You may have noticed all the annoying Grammarly adds bouncing around, which is a browser-based spelling/grammar/syntax checker. I wondered about how easily we could detect indications of known-bad-thinking with the same kind of analysis.
Before we go ahead and attempt to build something like Grammarly, but for logical reasoning, shouldn’t we verify that Grammarly actually improves one’s writing? I haven’t used Grammarly itself, but I did use a similar tool, called Hemingway, and I wasn’t terribly impressed with it.
Before we go ahead and attempt to build something like Grammarly, but for logical reasoning, shouldn’t we verify that Grammarly actually improves one’s writing? I haven’t used Grammarly itself, but I did use a similar tool, called Hemingway, and I wasn’t terribly impressed with it.
I don’t see how a grammar checker like Grammarly is similar to a tool that’s about improving style like Hemingway.
Frequently, there’s one correct answer for questions of grammar but there isn’t for questions of style.