I think I remember reading that the plural used to be conventional grammar and was then deliberately suppressed in favor of “he”.
I use the plural. It grows on you surprisingly quickly and isn’t at all obtrusive. Anyone who doesn’t already have the info stored “Oh, Eliezer uses the plural” after reading my writings for months is a case in point thereof.
Use of the plural form also has the advantage of being the stylistic direction the language is trending to. English is a mass hallucination anyways, why stand in futile defiance of its whims?
The grammatical value of “they” used as a singular has been discussed frequently at the inestimable Language Log, including citations of the form used by such disreputable, notorious abusers of the noble English tongue as William Shakespeare and Winston Churchill. A good post on the subject, though by no means the only one, can be found here.
Maybe next time, we can all argue over splitting infinitives, ending sentences with prepositions, or other happy chestnuts of wholly-unfounded prescriptive grammar pedant absurdity.
I think I remember reading that the plural used to be conventional grammar and was then deliberately suppressed in favor of “he”.
I use the plural. It grows on you surprisingly quickly and isn’t at all obtrusive. Anyone who doesn’t already have the info stored “Oh, Eliezer uses the plural” after reading my writings for months is a case in point thereof.
Use of the plural form also has the advantage of being the stylistic direction the language is trending to. English is a mass hallucination anyways, why stand in futile defiance of its whims?
The grammatical value of “they” used as a singular has been discussed frequently at the inestimable Language Log, including citations of the form used by such disreputable, notorious abusers of the noble English tongue as William Shakespeare and Winston Churchill. A good post on the subject, though by no means the only one, can be found here.
Maybe next time, we can all argue over splitting infinitives, ending sentences with prepositions, or other happy chestnuts of wholly-unfounded prescriptive grammar pedant absurdity.
Indeed! I pay attention both to gender pronouns and to Eliezer’s writing patterns, and I never noticed this. (Eliezer_2000 used “ve” a lot though.)
I had previously decided on “he” in order to optimize for flow, but I am happy to accept this well-made point and switch to “they’.