But “Taking ideas seriously” was an awesome post. Given what we know now, it probably did more harm than good, but I wouldn’t be able to walk around with something like that in my head and not post it for everyone to see.
I suspect it has to do with some LW users taking FAI seriously and dropping everything to join the cause, as suggested in this comment by cousin_it. In the following discussion, RichardKennaway specifically links to “Taking ideas seriously”.
I’d rather just not write posts than speculate about it, really. Any time spent writing posts I can instead use to try to convince other people to write posts, which I think my brain would also count as doing my part to avoid culpability for the predictable errors of others.
(Unrelated: Upon reflection, one of my posts was pretty okay, and I’d like it if someone did a second round of it soon, perhaps in the discussion section. Anyone who wants to do that, feel free to copy/paste.)
Any time spent writing posts I can instead use to try to convince other people to write posts, which I think my brain would also count as doing my part to avoid culpability for the predictable errors of others.
This is a good time to apply TDT/the categorical imperative, to your strategy and see what you get. ;)
This suggests giving yourself longer a mandatory editing period between writing a post and actually publishing it.
Yes. In sociology of science, there’s apparently something called the ‘equal-odds rule’ which says that for a given scientist, you can’t predict which of their publications will be the great publication, with no real effect of quality vs quantity—so it’s probably a good idea to just publish as much as you can that passes your basic bar. (Which doesn’t mean you should be sloppy about it, just means write a lot and let the ideas age like a fine wine.)
This suggests giving yourself longer a mandatory editing period between writing a post and actually publishing it.
Unless, I suppose, you post as a way to handle stress, and simply writing and leaving text to revisit later wouldn’t work as well?
But “Taking ideas seriously” was an awesome post. Given what we know now, it probably did more harm than good, but I wouldn’t be able to walk around with something like that in my head and not post it for everyone to see.
Can you elaborate on what we know now that shows that the post probably did more harm than good?
I suspect it has to do with some LW users taking FAI seriously and dropping everything to join the cause, as suggested in this comment by cousin_it. In the following discussion, RichardKennaway specifically links to “Taking ideas seriously”.
Yikes – “taking FAI seriously” is definitely not an obvious failure or harm!
I’d rather just not write posts than speculate about it, really. Any time spent writing posts I can instead use to try to convince other people to write posts, which I think my brain would also count as doing my part to avoid culpability for the predictable errors of others.
(Unrelated: Upon reflection, one of my posts was pretty okay, and I’d like it if someone did a second round of it soon, perhaps in the discussion section. Anyone who wants to do that, feel free to copy/paste.)
This is a good time to apply TDT/the categorical imperative, to your strategy and see what you get. ;)
Mixed strategy; thank the God Who is true randomness for randomness. (Though in practice false randomness would work just as well.)
Yes. In sociology of science, there’s apparently something called the ‘equal-odds rule’ which says that for a given scientist, you can’t predict which of their publications will be the great publication, with no real effect of quality vs quantity—so it’s probably a good idea to just publish as much as you can that passes your basic bar. (Which doesn’t mean you should be sloppy about it, just means write a lot and let the ideas age like a fine wine.)