I think I would support Joe’s view here that clarity and rigour are significantly different… but maybe—David—your comments are supposed to be specific to alignment work? e.g. I can think of plenty of times I have read books or articles in other areas and fields that contain zero formal definitions, proofs, or experiments but are obviously “clear”, well-explained, well-argued etc. So by your definitions is that not a useful and widespread form of rigour-less clarity? (One that we would want to ‘allow’ in alignment work?) Or would you instead maintain that such writing can’t ever really be clear without proofs or experiments?
I tend to think one issue is more that it’s really hard to do well (clear, useful, conceptual writing that is) and that many of the people trying to do it in alignment come from are inexperienced in doing it (and often have backgrounds in fields where things like proofs or experiments are the norm).
I think I would support Joe’s view here that clarity and rigour are significantly different… but maybe—David—your comments are supposed to be specific to alignment work? e.g. I can think of plenty of times I have read books or articles in other areas and fields that contain zero formal definitions, proofs, or experiments but are obviously “clear”, well-explained, well-argued etc. So by your definitions is that not a useful and widespread form of rigour-less clarity? (One that we would want to ‘allow’ in alignment work?) Or would you instead maintain that such writing can’t ever really be clear without proofs or experiments?
I tend to think one issue is more that it’s really hard to do well (clear, useful, conceptual writing that is) and that many of the people trying to do it in alignment come from are inexperienced in doing it (and often have backgrounds in fields where things like proofs or experiments are the norm).