This is really frustrating. When you ask questions of us who disagree with you, we tend to say “I don’t think the question is well posed”. But when we ask questions of you, you won’t say yes, or no, or explicitly reject the question—you just return to your own questions. If you don’t think the questions you’re being asked are well-posed enough to answer, could you say more about why? Otherwise we’re not engaging, we’re just talking past each other.
It can take a long time to say what the problem is. I just spent several hours trying to do this in Dan’s case, and I’m not sure I succeeded. The questions aren’t ill-posed, but the whole starting point was problematic. In effect I wanted to demonstrate the possibility of an alternative starting point. Dan managed to respond, and now I to that, and even this comment of yours contributed, but it took a lot of time and consideration of context even to produce an imperfect further reply. It’s a tradeoff between responding adequately and responding promptly. There’s been an improvement in communication since last time, but it can still get better.
This is really frustrating. When you ask questions of us who disagree with you, we tend to say “I don’t think the question is well posed”. But when we ask questions of you, you won’t say yes, or no, or explicitly reject the question—you just return to your own questions. If you don’t think the questions you’re being asked are well-posed enough to answer, could you say more about why? Otherwise we’re not engaging, we’re just talking past each other.
It can take a long time to say what the problem is. I just spent several hours trying to do this in Dan’s case, and I’m not sure I succeeded. The questions aren’t ill-posed, but the whole starting point was problematic. In effect I wanted to demonstrate the possibility of an alternative starting point. Dan managed to respond, and now I to that, and even this comment of yours contributed, but it took a lot of time and consideration of context even to produce an imperfect further reply. It’s a tradeoff between responding adequately and responding promptly. There’s been an improvement in communication since last time, but it can still get better.
I respect that.