Ok, thanks for clarifying. (To reiterate my later point, since it sounds like you’re considering the “narrative pyramid schemes” hypothesis: I think there is not common knowledge that narrative pyramid schemes happen, and that common knowledge might help people continuously and across contexts share more information, especially information that is pulling against the pyramid schemes, by giving them more of a true expectation that they’ll be heard by a something-maximizing person rather than a narrative-executer).
Ok, thanks for clarifying. (To reiterate my later point, since it sounds like you’re considering the “narrative pyramid schemes” hypothesis: I think there is not common knowledge that narrative pyramid schemes happen, and that common knowledge might help people continuously and across contexts share more information, especially information that is pulling against the pyramid schemes, by giving them more of a true expectation that they’ll be heard by a something-maximizing person rather than a narrative-executer).