I don’t get this impression from OB at all. The thoughts at OB even when I disagree with them are far more coherent than the sort of examples given as thought gone wrong. I’m also not sure it is easy to actually distinguish between “thought gone wrong” in the sense of being outright nonsense as drescribed in the linked essay and actually good but highly technical thought processes. For example I could write something like:
Noetherianess of a ring is forced by being Artinian, but the reverse does not hold. The dual nature is puzzling given that Noetherianess is a property which forces ideals to have a real impact on the structure in a way that seems more direct than that of Artin even though Artinian is a stronger condition. One must ask what causes the breakdown in symmetry between the descending and ascending chain conditions.
Now, what I wrote above isn’t nonsense. It is just poorly written, poorly explained math. But if you don’t have some background, this likely looks as bad as the passages quoted by the linked essay. Even when the writing is not poor like that above, one can easily find sections from conversations on LW about say CEV or Bayesianism that look about as nonsensical if one doesn’t know the terms. So without extensive investigation I don’t think one can easily judge whether a given passage is nonsense or not. The essay linked to is therefore less than compelling (in fact, having studied many of their examples I can safely say that they really are nonsensical but it isn’t clear to me how you can tell that from the short passages given with their complete lack of context Edit:. And it could very well be that I just haven’t thought about them enough or approached them correctly just as someone who is very bad at math might consider it to be collectively nonsense even after careful examination) It does however seem that some disciplines run into this problem far more often than others. Thus, philosophy and theology both seem to run into the parading nonsensical streams of words together problem more often than most other areas. I suspect that this is connected to the lack of anything resembling an experimental method.
The thoughts at OB even when I disagree with them are far more coherent than the sort of examples given as thought gone wrong. I’m also not sure it is easy to actually distinguish between “thought gone wrong” in the sense of being outright nonsense as drescribed in the linked essay and actually good but highly technical thought processes.
OB isn’t a technical blog though.
Having criticised it so harshly, I’d better back that up with evidence. Exhibit A: a highly detailed scenario of our far future, supported by not much. Which in later postings to OB (just enter “dreamtime” into the OB search box) becomes part of the background assumptions, just as earlier OB speculations become part of the background assumptions of that posting. It’s like looking at the sky and drawing in constellations (the stars in this analogy being the snippets of scientific evidence adduced here and there).
That example seems to be more in the realm of “not very good thinking” than thought gone wrong. The thoughts are coherent, just not well justified. it isn’t like the sort of thing that is quoted in the example essay where thought gone wrong seems to mean something closer to “not even wrong because it is incoherent.”
Ok, OB certainly isn’t the sort of word salad that Stove is attacking, so that wasn’t a good comparison. But there does seem to me to be something systematically wrong with OB. There is the man-with-a-hammer thing, but I don’t have a problem with people having their hobbyhorses, I know I have some of my own. I’m more put off by the way that speculations get tacitly upgraded to background assumptions, the join-the-dots use of evidence, and all those “X is Y” titles.
I don’t get this impression from OB at all. The thoughts at OB even when I disagree with them are far more coherent than the sort of examples given as thought gone wrong. I’m also not sure it is easy to actually distinguish between “thought gone wrong” in the sense of being outright nonsense as drescribed in the linked essay and actually good but highly technical thought processes. For example I could write something like:
Now, what I wrote above isn’t nonsense. It is just poorly written, poorly explained math. But if you don’t have some background, this likely looks as bad as the passages quoted by the linked essay. Even when the writing is not poor like that above, one can easily find sections from conversations on LW about say CEV or Bayesianism that look about as nonsensical if one doesn’t know the terms. So without extensive investigation I don’t think one can easily judge whether a given passage is nonsense or not. The essay linked to is therefore less than compelling (in fact, having studied many of their examples I can safely say that they really are nonsensical but it isn’t clear to me how you can tell that from the short passages given with their complete lack of context Edit:. And it could very well be that I just haven’t thought about them enough or approached them correctly just as someone who is very bad at math might consider it to be collectively nonsense even after careful examination) It does however seem that some disciplines run into this problem far more often than others. Thus, philosophy and theology both seem to run into the parading nonsensical streams of words together problem more often than most other areas. I suspect that this is connected to the lack of anything resembling an experimental method.
OB isn’t a technical blog though.
Having criticised it so harshly, I’d better back that up with evidence. Exhibit A: a highly detailed scenario of our far future, supported by not much. Which in later postings to OB (just enter “dreamtime” into the OB search box) becomes part of the background assumptions, just as earlier OB speculations become part of the background assumptions of that posting. It’s like looking at the sky and drawing in constellations (the stars in this analogy being the snippets of scientific evidence adduced here and there).
That example seems to be more in the realm of “not very good thinking” than thought gone wrong. The thoughts are coherent, just not well justified. it isn’t like the sort of thing that is quoted in the example essay where thought gone wrong seems to mean something closer to “not even wrong because it is incoherent.”
Ok, OB certainly isn’t the sort of word salad that Stove is attacking, so that wasn’t a good comparison. But there does seem to me to be something systematically wrong with OB. There is the man-with-a-hammer thing, but I don’t have a problem with people having their hobbyhorses, I know I have some of my own. I’m more put off by the way that speculations get tacitly upgraded to background assumptions, the join-the-dots use of evidence, and all those “X is Y” titles.