Agreed, the comments (fortified by the voting system) are a huge reason why I’m here. I bought Rationality A-Z for ease of reading, but discovered that I didn’t like it at all without seeing the discussion spawned by every post. In particular, it is very easy to be convinced by a well-written but subtly flawed argument, unless an equally well written rebuttal is in the comments.
The voting system is something that I would hate to lose too, I am very impressed by the people here really upvoting based more on quality than on vacuous agreement. I’ve had my first three comments on the site and one of my first posts massively downvoted, and it hurt, but now I’m very happy for it.
Wait a minute, comments are upvoted based on quality rather than agreement?
Until now, I thought that if a comment had, say, nine points, it meant that there existed at least nine LessWrongers who agreed with everything the comment author said. That is not so?
It’s both. There are no “official” guidelines on how you should up/downvote, but a commonly expressed heuristic is “upvote what you want to see more of, and downvote what you would like to see less of”. In practice, people vote to signify all kinds of things: agree/disagree, true/false, cool/uncool, interesting/boring, oooh/eeew, etc.
Agreed, the comments (fortified by the voting system) are a huge reason why I’m here. I bought Rationality A-Z for ease of reading, but discovered that I didn’t like it at all without seeing the discussion spawned by every post. In particular, it is very easy to be convinced by a well-written but subtly flawed argument, unless an equally well written rebuttal is in the comments.
The voting system is something that I would hate to lose too, I am very impressed by the people here really upvoting based more on quality than on vacuous agreement. I’ve had my first three comments on the site and one of my first posts massively downvoted, and it hurt, but now I’m very happy for it.
Wait a minute, comments are upvoted based on quality rather than agreement? Until now, I thought that if a comment had, say, nine points, it meant that there existed at least nine LessWrongers who agreed with everything the comment author said. That is not so?
It’s both. There are no “official” guidelines on how you should up/downvote, but a commonly expressed heuristic is “upvote what you want to see more of, and downvote what you would like to see less of”. In practice, people vote to signify all kinds of things: agree/disagree, true/false, cool/uncool, interesting/boring, oooh/eeew, etc.