallacies: Logical Trick of the Week: SophistryThe technical definitions of solipcism and sophistry tend to elude my memory. I study them, and a month later they slip away. "Sophistry" is of course often used as a general insult towards arguments with which one might disagree, but that usage degrades the meaning. AVI did my work for me today, on sophistry. His handy practical definition: "Sophistry is a phrase so neat you can't see the loose end that would unravel it. It's flawless, but wrong." Sleight-of-mind. One of the examples he offers is: You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war. Hmm, wait a minute - why can't you do both? I'll offer this one: If the glove don't fit, you must acquit. Wait a minute - a glove gets to make the decision? One more: Heard from a New Zealand interviewer last week re global warming: It is? Futility is an essential part of the Kiwi national character? Thus sophistry is designed to defeat thought, not to provoke thought. Such assertions are designed to ward off that "Hey, wait a minute, does that make sense?" reaction. Always check the premises before discussion, even if they sound OK. Or especially if they sound OK. You can read AVI's piece here.
Posted by The Barrister
in Fallacies and Logic, Our Essays
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12:10
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Saturday, May 3. 2008The "dignity of plants" and the cruel barbarism of VegansWhen man ceases to worship God he does not worship nothing, but worships everything. Contrary to a widespread impression, G.K. Chesterton apparently never said that. Still, it's a fine statement, and relevant to the modern form of Paganism which views the lives of the unborn, ready-to-be-born, or born-damaged as insignificant, but the social lives of Goldfish - and now the souls of asparagus - as sacred. A quote from Smith at Weekly Standard: "What is clear, however, is that Switzerland's enshrining of "plant dignity" is a symptom of a cultural disease that has infected Western civilization, causing us to lose the ability to think critically and distinguish serious from frivolous ethical concerns. It also reflects the triumph of a radical anthropomorphism that views elements of the natural world as morally equivalent to people. Why is this happening? Our accelerating rejection of the Judeo-Christian world view, which upholds the unique dignity and moral worth of human beings, is driving us crazy. Once we knocked our species off its pedestal, it was only logical that we would come to see fauna and flora as entitled to rights." Insty has a hilarious video to dramatize the subject. Regular readers know that all of creation is precious to us here at Magggie's Farm. We love plants, trees, birds, butterflies, rocks, mountains, meadows, rivers, intensely. Love them, love to be amongst them, and learn all we can about them. But we still hold that there is a big difference between "precious" and "sacred." These folks have taken the Pathetic Fallacy to a psychotic extreme. One is forced to wonder whether the only dining acceptable to Greenie Gaia-worshippers would now involve cannibalism, since they want us to worry about the souls of asparagus and lobsters, and view human life as an obnoxious intrusion on an otherwise beautiful Eden (except that most animals eat plants and/or other animals). Still, I must confess that the shrill scream of asparagus when it hits that steam always whets my pre-post-Christian appetite.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Fallacies and Logic, Our Essays, Quotidian Quotable Quote (QQQ), Religion
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22:12
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Monday, April 21. 2008Fallacy of the Week: Anchoring BiasFrom the Wiki entry: "Anchoring or focalism is a cognitive bias that describes the common human tendency to rely too heavily, or "anchor," on one trait or piece of information when making decisions." The notion of Anchoring Bias comes from Cognitive Psychology, not from Logic. I suppose it could be a fancy way of saying that sometimes we cannot see the forest for a single tree, and are thus "prevented" from considering all of the relevant facts or options. This sort of cognitive bias typically operates, as do most biases, unconsciously or reflexively, as a gravitational pull towards some decision or reaction. A true example (but not an unconscious one, from the Mrs., on considering what new car to buy): "It just has to be the right shade of maroon." Another example, reported to me by a pediatrician friend: "I ordered a brain MRI ($800) for a 10 year-old kid with tension headaches. Totally unnecessary, and I realized afterwards that I did it because I had read a journal article over the weekend about an undiagnosed brain tumor in a 10 year-old." Thus, like most fallacies and biases, it's part of the brain's effort to be efficient or persuasive in its heuristics by tossing out an anchor on one detail (ouch - that's bad writing), and often might, but doesn't always, lead to the most realistic choices. As we learn more about how our brains make decisions outside of our awareness, being aware of, and being able to monitor, the shortcuts our brains take should serve us well. I could not resist this free association, having recently learned that "Anchors Aweigh" was written in 1906 to be a swinging football song (which it is): Wednesday, April 16. 2008More on the Law of Unintended ConsequencesWe rarely miss an excuse to discuss this law of nature. From a piece by Rob Norton at the Library of Economics and Liberty, which begins:
Read the whole thing. Thursday, April 3. 2008Most influentialThe brilliant one-time lawyer and Warren Buffet partner Charlie Munger (I think the cynical - or should I say skeptical - Munger does the deep thinking, and Buffet is the practical guy) loves Robert Cialdini, who writes about influence and persuasion. Here's Cialdini's The Psychology of Persuasion. (Also, a lifetime of thought is condensed in Poor Charlie's Almanac: The Wit and Wisdom of Charles T. Munger) Wednesday, April 2. 2008Suggestio falsi and suppressio verire Hillary's lies, from Hitchins at Slate (I like that distinction between the two kinds of lies), a quote:
Posted by Gwynnie
in Fallacies and Logic, Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
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09:20
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Monday, March 31. 2008Toxic Incentives: Moral Hazard AheadYou bought a house two years ago, no money down, with a one-year teaser interest-only rate. You knew what you were doing: you gambled that in a year you might be able to make the second year's payments and, if not, the house would have more equity in it. That equity would belong to you. Can you really blame the mortgage broker? Or, maybe, you bought a second house or two to rent out, as You had no skin in the game, except for your hope for wild profit - it was all the bank's money. You had nothing to lose. Now the house is worth less than your buying price, and you can't keep up with this year's payment because you didn't get the promotion you hoped for. Logical (if dishonorable) person that you are, you consider dumping your committment and going back to renting again - or hoping that the taxpayer will somehow rescue your reckless real estate Well, not to worry. The Dems want to bail you out. McCain thinks it's nuts, and so do I. Am I a heartless Scrooge? In truth, buying a Newspapers and pandering politicians call these unlucky gamblers "homeowners," but they aren't. They own nothing but debt and a contract. As prices drop, houses are becoming more affordable to credible buyers instead of crazy gamblers. And, in ten years, there will be another housing bubble. You can bank on it. If your house is an investment, and not a home, sell it then. Editor's note: There are comparable moral hazards with rescuing the banks. See Fed eyes Nordic-style bank nationalization. I am not convinced that we are at that point. Power-people see every problem as an opportunity for a power and/or money grab. Just label it a "crisis."
Posted by The Barrister
in Fallacies and Logic, Our Essays, Politics
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10:17
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Friday, March 28. 2008See, I Found The Original. Guy's Just Eating His LunchIt appears Maggie's Farm readers and contributors were taken in by a hoax photograph. I hear tell that such things are rife on the Internet. I'm in a hurry, as I have a date witha Canadian Moose/Elk hybrid tonight, but I had time to locate the actual original source photograph for the now infamous Obamaphone hoax. As you can see, Obama's people have obviously airbrushed out the artery-clogging submarine sandwich Obama always devours for his lunches -- before having an evil cigarette. It's an obvious attempt to pander to the Minivan Mom demographic to "disappear" the sandwich like one of Stalin's out-of-favor colleagues, but politics is a rough and tumble business these days. And a man's gotta eat. Monday, March 17. 2008Deontological Morals"Act only according to that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law." Was Immanuel Kant's Categorical (ie absolute) Imperative just a fancy way of coming around to the Golden Rule, as Bird Dog suggested the other day? Kant's ethics fall in the category of deontologogical (ie duty-centered) absolutism: he said that one should not lie even to save a life (but I doubt that he ever found himself in that situation). To my simple mind, teleological (outcome-based) ethics, like Utilitarianism, are not ethics or morals at all: our daily actions need to be teleological most of the time, but that is about practical judgement - not morality. As a foundation for a moral code, teleological ethics are insidious and dangerous. Like most people, my moral codes are not carefully thought through. They are mostly inherited from a long line of Yankee Puritans, and Christianity-based. Thus far, they have kept me out of the clink, but have not protected me from doing my share of stupid, cruel, or selfish things. Like most people, I only focus on morals when presented with a moral dilemma that comes up on the radar, because the rest of the time I am on moral autopilot. I guess I'd have to say that my morality is neither deontological nor teleological, but mystical as G.K. Chesterton would say (Ten Commandments, The Great Commandment, etc) in its origins, with a dose of my personal obsessionalism on top. Still, it's an interesting thought experiment to spend a day thinking about how - or whether - my daily decisions might be different if I consciously and deliberately pretend to adopt a different moral foundation. Image: Immanuel Kant Dr. Bliss comment: You are right that one's morality is not arrived at by deliberate thought. Guilt and morality are quasi-internalized during youth. After that, it's all about just learning the rules, laws, and socio-cultural expectations to avoid a messy life. Maybe I will post a draft of a piece I once wrote on the subject for a lay audience. Sunday, March 16. 200899.9 % GoodI do not think that I like Eliot Spitzer, but I don't know him as a person. I do know that if he came to me for comfort and help, I would be happy to offer it to him as a fellow flawed, sinful, and foolish human. I would pray with him for himself and for his family, who are surely suffering for his idiot behavior. However, his story got the brain thinking about how, if you do 999 good, charitable, loving things in your life, and one bad, illegal thing (not that Spitzer is in that category - I doubt it, based on how he handled his powers as a prosecutor) - you are screwed if you get caught. Nobody will care about the other 999. That is why cops say that there are only two kinds of people - crims that haven't been caught, and those who have been. One must be careful in this life, because it can blow up in an instant.
Posted by The Barrister
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19:06
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Thursday, March 13. 2008Another example of the Broken Window FallacySowell notes that the cost of incarceration in some states exceeds the costs of higher education. The point, of course, is that when people (not Sowell) talk about those costs, they ignore the monetary and social costs of letting those folks loose on us. That's the fallacy. On the other hand, MA can send 'em all to Harvard for all I care, if they want to. Tuesday, March 11. 2008The Broken Window FallacyIt has nothing to do with Rudy Giuliani's "broken window" approach to restoring civilization to NYC (which is no fallacy - it worked well, because providing latitude in the little things, filth, petty crimes, bums and addicts sleeping in parks, hostile squeegee men, etc. implicitly endorses latitude in bigger things, leading to an atmosphere of anarchy that nobody wants to experience). The excellent Bastiat QQQ yesterday brought it to mind. Bastiat's famous parable of the Broken Window explains how a kid breaking a window, despite the expenditures to repair it, on the bottom line does no favor to the village's economy. While some Keynesians might argue otherwise, I would make the case that, although maintenance of things we care about is a large part of an economy - cars, houses, boats, gardens, horses, dogs, bodies, etc - the fallacy there is the failure to reckon the opportunity cost of the money on the part of the window-owner. I recently posted on the subject of the pseudo-rationality that ensues when the costs of an event are calculated, but is not compared to the costs of inaction or of alternate actions - or the advantages thereof. If anyone were to calculate the global economic advantages of global warming, for example, I think everyone would be praying for it - but I doubt it will occur in any meaningful way. Tuesday, March 4. 2008Thought Criminal Steven Pinker, and Pseudo-rationalityFrom Mediocracy:
and ... if people's sense of well-being comes from an assessment of their social status, and social status is relative, then extreme inequality can make people on the lower rungs feel defeated even if they are better off than most of humanity ... The medical researcher Richard Wilkinson, who documented these patterns, argues that low status triggers an ancient stress reaction ... Wilkinson argues that reducing economic inequality would make millions of lives happier, safer, and longer. (ibid) Mediocracy thus presents an excellent case of pseudo-rationality in which the human costs of an intervention are ignored. In my experience, failure to enter these costs into calculations generally results in further problems which also end up begging for another government intervention to try to correct. Thus governments and agencies grow, on the fertile soil of their own manure. Monday, February 25. 2008Buridan's AssIt turns out that Aristotle, not Jean Buridan, first came up with the logical paradox of the hungry, thirsty ass who dies, paralyzed by indecision between a bucket of water and a pile of hay. Viking mentions the Dem version, with its apparent solution:
Our editor mentions another one: A MA Yankee torn between his attachment to the Berkshire Hills and Cape Cod. (God forbid that leaves you stuck inside of Worcester, MA with the Memphis blues.) Friday, February 1. 2008More fun with logic: Newcomb's ProblemVia Overcoming Bias:
Decide, then read about it. Yes, it is related to the Prisoner's Dilemma. Wednesday, January 30. 2008The Law of Unintended ConsequencesI have long been a student of the above Law, but I have not seen it expressed so succinctly:
That is a quote from Andrew Gelman, via a piece at Marginal Revolution inspired in part by a Dubner and Levitt (Freakonomics) piece in the NYT entitled The Red-Cockaded Woodpecker which explains how the Americans with Disabilities Act has resulted in lower employment levels among the disabled. Both of the links are worth reading. The cost of food around the world due to biofuels is a fine example. Michael Crighton's talk below does a fine job with the subject of complexity, when it comes to man's interventions in nature:
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