I think it’s important to not downvote contributors to this survey if they sound honest, but voice silly-sounding or offending opinions. It’s better to reward honesty, even if what you hear hurts or irritates (but not endless repetition of misguided opinion, that cumulatively will bore other readers too much). Upvoting interesting comments should be fine.
P.S. This advice is not one of these “crazy things” the poll is about. ;-)
In this particular post, I’m upvoting all the comments which make me think. So if I agree with someone’s post, but it’s pretty much a cached-thought for me, I won’t bother upvoting it. And if I strongly disagree with someone, but they’ve forced me to think about why I disagree with them, I upvote it.
(This isn’t the metric I normally use for deciding when to upvote in other LW posts.)
I think it’s important to not downvote contributors to this survey if they sound honest, but voice silly-sounding or offending opinions. It’s better to reward honesty, even if what you hear hurts or irritates (but not endless repetition of misguided opinion, that cumulatively will bore other readers too much). Upvoting interesting comments should be fine.
P.S. This advice is not one of these “crazy things” the poll is about. ;-)
In this particular post, I’m upvoting all the comments which make me think. So if I agree with someone’s post, but it’s pretty much a cached-thought for me, I won’t bother upvoting it. And if I strongly disagree with someone, but they’ve forced me to think about why I disagree with them, I upvote it.
(This isn’t the metric I normally use for deciding when to upvote in other LW posts.)
I agree. But I do think it’s worth replying pointing out perceived holes in those beliefs, and seeing if the believer is able to defend them.