The Wisdom of the Crowd means I would like to ask whether it can be used as an effective tool to gain knowledge or not? — TheMadFool
He asked a wide group of individuals, drawn from diverse backgrounds ranging from mathematicians to salvage experts to guess the submarine’s location. The group’s average guess was just 220 yards from the location where the Scorpion was eventually found." — jgill
Yes I was thinking about that but the point of the wisdom of the crowd, if there's any, is that expertise is, paradoxically, unnecessary. I have little clue as to the details on how a system for acquiring knowledge this way would look like. Do you have any ideas?I would point out that this "wisdom of the crowd" is actually a crowd of knowledgeable and experienced experts — ZhouBoTong
Lots of things can be found out by using the wisdom of the crowd. Even if the crowd consists only of one person other than you.
This happens provided that the crowd be expert on the topic. "where are my keys?" I would ask in dispair. My girlfreind would say, "Did you look in its usual place where you keep it? Did you check the toilet? Your larger intestines, your bank safety deposit box, your pockets, the cheeks of your mouth?"
Sure enough the keys would be in one of these places most often than not.
"What time is it?" Normally returns a very reliable answer from the crowd.
"Which way to the nearest post office?" Gets it right for me.
"Is the logical positivists' necrological form of governance imitation compatible with the Indian Communist Party's 1947 resolution on the choice between rice or buffalo?" usually directs me toward the post office, too. — god must be atheist
What do you think is wrong with the idea of the wisdom of the crowd? If there is one. — TheMadFool
Yes I was thinking about that but the point of the wisdom of the crowd, if there's any, is that expertise is, paradoxically, unnecessary. — TheMadFool
I have little clue as to the details on how a system for acquiring knowledge this way would look like. Do you have any ideas? — TheMadFool
Now that you have a working knowledge on what The Wisdom of the Crowd means I would like to ask whether it can be used as an effective tool to gain knowledge or not?
For instance suppose we don't know the distance to a star. We can ask a group of people to make a guess and the average would be close to, or even exactly, the actual distance of that star.
We wouldn't have to argue anymore about what the truth is. A group of people guessing at random would settle all debates once and for all. Perhaps I'm missing something. Comments... — TheMadFool
Now that you have a working knowledge on what The Wisdom of the Crowd means I would like to ask whether it can be used as an effective tool to gain knowledge or not?
For instance suppose we don't know the distance to a star. We can ask a group of people to make a guess and the average would be close to, or even exactly, the actual distance of that star.
We wouldn't have to argue anymore about what the truth is. A group of people guessing at random would settle all debates once and for all. Perhaps I'm missing something. Comments... — TheMadFool
"If there is one." You mean, there is no crowd? Then what the (*#&@(! have I been dealing with up to now?
I want my money back. — god must be atheist
fishing for sensible opinions on the matter. — TheMadFool
↪christian2017I should've posted this in the math section. — TheMadFool
It seems the wisdom of the crowd is restricted to quantity. I'm not sure about it though. I think it fails in qualitative phenomena. — TheMadFool
"A group of people guessing at random" would require millions of guesses to get close to the correct answer. But a small group of experts, who are presumably already closer to the truth, could narrow down the possibilities just as well or better. There's nothing spooky about the WOC phenomenon. It's just mathematics, specifically statistics. Similar effects are used in computer calculations and communications. Wikipedia summarizes how WOC works as "noise cancelling", and notes that juries require a dozen opinions in order to get closer to truth than a single judge. Bayesian statistics make use of a similar phenomenon for increasing the accuracy of guessing. Unfortunately, whether the opinion is rendered by computer or crowds, we can still argue about such an abstract concept as "Truth". :smile:We wouldn't have to argue anymore about what the truth is. A group of people guessing at random would settle all debates once and for all. Perhaps I'm missing something. Comments... — TheMadFool
However, if one frames the question as: what is the percent likelihood of god existing? then it's theoretically possible to arrive at an "accurate" value. — TheMadFool
whether it can be used as an effective tool to gain knowledge or not? — TheMadFool
The theory was developed by Nassim Nicholas Taleb to explain:
[*] The disproportionate role of high-profile, hard-to-predict, and rare events that are beyond the realm of normal expectations in history, science, finance, and technology.
[*] The non-computability of the probability of the consequential rare events using scientific methods (owing to the very nature of small probabilities).
[*] The psychological biases that blind people, both individually and collectively, to uncertainty and to a rare event's massive role in historical affairs. — Wikipedia on Black Swan theory
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