Comment by 0xDEAFBEAD
Comment by 0xDEAFBEAD 18 hours ago
>its desirable for a model to be based on causal rather than merely correlated variables
Ironically, your "likes_hiphop" example would appear to be an unusually clean case of a variable that is likely to exert causal influence.
What do you think the causal effect of listening to lyrics like "Prolly leave my fuckin' show in a cop car" might be, on an impressionable teenage boy say?
From one of the most-streamed hip-hop songs of all time:
https://genius.com/Post-malone-rockstar-lyrics
https://newsroom.spotify.com/2024-05-20/best-hip-hop-songs-1...
>A model based on "socioeconomic status" has a totally different social meaning than one based on race, even if we cannot fully disentangle the two statistically.
I see no evidence Gwern disagrees with this claim. He just seems to be arguing the "cannot fully disentangle the two statistically" part.
Doesn't it seem like the opposite to you? Since this is one of the most streamed songs of all time AND most kids have not "[left their] fuckin' show in a cop car" it seems that the causal power of media is small, which is pretty consistent with the literature on the subject.
The vast, vast majority of people understand the difference between media and real life. I mean I wouldn't go so far as to suggest that Post Malone is "good," either "morally" or aesthetically, but I don't think there is a strong case for lyrics, tv, or video games having a strong effect on violent behavior. But if it were the case it would be good to identify it accurately. There is plenty of violent "rock" music too, after all. The Columbine shooters weren't listening to hip hop.