Difference between revisions of "OCT 19"

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==14: OCT 19: Unit 4: Free Will and Culture==
+
==16: OCT 19. Living in the Matrix / Working with Political Difference 2==
  
 
===Assigned===
 
===Assigned===
  
:*Dennett, Daniel. Chapter 2: "A Tool for Thinking about Determinism" Freedom Evolves. (300) (25-63) (Jo/Erik)
+
:*Haidt, Chapter 12, "Can't We all Disagree More Constructively?" (276-312) (36)
  
===Dennett, Daniel. Chapter 2: "A Tool for Thinking about Determinism" Freedom Evolves.===
+
===In-class===
  
:*Chapter 2: A tool for thinking about determinism
+
:*Looking ahead to Unit 3 - Tuesday
  
:*People go wrong in thinking about determinism. Three claims:
+
===Haidt, Ch 12, "Can't We All Disagree More Constructively?"===
::*1. Determinism doesn't imply inevitability.
 
::*2. Indeterminism doesn't give you freedom or free will.
 
::*3. In a deterministic world there are "real options".
 
  
:*Laplace's demon -- first modern expression of scientific determinism, idea of being able to predict all future states of a system from knowing the position and movement of everything at some moment.   
+
:*Evidence of polarization in American politics; changes in political culture. compromise less valued. 
 +
:*Looking for a '''theory of ideologies''', which might be thought to drive political identity formation.
 +
::*Two senses:
 +
:::*1. Fixing orientation (all of the "big" theories we've studied have focused on evidence of persistent traits, especially in adults.
 +
:::*2. Fixing the specific fusion of issue-position and label acceptance. 
 +
:*"right" and "left", simplifications, but basis of study and comparative to Europe in some ways, historical origins in French Assembly of 1789, basis in heritable traits - twins studies.  L/R don't map wealth exclusively.   
 +
:*Old answers: people choose ideologies based on interests.  blank-state theories.
  
:*Dennett suggests we design a "toy problem" to think about this image of the "demon"Draws on Quine's concept of "democritean universe"Really trying to model a "design space" (term from Darwin's Dangerous Idea) in the Library of Babel and the idea of "Vast" and "Vanishing"
+
:*One more time through the modern genetic/epigenetic/phenotype explanation pattern (note what's at stake: if you misunderstand the determinism here, you'll misunderstand the whole theory):
 +
::*1: Genes make brains - Australian study: diff responses to new experiences: threat and fear for conservative, dopamine for liberal.  (recall first draft metaphor)
 +
::*2: Dispositional traits lead to different experiences, which lead to "characteristic adaptations" (story about how we differentiate ourselves through our first person experience. mention feedback loops).  (Lots of parents would corroborate this.)  Does the story of the twins seem plausible?
 +
::*3: Life narratives; McAdams study using Moral Foundations Theory to analyze narratives, found MFs in stories people tell about religious experienceThesis: different paths to religious faithWe "map" our moral foundations onto our faith commitment to some extent.
 +
:*So, an '''ideology''' can be thought of as the political version of a narrative that fits with a personal narrative you tell about your experience. Note the complexity here.  You can tailor your narrative to you. 
  
:*34: You could makes some Universes deterministic and some indeterministic. read.  Indeterminate universes exclude Laplace's DemonDeterminism is just one kind of regularity a universe can display. Eliminable vs. Ineliminable probabilities. 
+
:*Political narratives of Republicans and Democrats.
 +
::*Haidt, Graham, and Nosek study: Liberals worse at predicting conservatives responses.   Interesting point: the distortion of seeing things as a liberal makes liberals more likely to believe that conservatives really don't care about harmBut conservatives may be better at understanding (predicting) liberal responses because they use all of the foundations. (File this with Hibbing Chs. 5 and 6)
  
:*36: To make the point a different way, he turns to Conway's Life World research. (Artificial life.)
+
:*Muller on difference bt conservative and orthodox.  Post-enlightenment conservatives: want to critique liberalism from Enlightenment premise of promoting human well beingfollow conservative description of human nature. 290. - humans imperfect, need accountability, reasoning has flaws so we might do well to give weight to past experience, institutions are social facts that need to be respected, even sacralized.  (Consider countries in which judges are abducted or blown up.)
:*translation rules are like physics in a real world.   
+
:*Moral and Social Capital -- moral capital: resources that sustain a moral community (including those that promote accountability and authority.).  moral capital not always straightforward good (293), also, less trusting places, like cities, can be more interestingSocial capital more about the ties we have through our social networks which maintain trust and cooperation relationships.   
:*Initially, the deterministic "life worlds" look like our stereotype of determinism. boring.
 
:*But with more translation rules, we get more complex events.  At the ''design level'', we have persistent objects in motion, contingencies ("usually this happens"). But at the ''physical level'', there is no motion, only on and off.  (How do you design creatures that can survive?)
 
:*43: Some objects in the life world have powers just by virtue of their shape (and the "physics").  Like walls“Avoidance” might be more expensive.
 
:*Persisting might include "avoiding" impending harms that are predictable"The birth of avoidance." 43
 
  
:*In this model, you still have "hacker Gods" designing the creaturesYou could eliminate the hacker Gods by building the "r&d" into the creature. This is a move from the design stance to the intentional stanceThis is also a feature of an evolutionary "life world".  You might just need life worlds that can have "Universal Touring Machines" -- which means they can solve any computable problemConway shows that his life worlds can instantiate Touring machines. (48)
+
:*Liberals
 +
::*Blindspot: not valuing moral capital, social capital, tends to over reach, change too many things too quicklyBertrand Russell:  tension between ossification and dissolution..
 +
::*Strength: 1) regulating super-organisms (mention theory of "regulatory capture"); 2)solving soluble problems (getting the lead out - might have had big effect on well-beingnote this was a bipartisan push back against a Reagan reversal of Carter's policy).
  
:*necessary ingredients for "avoiders" (Whom we might hold responsible?)
+
:*Libertarians.  Today's political libertarian started out as a "classic liberal" prioritizing limited gov and limited church influence of government. 
 +
::*Note research suggesting how libertarians diverge from liberals and conservatives on the MFs.
 +
::*Libertarian wisdom: 1) markets are powerful -- track details -- often self-organizing, self-policing, entrepreneurial)
  
:*51: describes a feature of genetic history of dealing with parasitic genes: design problem, solution in design space, "actions taken".  (Note than design and intentional terms are very apt here, even when talking about fruit fly genomes that don’t really “know” what the hell is happening to them.)
+
:*Social Conservatives
 +
::*wisdom: understanding threats to social capital (can't help bees if you destroy the hive)
  
:*53A process with no foresight can invent a process with foresight.
+
:*Putnam's research on diversity and social capital : bridging and bonding capital both decline with diversity. sometimes well intentioned efforts to promote ethnic identity and respect can exacerbate this.
  
:*read at 54.  “We are virtuoso avoiders, …”
+
===Layers of Political Difference===
  
:*56: Core argument for “Determinism doesn’t imply inevitability”.
+
:*[[Image:Synthesizing Research on Political and Moral Difference.jpg|600px]]
  
:*56: Objections and Replies
+
:*'''Issues'''
 +
::*Issues have lifespans that can range from months to years.  Some issues get settled (e.g. gay marriage) while other remain contested (abortion).  Since issues can get people to vote, political parties sometimes keep issues alive even when polling tells us that most people have moved on (again abortion, gun rights).  Some issues are “live” but untouched by the major political parties (health care, penal reform), sometimes because advocacy would promote more opposing votes than supporting votes.
 +
:*'''Labels'''
 +
::*Labels can apply to parties and people.  Democrats were “centrists” when Clinton was president, but now there are more progressive voices.  Parties manage labels to avoid losing adherents, but parties can also be “taken over.” Some would says Republicans have been taken over by right wind authoritarianism.  Dems are less centrist now. Polarization rules.
 +
:*'''Political Parties'''
 +
::*In a two party system, political parties have to reach 51% to win.  They do this by trying to map labels onto people.  If you are cynical, you might say they “manage” opinion by tracking trends and testing out issues to see “what sells”. 
 +
:*'''People'''
 +
::*People are obviously at the heart of moral life.  We have our own “moral matrix” and beliefs about “basic social dilemmas” (how society works best).  We have to figure out who to ally with, who to tolerate, and who to avoid.  Sometimes we actively oppose others’ views by protesting or contributing to causes.
 +
:*'''Culture'''
 +
::*Culture is a vector for transmitting moral views, so it shapes us, but we also shape it by the way we live our lives.  This happens intentionally, but also passively through imitation.
 +
:*'''Orientations''' - Evolved Psychology
 +
::*This is the level at which Moral Foundations Theory (MFT) and responses to basic social dilemmas describe our relatively stable “values orientation”. 
 +
:*'''Nature''' - Evolutionary Challenges - Ancestral to Contemporary
 +
::*Evolutionary challenges are well known: how to behave, whom to trust, how to raise kids, when to go along with things, and when to resist others’ values and actions. Any existential problem that can be addressed by values is an evolutionary challenge, from avoiding disease to responding to aggression to facing climate change.
  
::*1. It's not real avoidance because the object's fate was never in doubt.
+
===Note on "Social Epistemology"===
  
:::*Determined avoidance is real avoidanceWhat's the diff?
+
:*'''Philosophical Method point:''' The following line of thought is also example of philosophical speculationWe are venturing a bit beyond the research itself to extract significance and insight.
  
::*2. It's not real avoidanceReal avoidance changes something that "was going to happen" into something that doesn't happen.  
+
:*"Social Epistemology" means a variety of things in philosophyHere, the idea is that some traits relevant to group problem solving are distributed in a population (call this a "demographic epistemic trait" AND that this variation might play a role in optimizing group decision-making. In other words, we are not all seeing the same social reality due to our different orientations and experiences.  These differences might be persistent, not something we can talk each other out of.  But making constructive use of differences might product better decisions.
  
:::*depends upon meaning of "going to happen".  Avoiding a baseball coming at you is real avoiding even if the ball was never going to hit you because of your avoidance system.  You can also avoid avoiding (get hit by the ball on purpose to get on base). And so on... avoid avoiding avoiding. 
+
:*Think about evidence from Haidt and Hibbing about divergences in cognitive style, problem solving (BeanFest!), perception, and moral matrices. Evidence from Haidt on MFs.
  
::*3. It's not real avoidanceReal avoidance changes the outcome.  
+
:*Speculative questions about such traits (I am not aware of a theory about this yet): Are there are DETs?  Would human populations with some optimal variation in DETs do better than ones with more or less than an optimal range?  There is a research literature on diversity of perspective in workgroupsIt is often a benefit.
  
:::*you can only change anticipated outcomes, and that's what we are doing in "determined avoiding".
+
:*Related literature: Wisdom of Crowds [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wisdom_of_Crowds] and research on group decision making under conditions of cognitive diversity.
  
::*4 (60). The creatures in the life world have their powers "inevitably" thanks to the determinism of that world.  They are just what they are due to their starting points and events.  “Determinism is the friend, not the foe, of those who dislike inevitability.”  (You could use this to make a strong claim that we can only have free will in a universe that is at least partly deterministic.)
+
===Conversational Strategies for Engaging Political Difference===
  
:::*This is exactly the link between "determined" and "inevitable" that D wants to break.  Our powers are determined by the past, but that doesn't mean our actions are inevitable. 
+
:*A big problem that this unit leaves us with is, "How do we interact with people with different matrices and different experiences, especially concerning political value differences, when we hold our own views with conviction and sense of their truth? In other words, how do we deal with the '''Paradox of Moral Experience'''?
  
:::*Bonus argument: inevitability is also a feature of indeterminist worlds. You can't dodge an undetermined lightning bolt.  (That suggests we are packing something illicit into the term when we think it only spoils free will in a determinist world.)
+
:*Why this is ''so'' difficult...
 +
::*We often unintentionally (and, for some people, intentionally) create "cognitive dissonance" in a discussion, leading people to find ways to stop the pain, rather than listen to the issues. This can escalate.
 +
::*We don't always have reasons for our convictions, but, as we know from the dumbfounding research, we "confabulate". We confuse intuitions with reasoned convictionThis can lead us to "pile on" arguments, thinking they are persuasive apart from the intuitions (moral matrix) that support them. But if you don't have those intuitions, the "pile on" can feel aggressive.
 +
::*We don't all react the same way when our views are criticized.  (Remember Socrates' attitude here. Noble but difficult to achieve.)
  
:*60: Determinism is the friend of those who dislike inevitability.
+
:*'''1. Three Basic Strategies:'''
 +
::*A. Explore differences gently. Monitor your vital signs and those of your interlocutors.
 +
::*B. Find common goals or things to affirm. (Example of landlord interaction last semester.)
 +
::*C. Model exploratory thought. (How do you do that, specifically?)  See ''sympathetic interpretation'' below.
 +
::*These strategies obviously move you in different directions in a conversation, but they can all be used together to manage "dissonance" and tension in a discussion.
 +
 
 +
:*'''2. Practice Sympathetic Interpretation'''
 +
::*In general, sympathetic interpretation involves strategies that mix "identification" (peanuts for the elephant) with "critical engagement" (rational persuasion, expression of value differences)
 +
::*Try to understand where a view is "coming from".  Ask questions.
 +
::*Restate views, checking for fairness.
 +
 
 +
:*'''3. Other miscellaneous strategies''' (many contributed by students):
 +
 
 +
::*Cultivate diverse relationships if possible.
 +
::*Avoid pejorative labels.
 +
::*Views can change even if orientations don't.  Focus on views, not orientations.
 +
::*Accept differences that won't change (validate them in others, as you would other differences), focus on pragmatics and cooperation.
 +
::*Humor, if possible.  Self-effacing humor can set the stage.
 +
::*Acknowledge physio-politics in the discussion.  Give people "permission" or space to "out" themselves as libs and cons.
 +
::*Acknowledge your own orientation and expect it to be respected.
 +
::*Don't "sugar coat" differences.  (Be true to yourself.)
 +
 
 +
===Argumentative and Rhetorical Strategies for Engaging Political Difference===
 +
 
 +
:*Acknowledge partial truths in opposing views, and weaknesses in your own view.
 +
:*Present your issue commitment as something that should appeal to someone with a different political orientation.
 +
:*::*Practice "strategic dissimulation" (controversial for some).  "I'm still working out my views here..." when you really have pretty well worked out views, even one's you are proud of and think to be true (Paradox of Moral Experience)
 +
::*Practice "strategic self-deprecation" - Acknowledge knowledge deficits or evidentiary weaknesses in your view as a way of inviting a more critical discussion.
 +
::*Use verbal cues that indicate (if possible) that views you disagree with are "reasonable" and/or "understandable".  That could mean:
 +
:::*1. The view is reasonable, even if you disagree. Preface your disagreement by acknowledging this. 
 +
::::*Example: "Reasonable and well-informed people disagree on this..."... "Well, your in good company..."
 +
:::*2. The view seems unreasonable, but you focus on some intuitions that support it, even if you don't share these intuitions.
 +
::::*Example: I can see how/why someone would feel this way..., but...
 +
:::*3. The view seems unreasonable and false to you, but it is one that many people hold.
 +
::::*Example: Acknowledging that the view is widely held without endorsing it.  You can also "deflect" to the complexity of the problem or human nature...

Latest revision as of 17:58, 19 October 2023

16: OCT 19. Living in the Matrix / Working with Political Difference 2

Assigned

  • Haidt, Chapter 12, "Can't We all Disagree More Constructively?" (276-312) (36)

In-class

  • Looking ahead to Unit 3 - Tuesday

Haidt, Ch 12, "Can't We All Disagree More Constructively?"

  • Evidence of polarization in American politics; changes in political culture. compromise less valued.
  • Looking for a theory of ideologies, which might be thought to drive political identity formation.
  • Two senses:
  • 1. Fixing orientation (all of the "big" theories we've studied have focused on evidence of persistent traits, especially in adults.
  • 2. Fixing the specific fusion of issue-position and label acceptance.
  • "right" and "left", simplifications, but basis of study and comparative to Europe in some ways, historical origins in French Assembly of 1789, basis in heritable traits - twins studies. L/R don't map wealth exclusively.
  • Old answers: people choose ideologies based on interests. blank-state theories.
  • One more time through the modern genetic/epigenetic/phenotype explanation pattern (note what's at stake: if you misunderstand the determinism here, you'll misunderstand the whole theory):
  • 1: Genes make brains - Australian study: diff responses to new experiences: threat and fear for conservative, dopamine for liberal. (recall first draft metaphor)
  • 2: Dispositional traits lead to different experiences, which lead to "characteristic adaptations" (story about how we differentiate ourselves through our first person experience. mention feedback loops). (Lots of parents would corroborate this.) Does the story of the twins seem plausible?
  • 3: Life narratives; McAdams study using Moral Foundations Theory to analyze narratives, found MFs in stories people tell about religious experience. Thesis: different paths to religious faith. We "map" our moral foundations onto our faith commitment to some extent.
  • So, an ideology can be thought of as the political version of a narrative that fits with a personal narrative you tell about your experience. Note the complexity here. You can tailor your narrative to you.
  • Political narratives of Republicans and Democrats.
  • Haidt, Graham, and Nosek study: Liberals worse at predicting conservatives responses. Interesting point: the distortion of seeing things as a liberal makes liberals more likely to believe that conservatives really don't care about harm. But conservatives may be better at understanding (predicting) liberal responses because they use all of the foundations. (File this with Hibbing Chs. 5 and 6)
  • Muller on difference bt conservative and orthodox. Post-enlightenment conservatives: want to critique liberalism from Enlightenment premise of promoting human well being. follow conservative description of human nature. 290. - humans imperfect, need accountability, reasoning has flaws so we might do well to give weight to past experience, institutions are social facts that need to be respected, even sacralized. (Consider countries in which judges are abducted or blown up.)
  • Moral and Social Capital -- moral capital: resources that sustain a moral community (including those that promote accountability and authority.). moral capital not always straightforward good (293), also, less trusting places, like cities, can be more interesting. Social capital more about the ties we have through our social networks which maintain trust and cooperation relationships.
  • Liberals
  • Blindspot: not valuing moral capital, social capital, tends to over reach, change too many things too quickly. Bertrand Russell: tension between ossification and dissolution..
  • Strength: 1) regulating super-organisms (mention theory of "regulatory capture"); 2)solving soluble problems (getting the lead out - might have had big effect on well-being. note this was a bipartisan push back against a Reagan reversal of Carter's policy).
  • Libertarians. Today's political libertarian started out as a "classic liberal" prioritizing limited gov and limited church influence of government.
  • Note research suggesting how libertarians diverge from liberals and conservatives on the MFs.
  • Libertarian wisdom: 1) markets are powerful -- track details -- often self-organizing, self-policing, entrepreneurial)
  • Social Conservatives
  • wisdom: understanding threats to social capital (can't help bees if you destroy the hive)
  • Putnam's research on diversity and social capital : bridging and bonding capital both decline with diversity. sometimes well intentioned efforts to promote ethnic identity and respect can exacerbate this.

Layers of Political Difference

  • Synthesizing Research on Political and Moral Difference.jpg
  • Issues
  • Issues have lifespans that can range from months to years. Some issues get settled (e.g. gay marriage) while other remain contested (abortion). Since issues can get people to vote, political parties sometimes keep issues alive even when polling tells us that most people have moved on (again abortion, gun rights). Some issues are “live” but untouched by the major political parties (health care, penal reform), sometimes because advocacy would promote more opposing votes than supporting votes.
  • Labels
  • Labels can apply to parties and people. Democrats were “centrists” when Clinton was president, but now there are more progressive voices. Parties manage labels to avoid losing adherents, but parties can also be “taken over.” Some would says Republicans have been taken over by right wind authoritarianism. Dems are less centrist now. Polarization rules.
  • Political Parties
  • In a two party system, political parties have to reach 51% to win. They do this by trying to map labels onto people. If you are cynical, you might say they “manage” opinion by tracking trends and testing out issues to see “what sells”.
  • People
  • People are obviously at the heart of moral life. We have our own “moral matrix” and beliefs about “basic social dilemmas” (how society works best). We have to figure out who to ally with, who to tolerate, and who to avoid. Sometimes we actively oppose others’ views by protesting or contributing to causes.
  • Culture
  • Culture is a vector for transmitting moral views, so it shapes us, but we also shape it by the way we live our lives. This happens intentionally, but also passively through imitation.
  • Orientations - Evolved Psychology
  • This is the level at which Moral Foundations Theory (MFT) and responses to basic social dilemmas describe our relatively stable “values orientation”.
  • Nature - Evolutionary Challenges - Ancestral to Contemporary
  • Evolutionary challenges are well known: how to behave, whom to trust, how to raise kids, when to go along with things, and when to resist others’ values and actions. Any existential problem that can be addressed by values is an evolutionary challenge, from avoiding disease to responding to aggression to facing climate change.

Note on "Social Epistemology"

  • Philosophical Method point: The following line of thought is also example of philosophical speculation. We are venturing a bit beyond the research itself to extract significance and insight.
  • "Social Epistemology" means a variety of things in philosophy. Here, the idea is that some traits relevant to group problem solving are distributed in a population (call this a "demographic epistemic trait" AND that this variation might play a role in optimizing group decision-making. In other words, we are not all seeing the same social reality due to our different orientations and experiences. These differences might be persistent, not something we can talk each other out of. But making constructive use of differences might product better decisions.
  • Think about evidence from Haidt and Hibbing about divergences in cognitive style, problem solving (BeanFest!), perception, and moral matrices. Evidence from Haidt on MFs.
  • Speculative questions about such traits (I am not aware of a theory about this yet): Are there are DETs? Would human populations with some optimal variation in DETs do better than ones with more or less than an optimal range? There is a research literature on diversity of perspective in workgroups. It is often a benefit.
  • Related literature: Wisdom of Crowds [1] and research on group decision making under conditions of cognitive diversity.

Conversational Strategies for Engaging Political Difference

  • A big problem that this unit leaves us with is, "How do we interact with people with different matrices and different experiences, especially concerning political value differences, when we hold our own views with conviction and sense of their truth? In other words, how do we deal with the Paradox of Moral Experience?
  • Why this is so difficult...
  • We often unintentionally (and, for some people, intentionally) create "cognitive dissonance" in a discussion, leading people to find ways to stop the pain, rather than listen to the issues. This can escalate.
  • We don't always have reasons for our convictions, but, as we know from the dumbfounding research, we "confabulate". We confuse intuitions with reasoned conviction. This can lead us to "pile on" arguments, thinking they are persuasive apart from the intuitions (moral matrix) that support them. But if you don't have those intuitions, the "pile on" can feel aggressive.
  • We don't all react the same way when our views are criticized. (Remember Socrates' attitude here. Noble but difficult to achieve.)
  • 1. Three Basic Strategies:
  • A. Explore differences gently. Monitor your vital signs and those of your interlocutors.
  • B. Find common goals or things to affirm. (Example of landlord interaction last semester.)
  • C. Model exploratory thought. (How do you do that, specifically?) See sympathetic interpretation below.
  • These strategies obviously move you in different directions in a conversation, but they can all be used together to manage "dissonance" and tension in a discussion.
  • 2. Practice Sympathetic Interpretation
  • In general, sympathetic interpretation involves strategies that mix "identification" (peanuts for the elephant) with "critical engagement" (rational persuasion, expression of value differences)
  • Try to understand where a view is "coming from". Ask questions.
  • Restate views, checking for fairness.
  • 3. Other miscellaneous strategies (many contributed by students):
  • Cultivate diverse relationships if possible.
  • Avoid pejorative labels.
  • Views can change even if orientations don't. Focus on views, not orientations.
  • Accept differences that won't change (validate them in others, as you would other differences), focus on pragmatics and cooperation.
  • Humor, if possible. Self-effacing humor can set the stage.
  • Acknowledge physio-politics in the discussion. Give people "permission" or space to "out" themselves as libs and cons.
  • Acknowledge your own orientation and expect it to be respected.
  • Don't "sugar coat" differences. (Be true to yourself.)

Argumentative and Rhetorical Strategies for Engaging Political Difference

  • Acknowledge partial truths in opposing views, and weaknesses in your own view.
  • Present your issue commitment as something that should appeal to someone with a different political orientation.
    • Practice "strategic dissimulation" (controversial for some). "I'm still working out my views here..." when you really have pretty well worked out views, even one's you are proud of and think to be true (Paradox of Moral Experience)
  • Practice "strategic self-deprecation" - Acknowledge knowledge deficits or evidentiary weaknesses in your view as a way of inviting a more critical discussion.
  • Use verbal cues that indicate (if possible) that views you disagree with are "reasonable" and/or "understandable". That could mean:
  • 1. The view is reasonable, even if you disagree. Preface your disagreement by acknowledging this.
  • Example: "Reasonable and well-informed people disagree on this..."... "Well, your in good company..."
  • 2. The view seems unreasonable, but you focus on some intuitions that support it, even if you don't share these intuitions.
  • Example: I can see how/why someone would feel this way..., but...
  • 3. The view seems unreasonable and false to you, but it is one that many people hold.
  • Example: Acknowledging that the view is widely held without endorsing it. You can also "deflect" to the complexity of the problem or human nature...