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David Cole's avatar

“First, we rarely consider extremists on our side to be on our side. This is called in philosophy the “no true Scotsman” fallacy. For example, I might show you a tweet in which someone I perceive as your ally says something completely insane. You might respond: “Please, that’s not an ally of mine. No real [whatever] thinks that way!” But of course, you probably believe that your opponents are defined by their extremes (or again, by their failure to control their extremes).”

This is such a big piece of this for me because I think you can really learn to see this psychological pattern as it’s happening and before it flourishes into extremist mental ranting. FAE for scales larger than 1.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamental_attribution_error

When we’re in default mode network / papança mental rambling, it’s so easy to let the defense attorney pilot indefinitely. I’d like to think being a naturally argumentative person equips me to occasionally turn the tools on myself and simulate the prosecution at a productive fidelity.

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Nick @ Substack's avatar

One question turning in the back of my mind throughout this: “Has reactive amplification ever produced anything good?”

At FB people often (and glibly) cited the civil rights movement c. 1965 as an example of how “radicalization” can have positive social outcomes. Is the same true of this large-scale volume raising?

The only examples I can think of are those where online life crosses offline - a protest forming, a leader deposed, a corruption prosecuted. You need to leave the platform to achieve anything at all.

In that light it’s funny that platform policies are so laser focused on preventing real world outcomes like Jan 6 - as if to say “fight all you want on the field, just don’t take it outside (where it might actually touch reality).

Please keep all exploding atoms inside the reactor.

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