That seems rather applause-lighty. The reversal is abnormal; who would say “Use some things that don’t work”? Maybe in some traditionalist cultures “Resist the appeal of using things that work but come from unworthy places” would sound wise, but on LessWrong it would likely get stares.
I think many cited quotations sound applause-lighty. They are meant to by pithy encapsulations of LW themes, after all. And I don’t think that’s necessarily a problem; applauselights are a problem for things that might be taken as reasoning, like posts.
“Use only that which works” is obvious enough to be unhelpful, but “take it from any place you can find it” was pretty novel in the context in which he proposed it, and still is to a lot of people in a lot of domains.
The existence of the Traditional branch of Jeet Kune Do (as opposed to the Concepts branch,) which exclusively teaches the martial art as Bruce Lee practiced it at the time of his death, is testament to the strength of humans’ tendency to behave counter to this advice.
That seems rather applause-lighty. The reversal is abnormal; who would say “Use some things that don’t work”? Maybe in some traditionalist cultures “Resist the appeal of using things that work but come from unworthy places” would sound wise, but on LessWrong it would likely get stares.
Bruce Lee was a martial artist, and martial arts is a field where a lot of people go by tradition rather than checking on what works.
awesomely relevant video: Joe Rogan on MMA and Kung Fu
I think many cited quotations sound applause-lighty. They are meant to by pithy encapsulations of LW themes, after all. And I don’t think that’s necessarily a problem; applause lights are a problem for things that might be taken as reasoning, like posts.
“Use only that which works” is obvious enough to be unhelpful, but “take it from any place you can find it” was pretty novel in the context in which he proposed it, and still is to a lot of people in a lot of domains.
The existence of the Traditional branch of Jeet Kune Do (as opposed to the Concepts branch,) which exclusively teaches the martial art as Bruce Lee practiced it at the time of his death, is testament to the strength of humans’ tendency to behave counter to this advice.