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So, in that context, the word "rationalist" derives from instrumental rationality, not philosophical rationalism. That's why they have tags for things like game theory, economics, utility functions, and empiricism. They are not opposed to empiricism, and in fact they generally agree with Hume and other philosophical empiricists that information comes in from the senses, and that the mind just processes the information to manage models of the world and make predictions. The philosophical frameworks commonly favored over there are bayesian epistemology, consequentialism, reductionism, computationalism, and sentiocentric transhumanist values; they don't use the framework of philosophical rationalism at all, and have no conceptual lineage with it. They probably shouldn't be mentioned here, for the same reason that Bayes Rule goes in the rationality article, not the rationalism article. Rationalism and rationality have very little to do with each other but are commonly confused because of the similar name, and giving a group that discusses rationality a section in the rationalism article seems like a case of that confusion. OrangeCroutons (talk) 20:57, 28 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
A few sections in this article lead with what appear to be pull quotes, which are a well-established no-no. I imagine they are potentially very old, but I wanted to sanity-check before removing them. — Remsense诉11:24, 17 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]