Questions are not a problem, obligation to answer is a problem. Criticism is not a problem, implicit blame for ignoring it is a problem. Availability of many questions makes it easier to find one you want to answer.
Incidentally, understanding/verifying/getting-used-to/starting-to-track the answer (for those who care about the question) is often harder than writing an answer (for those whose mind was already prepared to generate it).
Though sometimes the obligation to answer is right, right? I guess maybe it’s that obligation works well at some scale, but then becomes bad at some larger scale. In a coversation, it’s fine, in a public debate, sometimes it seems to me that it doesn’t work.
Obligation to answer makes questions/criticism cause damage unrelated to their content, so they are marginally more withheld or suppressed. If they won’t be withheld or suppressed, like in a debate, they still act as motivation to avoid getting into that situation. The cost has a use for signaling that you can easily provide answers, but it’s still a cost, higher for those who can’t easily provide answers or don’t value conveying that particular signal.
Questions are not a problem, obligation to answer is a problem.
I think if any interaction becomes cheap enough, it can be a problem.
Let’s say I want to respond to ~ 5 to 10 high-effort questions (questions where the askers have done background research and spend some time checking their wording so it’s easy to understand), and I receive 8 high-effort questions and 4 low-effort questions, then that’s fine- it’s not hard to read them all and determine which ones I want to respond to.
But what about if I receive 10 high-effort questions, and 1000 low-effort questions? then the low-effort questions are imposing a significant cost on me, purely because I have to spend effort to filter them out to reach the ones I want to respond to.
My desire to participate in answering questions, coupled with an incredibly cheap question-asking process, is sufficient to impose high costs on me (if I set up some kind of automated spam filter, this is also a cost, and leads to the kind of spam filter/automated email arms race that we currently see, with each automated system trying to outsmart the other).
Questions are not a problem, obligation to answer is a problem. Criticism is not a problem, implicit blame for ignoring it is a problem. Availability of many questions makes it easier to find one you want to answer.
Incidentally, understanding/verifying/getting-used-to/starting-to-track the answer (for those who care about the question) is often harder than writing an answer (for those whose mind was already prepared to generate it).
Though sometimes the obligation to answer is right, right? I guess maybe it’s that obligation works well at some scale, but then becomes bad at some larger scale. In a coversation, it’s fine, in a public debate, sometimes it seems to me that it doesn’t work.
Obligation to answer makes questions/criticism cause damage unrelated to their content, so they are marginally more withheld or suppressed. If they won’t be withheld or suppressed, like in a debate, they still act as motivation to avoid getting into that situation. The cost has a use for signaling that you can easily provide answers, but it’s still a cost, higher for those who can’t easily provide answers or don’t value conveying that particular signal.
I think if any interaction becomes cheap enough, it can be a problem.
Let’s say I want to respond to ~ 5 to 10 high-effort questions (questions where the askers have done background research and spend some time checking their wording so it’s easy to understand), and I receive 8 high-effort questions and 4 low-effort questions, then that’s fine- it’s not hard to read them all and determine which ones I want to respond to.
But what about if I receive 10 high-effort questions, and 1000 low-effort questions? then the low-effort questions are imposing a significant cost on me, purely because I have to spend effort to filter them out to reach the ones I want to respond to.
My desire to participate in answering questions, coupled with an incredibly cheap question-asking process, is sufficient to impose high costs on me (if I set up some kind of automated spam filter, this is also a cost, and leads to the kind of spam filter/automated email arms race that we currently see, with each automated system trying to outsmart the other).