Unless I misunderstand, this story is a parable. EY is communicating with a handwaving example that the effectiveness of a code doesn’t depend on the alphabet used. In the code used to describe the plate phenomenon, “magic” and “heat conduction” are interchangeable symbols which formally carry zero information, since the coder doesn’t use them to discriminate among cases.
I’m sincerely confused as to why comments center on the motivations of the students and the professor. Isn’t that irrelevant? Or did EY mean for the discussion to go this way? Does it matter?
People focus on the motivations of the students and the professor because the professor’s behavior is unorthodox. The students paid good money to learn about physics. As others have mentioned, you can’t be too hard on them, they arrive at class expecting a physics lesson, not sleight-of-hand. Consequently, my initial response to the article was that I understood what EY meant to convey, but I thought there were probably other ways to illustrate it that didn’t involve the unnecessary “trickery” demonstrated by the professor.
However, upon further reflection, the professor’s trickery itself could be characterized as relevant to EY’s point. If we completely ignore the proferred “magic explanations” from the students, one might consider the professor’s trick a lesson that all the physics education in the world may be inadequate to explain a puzzling observation. In other words, I found it helpful to assume that the professor was also trying to make a point similar to that which EY was making, instead of assuming that the professor just felt like being a jerk that day.
As a bonus, by focusing on the conditions of the scenario instead of just the answers, a student who is smart enough to recognize that their education may be inadequate could still answer “I don’t have enough information to explain this,” which implies he still believes there is an explanation, which might be a better answer than just “I don’t know,” which sounds a lot like just giving up.
Unless I misunderstand, this story is a parable. EY is communicating with a handwaving example that the effectiveness of a code doesn’t depend on the alphabet used. In the code used to describe the plate phenomenon, “magic” and “heat conduction” are interchangeable symbols which formally carry zero information, since the coder doesn’t use them to discriminate among cases.
I’m sincerely confused as to why comments center on the motivations of the students and the professor. Isn’t that irrelevant? Or did EY mean for the discussion to go this way? Does it matter?
EY can mean whatever he wants. He gets to choose what is in the post, everyone else gets to choose what they would like to talk about.
People focus on the motivations of the students and the professor because the professor’s behavior is unorthodox. The students paid good money to learn about physics. As others have mentioned, you can’t be too hard on them, they arrive at class expecting a physics lesson, not sleight-of-hand. Consequently, my initial response to the article was that I understood what EY meant to convey, but I thought there were probably other ways to illustrate it that didn’t involve the unnecessary “trickery” demonstrated by the professor.
However, upon further reflection, the professor’s trickery itself could be characterized as relevant to EY’s point. If we completely ignore the proferred “magic explanations” from the students, one might consider the professor’s trick a lesson that all the physics education in the world may be inadequate to explain a puzzling observation. In other words, I found it helpful to assume that the professor was also trying to make a point similar to that which EY was making, instead of assuming that the professor just felt like being a jerk that day.
As a bonus, by focusing on the conditions of the scenario instead of just the answers, a student who is smart enough to recognize that their education may be inadequate could still answer “I don’t have enough information to explain this,” which implies he still believes there is an explanation, which might be a better answer than just “I don’t know,” which sounds a lot like just giving up.
You’ll quickly find that LessWrongers love tangents and digressions.