I can’t tell which way your sarcasm was supposed to cut.
The obvious interpretation is that you think rationality is somehow hindered by paying attention to form rather than substance, and the “exemplary rationality” was intended to be mocking.
But your comment being referenced was an argument that form has something very relevant to say about substance, so it could also be that you were actually praising gwern for practicing what you preach.
I read your three-part series. Your posts did not substantiate the claim “good thinking requires good writing.” Your second post slightly increased my belief in the converse claim, “good thinkers are better-than-average writers,” but because the only evidence you provided was a handful of historical examples, it’s not very strong evidence. And given how large the population of good thinkers, good writers, bad thinkers, and bad writers is relative to your sample, evidence for “good thinking implies good writing” is barely worth registering as evidence for “good writing implies good thinking.”
The philosophizing of inept, verbose writers like Yudkowsky can be safely dismissed based solely on their incompetence as writers. For a succinct defense of this contention, see my “Can bad writers be good thinkers? Part 1 of THE UNITY OF LANGUAGE AND THOUGHT” OR see the 3-part “Writing & Thought series” — all together, fewer than 3,000 words.
I believe what you wrote because you used so much bolding.
Way to deflect attention from substance to form. Exemplary rationality!
I can’t tell which way your sarcasm was supposed to cut.
The obvious interpretation is that you think rationality is somehow hindered by paying attention to form rather than substance, and the “exemplary rationality” was intended to be mocking.
But your comment being referenced was an argument that form has something very relevant to say about substance, so it could also be that you were actually praising gwern for practicing what you preach.
I choose to interpret it as praise, and receive a warm fuzzy feeling.
I read your three-part series. Your posts did not substantiate the claim “good thinking requires good writing.” Your second post slightly increased my belief in the converse claim, “good thinkers are better-than-average writers,” but because the only evidence you provided was a handful of historical examples, it’s not very strong evidence. And given how large the population of good thinkers, good writers, bad thinkers, and bad writers is relative to your sample, evidence for “good thinking implies good writing” is barely worth registering as evidence for “good writing implies good thinking.”