Mod note: I count six deleted comments by you on this post. Of these, two had replies (and so were edited to just say “deleted”), one was deleted quickly after posting, and three were deleted after they’d been up for awhile. This is disruptive to the conversation. It’s particularly costly when the subject of the top-level post is about conversation dynamics themselves, which the deleted comments are instances (or counterexamples) of.
You do have the right to remove your post/comments from LessWrong. However, doing so frequently, or in the middle of active conversations, is impolite. If you predict that you’re likely to wind up deleting a comment, it would be better to not post it in the first place. LessWrong has a “retract” button which crosses out text (keeping it technically-readable but making it annoying to read so that people won’t); this is the polite and epistemically-virtuous way to handle comments that you no longer stand by.
Thanks for this information. When I did this, it was because I was misunderstanding someone’s position, and only realized it later. I’ll refrain from deleting comments excessively in the future and will use the “retract” feature when something like this happens again.
Mod note: I count six deleted comments by you on this post. Of these, two had replies (and so were edited to just say “deleted”), one was deleted quickly after posting, and three were deleted after they’d been up for awhile. This is disruptive to the conversation. It’s particularly costly when the subject of the top-level post is about conversation dynamics themselves, which the deleted comments are instances (or counterexamples) of.
You do have the right to remove your post/comments from LessWrong. However, doing so frequently, or in the middle of active conversations, is impolite. If you predict that you’re likely to wind up deleting a comment, it would be better to not post it in the first place. LessWrong has a “retract” button which crosses out text (keeping it technically-readable but making it annoying to read so that people won’t); this is the polite and epistemically-virtuous way to handle comments that you no longer stand by.
Thanks for this information. When I did this, it was because I was misunderstanding someone’s position, and only realized it later. I’ll refrain from deleting comments excessively in the future and will use the “retract” feature when something like this happens again.