I’ll go along with whatever rules you decide on, but that seems like an extremely long time to wait for basic clarifications like “what did you mean by this word” or “can you give a real-world example”.
Yep, I think genuine questions for clarification seems quite reasonable. Asking for additional clarifying examples is also pretty good.
I think doing an extended socratic dialogue where the end goal is to show some contradiction within the premise of the original post in a way that tries to question the frame of the post at a pretty deep level is I think the kind of thing that can often make sense to wait until people had time to contextualize a post, though I am not confident here and it’s plausible it should also happen almost immediately.
I see. If the issue here is only with extended socratic dialogues, rather than any criticism which is perceived as low-effort, that wasn’t clear to me. I wouldn’t be nearly as opposed to banning the former, if that could be operationalized in a reasonable way.
Yep, I think genuine questions for clarification seems quite reasonable. Asking for additional clarifying examples is also pretty good.
I think doing an extended socratic dialogue where the end goal is to show some contradiction within the premise of the original post in a way that tries to question the frame of the post at a pretty deep level is I think the kind of thing that can often make sense to wait until people had time to contextualize a post, though I am not confident here and it’s plausible it should also happen almost immediately.
I see. If the issue here is only with extended socratic dialogues, rather than any criticism which is perceived as low-effort, that wasn’t clear to me. I wouldn’t be nearly as opposed to banning the former, if that could be operationalized in a reasonable way.
See this comment for my thoughts on the matter.