yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

The Importance of Knowing: A Big Think Mentor Workshop | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 4, 2024

An epinet is a diagram. It's a diagram that lets me figure out and map and keep track of what you're thinking, what you're thinking I'm thinking, what other people in the room think about what I'm thinking and what each thinks about what every other person in the room is thinking. That sounds like a lot, and that's why you need a diagram.

And it's a little bit different than your traditional social network diagram in that you don't have only people that are connected by edges and lines; you also have various beliefs. So if I think that you think that today is Friday, then there's going to be an arch that takes us from me to you to the proposition today is Friday. If I think that you think that I think that today is Friday, there's an arch that takes me from me to you back to me and back to the proposition today is Friday.

Why is this very helpful in the context of something like a meeting or a gathering of any kind or an email exchange? When we have a meeting, there are a lot of unspoken suppositions and a lot of attributions that I make. I think about what other people think and what they think I think, and sometimes I have conversations with somebody that are meant to be dramaturgical, so they're meant to be a piece of theater that we play out for the benefit of other people in the audience.

So I might try to persuade you that it's a good thing for you to put your hat in the ring for a presidential race or a decanal race, not because I think that's a good thing but because I think somebody else thinks that I don't think that's a good thing. I want to persuade that person that in fact I think highly of you. So, what I've done in that case is I've used the topology of the beliefs that various people have and the beliefs that they have about other people's belief in the room to create a situation.

So you can think of an epinet first of all as a diagram, but then you can also think about it as a design tool. And it's a tool for the design of human interactions in contexts that are high-stakes, interpersonally acute if you will, because that's where we spend a lot of time obsessing about what everybody thinks and what everybody thinks we think. And complicated.

Even the very simple structures that I was telling you about have a very complex interactive belief hierarchy. There are things that I believe that you don't know about. There are things that you believe that I don't know about. There are conjectures that you have about what I think, which I am oblivious of because I can't even imagine some of them. And there are things that I can conjecture about you which you may be oblivious of.

And it's very important to not necessarily obsess and to become neurotic about this, but it's important to be precise. And it is valuable to be precise. And that is what a lot of the epinets work that we've done tends to show: that more greater precision, greater depth, so if I think more carefully about what you think and what you think I think and what you think I think you think, then it makes me more likely to respond to your concerns.

It makes me more likely to address problems, issues, and complaints that you might have. It makes us more likely to be able to coordinate our actions successfully. It makes us more able to co-mobilize in order to do something that's important to both of us. And that comes from greater precision; it doesn't come necessarily from a catchall theory like, let's say, game theory or interactive epistemology that go bonkers in terms of the formalism, but they don't focus on the precise structure of the beliefs as they occur in a human group interacting in real time.

More Articles

View All
Moving Illusions
Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. This is a completely still image, but as your eye reads what I’m saying and jumps from word to word, the paragraph will appear to slightly, just subtly, wave and boil. The allusion is called anomalous motion. It’s neat. But to …
Everybody wants to love - Ingrid Michaelson cover
One two three [Music] four. We have fallen down again tonight. In this world, it’s hard to get it right, trying to make your heart fit like a glove. [Music] What you need is love, love, love. Everybody, everybody wants to love. Everybody, everybody wants…
Clearly I messed something up...
Hey, it’s me Destin. Welcome back to Smarter Every Day! So the last video I uploaded was about helping an orphanage and trying to motivate you to help me build this orphanage, but it’s pretty clear that I messed that up. So I’ve flown over to England, I’…
Western Australia's Shark Attack Causes | SharkFest
[music playing] NARRATOR: And while sharks have always been present along this massive shoreline, starting in 2010, they become a problem. More than 60 attacks in just 10 years, triple the number of incidents from the preceding decade—it’s an unprecedent…
Designing the Costumes | Saints & Strangers
[Music] It’s always fun sitting on sets, watching everybody in costumes. CU of course, it’s the nearest thing to time travel you can kind of get, you know? Everyone disappears if the crews are in a certain way. You just look around, you see these people, …
Zeros of polynomials (with factoring): common factor | Polynomial graphs | Algebra 2 | Khan Academy
So we’re given a p of x; it’s a third degree polynomial, and they say plot all the zeros or the x-intercepts of the polynomial in the interactive graph. The reason why they say interactive graph, this is a screenshot from the exercise on Khan Academy, whe…