I agree with David_Gerard: when I say I’m doing something, it appears to the reader as though I’m doing that thing.
I would also agree with various more-strongly-worded equivalents, such as “when I say I’m doing X in a series of acts that includes Y, it’s disingenuous to later claim that Y wasn’t intended to do X.”
Hence, understatement. That is, an expression worded less strongly than, in my opinion, the situation justifies.
Is “challenge the consensus” a performative utterance? By saying “I challenge the consensus regarding foo”, do you thereby challenge the consensus regarding foo?
Consider: If I said, “I challenge the Less Wrong consensus that 2 + 2 = 5. I assert that it’s 4,” by saying this I wouldn’t actually challenge a consensus that 2 + 2 = 5, because there isn’t one to challenge. Rather, all I would be doing is setting up a straw man: falsely asserting the existence of a consensus, and then disagreeing with that imagined consensus.
How was it an understatement?
I acknowledge that it feels like one when you read it, but defining that way lies madness! Just ask the words “ironic” and “literally”.
I agree with David_Gerard: when I say I’m doing something, it appears to the reader as though I’m doing that thing.
I would also agree with various more-strongly-worded equivalents, such as “when I say I’m doing X in a series of acts that includes Y, it’s disingenuous to later claim that Y wasn’t intended to do X.”
Hence, understatement. That is, an expression worded less strongly than, in my opinion, the situation justifies.
Is “challenge the consensus” a performative utterance? By saying “I challenge the consensus regarding foo”, do you thereby challenge the consensus regarding foo?
Consider: If I said, “I challenge the Less Wrong consensus that 2 + 2 = 5. I assert that it’s 4,” by saying this I wouldn’t actually challenge a consensus that 2 + 2 = 5, because there isn’t one to challenge. Rather, all I would be doing is setting up a straw man: falsely asserting the existence of a consensus, and then disagreeing with that imagined consensus.