Crux

Another related concept is that of a crucial consideration, or a consideration that warrants a major reassessment of a cause or intervention. A crucial consideration may be regarded as a  reason for rejecting a belief which is currently a crux for some cause or intervention, especially one currently considered to be high-priority.

A relatedsimilar concept is that of a true rejection, or a person's crux for rejecting a view. Often, what is raised as an objection is not a true rejection, because the critic would still reject the view even if the objection was fully addressed.[2]

Another related concept is that of a crucial consideration, or a consideration that warrants a major reassessment of a cause or intervention. A crucial consideration may be regarded as a  reason for rejecting a belief which is a crux for some cause or intervention, especially one currently considered to be high-priority.

A person's crux for holding a view on some topic is any belief on which those views depend,that view depends, such that if the person ceased to have that belief, they would no longer hold the view. For example, a crux for someone who works in AI safety might be the belief that transformative artificial intelligence will arrive within the next few decades: ceasing to have this belief will cause the person to work on other causes or problems.[1]

Sabien, Duncan (2021) Participant Handbook, Center for Applied Rationality.Rationality, pp. 91–99.

Sabien, Duncan (2021) Participant handbookHandbook, Center for Applied Rationality, January, pp. 91–99.Rationality.

A person's crux for holding a view on some topic is any belief on which those views depend, such that if the person ceased to have that belief, they would no longer hold the view. For example, a crux for someone who works in AI safety might be the belief that transformative artificial intelligence will arrive within the next few decades: ceasing to have this belief will cause the person to work on other causes or problems.[1]

A related concept is that of a true rejection, or a person's crux for rejecting a view. Often, what is raised as an objection is not a true rejection, because the critic would still reject the view even if the objection was fully addressed.[2]

Further reading

Sabien, Duncan (2021) Participant handbook, Center for Applied Rationality, January, pp. 91–99.

Related entries

crucial consideration | epistemology

  1. ^

    Shlegeris, Buck (2020) My personal cruxes for working on AI safety, Effective Altruism Forum, February 13.

  2. ^

    Yudkowsky, Eliezer (2008) Is that your true rejection?, LessWrong, December 6.

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