EDIT: I’ve reconsidered this, and what I wrote here is unfair to SilasBarta. What really happened here, I think, is that Alicorn’s actions inadvertantly set up a feedback loop, which no one understood well enough to shut down before it blew up here. In this post, I chided Silas for not recognizing and disarming that feedback loop—but the truth is, there were plenty of people, including both Alicorn and myself, who could’ve repaired the situation with a little more awareness, and this comment really didn’t help.
And to clarify—what started this whole thing was Alicorn asking Silas not to respond to any of her comments, which was a strange and hostile thing to ask. In this comment, I interpreted that request by rounding it to the nearest non-strange request, which more than I thought. Unfortunately, when asked to clarify, Alicorn clarified it as literally “don’t reply to comments”, rather than “don’t try to initiate conversations”, as she should have.
Original comment below:
Ok, this has gotten painful to watch, and since no one has explained it properly, I feel I ought to overcome the bystander effect and step in. SilasBarta, you have dramatically misunderstood what is happening here. You are flagrantly violating a social norm that you do not seem to understand. Alicorn has acted in a way that is fully determined by your behavior towards her, and anyone else would do the same in her place.
When you speak someone’s name and know that they can hear you, you are, in effect, attempting to summon them. It effectively forces them to listen; if in public, they may need to step in to defend their reputation, and if in private they know they’re specifically being addressed. Attempts to initiate conversation are a social primitive; neurotypicals track a statistical overview of the nature, frequency, and response given to conversations with each person, and expect each other to do the same.
If you attempt to initiate conversation with someone, they give you a negative response, and you knew or should have known that they would give you a negative response, then you are pestering them. By “negative response”, I mean visible irritation, anger, or an attempt to push you out of their sphere of attention without using a pretext. If you repeatedly pester someone who has specifically asked you not to, and you don’t have a sufficiently suitable and important pretext, then you are harrassing them. Pestering someone is frowned upon. Harrassing someone is frowned upon, and can also be illegal if it either carries an implied threat or is sufficiently flagrant. Also, our culture assigns additional penalty points for this if you are male and the person you’re harrassing is female.
So here is the story, as I understand it. After an interaction that did not go well, Alicorn asked you not to reply to her comments. This means “don’t pester me” (or more succinctly, “go away”). This is one of a small number of standard messages which all neurotypicals expect each other to be able to recognize reliably and to pick out of subtext. You continued to participate in conversations Alicorn was involved in, by responding to other commenters, but every time you did so you spoke Alicorn’s name, even when you had no pretext for doing so. You interpreted her request in a literal-minded but incorrect way; you failed to generalize from “don’t respond to my comments” to “don’t try to pull me into a conversation with you by any means”.
I’m curious now about this community’s perceptions of a person A’s requests for a person B not to reply to A’s comments. (Note: I’m using letters A and B because this isn’t about the particular situation or the individuals in question, and I don’t want the individuals’ identities to distract from the issue here.)
I posted a comment stating that it wasn’t reasonable to ask someone not to reply, which got downvoted. I’m assuming this got downvoted because people disagree.
One person replied stating that A’s original request was not to avoid replying to any of A’s comments, but to stop making comments that specifically single A out. However, this was not B’s interpretation of the request. B seems to think, possibly incorrectly, that A asked B not to reply to any of A’s comments on LW.
For people who think this is a reasonable request, here’s a hypothetical: suppose C and D are enrolled in a philosophy class together. C and D have an unpleasant interaction, and C requests that D not raise her hand in class and participate in class discussion after C has made a comment. Do people agree that this would be an unreasonable request, unlike, say, “please don’t call or email me”? If so, why is a request to not reply to someone’s LW comments substantially different?
suppose C and D are enrolled in a philosophy class together. C and D have an unpleasant interaction, and C requests that D not raise her hand in class and participate in class discussion after C has made a comment. Do people agree that this would be an unreasonable request
It depends on whether D’s intention in responding to a comment of C is to contribute to the class discussion or to needle C.
In a classroom setting, the right to ask people to leave or to not participate is reserved exlusively for the professor; a student could not ask another student to shut up without the teacher’s express consent. On a blog, however, no such authority exists, so anyone can make such requests—but only in response to breaking certain social norms without a good excuse.
Well, blogs do have administrators, who hold a similar authority. I believe Eliezer has banned several people from LW for making only poor quality or trollish posts, for instance.
anyone can make such requests—but only in response to breaking certain social norms without a good excuse.
Well, yes, anyone can make such requests, just like I can request that LW commentors refrain from using the word “the” because I find it incredibly offensive. The point is that it isn’t a reasonable request. If someone’s violated enough of the community norms to be banned, that’s a matter for the administrator, but that’s different than an individual requesting “please don’t reply to my comments in a public discussion forum” as if it were comparable to “please don’t email or call me.”
After an interaction that did not go well, Alicorn asked you not to reply to her comments. This means “don’t pester me” (or more succinctly, “go away”). This is one of a small number of standard messages which all neurotypicals expect each other to be able to recognize reliably and to pick out of subtext.
Ok, that’s ridiculous. Comments on LW are part of a large group discussion. A person can tell someone else to stop bugging them or emailing them or calling them, but it is not reasonable to ask someone to not make public comments on LW. No one has the right to do that, any more than I have the right to say “stop using the Internet; it bugs me.”
A person can tell someone else to stop bugging them or emailing them or calling them, but it is not reasonable to ask someone to not make public comments on LW.
True, but that’s not the request that was made. She asked him to stop making comments which specifically single her out.
Sorry, jimrandomh, but you are flatly wrong here, and this misunderstanding underpins your entire criticism. Alicorn has asked that I not post any comments as a reply to hers, even if they don’t single her out, and even if they involve asking others not to mod her down because of the context of her comment! See here, and here.
Now, please revise your diplomatic comments in light of this new information.
(The funniest part is how Alicorn keeps appealing to her own non-neurotypicality, despite my being the only one accused of missing something due to non-NT. Go fig.)
The most accurate phrasing of the intended meaning of Alicorn’s request is the one I wrote in my first post: “do not try to pull me into a conversation with you by any means”. A direct reply does that; it singles out the author of the parent, to a degree that depends on how easily someone else could step in and take their place in the conversation. Non-reply comments also do that if they name her; she didn’t explicitly say that wasn’t allowed, but “leave me the fuck alone” should’ve covered it.
The most accurate phrasing of the intended meaning of Alicorn’s request is the one I wrote in my first post: “do not try to pull me into a conversation with you by any means”.
Except that I stated what I took the request to mean, and she agreed with that. And “do no try to pull me into a conversation …” just ain’t part of it. Take, for example, this comment and this one. Off limits? Well, Alicorn certainly reserves the right to make such comments on my top-level posts. And it doesn’t obligate her to respond directly.
So you still appear very confused about the topic you’re opining on so strongly and confidently.
A direct reply does that;
Not even close: see here, another major example of Alicorn saying what is and is not okay. The comment I made, though nested under her comment, does not in any way draw her into a conversation, because it is a remark about someone else. It is not addressed to her, but to the group in general, regarding a different poster. Still off limits, for some reason.
Is it starting to dawn on you how you’ve misinterpreted Alicorn’s past demands, and why you should maybe withdraw your misconception -rounded, “noble” criticism of me from earlier?
Not even close: see here, another major example of Alicorn saying what is and is not okay. The comment I made, though nested under her comment, does not in any way draw her into a conversation, because it is a remark about someone else. It is not addressed to her, but to the group in general, regarding a different poster. Still off limits, for some reason.
I see two problems with your selected case.
First, you appeared to violate the stated version of the rule. You need a better reason just to create that appearance than wanting to make a jocular remark.
Second, jocular remarks are drawing people into conversations—they’re probably the number-one way to draw someone into a conversation. People joke around with people that they like, and Alicorn does not like you.
I had no idea the concept of “jocular” even applied at the time (and remember, the aspie defense can only be used by Alicorn, not me!) I still don’t see how such a remark somehow draws Alicorn to post further (maybe in real life, in-person situations that might be true?).
Does anyone really see why that general, light-hearted jab at Mitchell somehow gives Alicorn a social obligation to continue?
As for violating the stated rule, my (quite reasonable) understanding at the time (though not anymore) was that the mere nesting of the comment doesn’t matter; what matters is who it’s directed at. And from context, it’s clear it’s a general, big-picture remark bout Mitchell’s theory’s inadequacy. (And a bit of a rude one, but not to Alicorn.)
So it’s far from obvious I was doing anything wrong at the time—but apparently, even defending Alicorn for saying “leave me the fuck alone” is blatant disregard for her—go fig!
Your defense of Alicorn is at +1. Your original remark is at −6. This is because the former comment was appropriate, and the latter not.
Edit 5/27: I have been reminded that the primary reason given for downvoting the original comment was that it was rude, not that it was a reply to Alicorn—I had forgotten this, and left a misleading impression as a consequence.
I hope you know this already, but your social coprocessor is crap, dude. You really need to put in some hard work developing a better set of heuristics, because you’ve been making a lot of blunders, and it’s turning people off.
Your defense of Alicorn is at +1. Your original remark is at −6. This is because the former comment was appropriate, and the latter not.
The defense of Alicorn was at 0 earlier today, and long ago it went negative very quickly. It has nothing to do with appropriateness and everything to do with Alicorn wanting to impose unreasonable rules on me out of some misguided spite.
I hope you know this already, but your social coprocessor is crap, dude.
Thanks—I’m glad that won’t work as a self-fulfilling prophesy or anything, and it’s not the kind of thing you could have said privately—very thoughtful of you.
You really need to put in some hard work developing a better set of heuristics, because you’ve been making a lot of blunders, and it’s turning people off.
Well, I’m glad to know that on a site like LW, I will be given more patience because of the understanding of non-neurotypicality, so long as you use Alicorn rather than SilasBarta as your handle.
Thanks—I’m glad that won’t work as a self-fulfilling prophesy or anything, and it’s not the kind of thing you could have said privately—very thoughtful of you.
SilasBarta, let me tell you something. I am bad with names. Very, very bad with names. So bad that I know a guy who made bet that I wouldn’t know the name of his friend, who I had been hanging out with for years—and won the bet. If someone tells me in public, “Robin, you are terrible with names”, I have no grounds whatsoever to take that as an insult. It would be like being insulted that people thought I was a man. I have a beard, no breasts, and worse recall for names than the average parakeet, and all these things are painfully obvious in a short period of time.
SIlasBarta, you get caught up in more flamewars than almost anyone on Less Wrong. Drop the conspiracy theorists and you’re a lock. That’s a warning sign, man, just as much as the crazy differential between people knowing my name and my knowing theirs—it’s a clue that you’re in the wrong tail of the distribution. If you want to say that Alicorn is on the same side of the peak, I won’t argue with you, but that’s Alicorn’s problem, not yours. You need to figure out what you’re doing that can explain why the population gets peeved at you more often than it does at other people, because the difference is too large to explain by chance.
I think jimrandomh may be mistaken in selecting “neurotypical” as the relevant criterion—the correlated criterion of “well-socialized” may be nearer the mark.
Good point; that terminology would do a better job of hiding the dissonance in scolding me for my autistic errors, even as Alicorn alone gets the sympathy for being non-NT. Make sure to tell Jim!
Because society is not particularly well optimized, the implication of goodness in the modifier “well” is deceptive—a well-socialized person is quite likely to be tribalistic and repressed, for example.
Sounds like your definition of “well-socialized” is closer to “well-adjusted” than RobinZ’s.
As I understand them, skill in navigating social situations, epistemic rationality and psychological well-being are all separate features. They do seem to correlate, but the causal influences are not obvious.
ETA: Depends a lot on the standard you use, too. RobinZ is probably correct if you look at the upper quartile but less so for the 99th percentile.
As an aside, I would say that jimrandomh’s point relies upon describing a substantial population—more like the set of those above the upper quartile than those above the 99th percentile.
I think the point was that Silas is and he should have responded appropriately. Personally I think NT issue is irrelevant here unless the person receiving the message is not NT, in which case not getting it is a somewhat valid excuse.
Since you advertised it, which “bucket” are you in? My son is on the spectrum, somewhat high functioning, so potential development branches are of personal interest.
I have an Asperger’s diagnosis. People who know me in person and know the details of autism symptoms find it entirely credible. People who wouldn’t know an autie from any other neuroatypicality are surprised when I tell them (I’m high functioning and have decent social heuristics, and in the minds of the completely uninformed, autism = retardation plus rocking and hand flapping).
My hand is horizontal; I think Jim’s assumption is that you are.
If you are credibly not, and feel you did not get Alicorn’s signal due to this you should say so—I think it will create an good case to smoke some peace pipes. Personally, I like you both and wish to see this settled.
Whoa, when was evidence a pre-requisite for you to post strongly about something? Since two minutes ago?
I’m going to go out on a limb and guess that you put full credence in Alicorn’s self-serving, unverifiable claim to having been diagnosed with Asberger’s, despite her infamous, “Why not just meet women on the internet?” line … am I right?
And yet the very basis for your criticism of me was that I’m making a non-NT-characteristic mistake in interpreting a social situation? Did your arguments come before or after your conclusion?
unverifiable claim to having been diagnosed with Asperger’s
I, Lucas Sloan, do solemnly swear that Alicorn is not neurotypical, and very probably has Asperger’s. I further attest that the information this comment is based on is the result of having physically interacted with her.
Are you also solemnly swearing to ignorance of Alicorn’s long-time inarticulable ease with which she makes long-term friendships, a strong non-Asperger’s indicator?
Except that she’d done it naturally all her life without any rigorous systematization—which is why she finds her methods so inarticulable (“why not just meet girls/friends on the internet?”). Someone who’s systematized it has gone through all the steps (the “nuts and bolts”) explicitly and has no trouble telling others how to do it—yet Alicorn has spectacularly, laughably failed at that.
(Good for her if she can make friends—but she can’t seem to pass that skill on.)
So the evidence suggests that this friendship ability did not originate from Asperger’s-type systematization, rendering it unable to substantiate claims of Aspberger’s.
Yes, to criticize the advice’s actual vacuousness.
[Alicorn:] Cultivate social spontaneity. This one is hard to define, so I’ll give an example. I was waiting for a bus and a woman I’d never met before in an awesome homemade knitted cloak tottering along on crutches said she loved my jacket.
[Crono:] WARNING. If you’re male and you attempt to talk to a woman on public transportation, you may very well end up making her extremely uncomfortable. This xkcd comic triggered a major backlash.
[me:]The way you avoid negative outcomes or ill will in such situations is to only approach people who will appreciate being approached by you.
And how do you determine that? Um, implementation issue. Yeah.
The advice requires you to know things that, as an AS type, you wouldn’t know to begin with. Her advice is just another form of “do what the other person believes is okay for you to do, and do it right and stuff”—this shows serious lack of systematization.
And what kind of advice is it anyway, to say, “Um, okay, first assume the other person has started the conversation...”
I’ve read everything that Alicorn wrote in that thread four times now, and don’t see anywhere where she said to assume that the other person has started the conversation. She didn’t give explicit advice on how to start a conversation, but note that the original comment is marked “some tidbits”, not “everything you need to know about having a conversation”.
She does give a useful, if rough, heuristic for determining when one shouldn’t try to start a conversation with a stranger:
If you do not have practice using social spontaneity to good effect it is ideal to try it in situations where the other party may both physically and socially escape, just as a general rule.
Further, auties can learn heuristics that mitigate some of our social skills deficits, and Alicorn’s advice is generally within the realm of such heuristics; she doesn’t suggest reading the other person’s body language, for example, but gives advice that is likely to work without the knowledge that body language gives. Also, as a strong extrovert, Alicorn is more likely than most auties to have developed those heuristics to the point where they can be built on to create more advanced heuristics that go well beyond what is stereotypically expected of an autie.
I’ve read everything that Alicorn wrote in that thread four times now, and don’t see anywhere where she said to assume that the other person has started the conversation.
What about the thing I just quoted:
[Alicorn:] Cultivate social spontaneity. This one is hard to define, so I’ll give an example. I was waiting for a bus and a woman I’d never met before in an awesome homemade knitted cloak tottering along on crutches said she loved my jacket.
Next:
She does give a useful, if rough, heuristic for determining when one shouldn’t try to start a conversation with a stranger:
If you do not have practice using social spontaneity to good effect it is ideal to try it in situations where the other party may both physically and socially escape, just as a general rule.
Except that’s not useful, because socially-adept people violate that in spades.
As I discussed here, I don’t think being autistic and being extroverted are mutually exclusive, although they may co-occur in many individuals. Alicorn was actually one of the people I had in mind as someone whom I’ve met who has AS and is also extroverted.
Yes, I’m quite aware of that. And be that as it may, the experience of an extroverted autistic is going to be significantly different from that of a normal autistic, questioning the usefulness of the former’s insight into the latter.
I agree with you on this point. To the extent that Alicorn has presented her socialization/luminosity advice as being applicable to all people (or all autistic people), she has certainly overstated her case. Indeed, I would guess the reason her comment about meeting people on the Internet was downvoted was that it appeared to promise universally applicable advice, and as HughRistik ably pointed out, it did not fulfill that promise.
But my guess, based on Alicorn’s posts, would be that at this point, even Alicorn would agree that her advice may not work for all people. She backed off somewhat on the universal applicability of her Internet-socializing advice in response to HughRistik’s comment (“It is possible I was overgeneralizing”). And I think her more recent posts have mostly recognized that her advice may not be helpful to all people. For example, in the introduction to the luminosity sequence, she wrote:
I’m optimistic that at least some of [these techniques] will be useful to at least some people. However, I may be a walking, talking “results not typical”. My prior attempts at improving luminosity in others consist of me asking individually-designed questions in real time, and that’s gone fairly well; it remains to be seen if I can distill the basic idea into a format that’s generally accessible.
Yes, she backed down in response to my comment, which I noticed and greatly appreciated. But she never made any personal admission of fault or retraction to Silas, so I understand why he held a grudge. After all, she did tell him:
If they [women Silas knows] have not invited you to any social functions where you could meet any of their friends, I doubt they like you very much. If you’d like to add a less polite data point, I’d neither date you nor introduce you to my single friends based on what little I know of you.
At this point in the conversation, I really don’t see what Silas had done to deserve such as assessment, other than proclaim frustration at his dating situation, and point out that her advice wasn’t helpful to him.
If Alicorn had given Silas some kind of personal apology or retraction, admitting that it was premature to try to give him advice without understanding his situation, and imputing negative characteristics to him because of his difficulty accepting that advice, then perhaps the whole communication breakdown might not have happened.
While Silas has handled the interpersonal aspects of their interaction badly, so has Alicorn. I understand why he was frustrated, and felt motivated to point out seeming contradictions between the way she treated him and his arguments, and some of the other posting she did on LessWrong (I also noticed a contradiction between her excellent post on problems vs tasks, and her “let them eat cake” style dating advice to Silas). Along the way, Silas dug himself into a deeper and deeper hole with sarcasm and abrasiveness (despite the urging of me and many others to cool down) and convinced Alicorn and a bunch of other people that he is a jerk, even though he also seems to have made good faith efforts to have discussions with Alicorn on other subjects.
As a result, judgments of Silas by Alicorn or others based on his recent behavior risk falling prey to the fundamental attribution error that Alicorn correctly warns against in the original post. He does have (in my mind) a valid, unresolved beef with a certain lack of charity and hasty negative conclusions that Alicorn displayed to his arguments and character in the past. I strongly, strongly disagree with how he has been expressing it, but he does have a valid beef that people need to realize before piling on him (it’s a testament to the failure of his communication skills that he has slowly managed to alienate a large segment of the community even when he started out being in the right.)
Indeed with this single post you are a much better advocate for Silas than he has been with his many posts. I had not previously seen that post from Alicorn, and I suspect I am not the only one. I agree that Silas, while he has made some good points here and there, has mostly just dug himself a deeper and deeper hole. Whereas Alicorn’s radio silence, particularly in comparison with the frequency of Silas’s posting, has been the wiser move, whether or not it was calculated to be so.
Except that’s not useful, because socially-adept people violate that in spades.
Yes, they can afford to violate it because they can pick up on the relevant subtle cues. Any attempt at systematization in this sort is going to require having a more restrained set of options than that used by socially-adept people. That’s because the rules for how humans interact are really complicated. So even if you did have a decent descriptor for how they all worked, keeping track of all those rules would be really difficult.
Yes, they can afford to violate it because they can pick up on the relevant subtle cues. Any attempt at systematization in this sort is going to require having a more restrained set of options than that used by socially-adept people.
And adhering to this rule will so constrain you and mark you as unusual, that it’s no different from just doing aspie SOP (what you’d do anyway).
If I could afford to only talk to people in these circumstances, I wouldn’t be asking for social advice.
And adhering to this rule will so constrain you and mark you as unusual, that it’s no different from just doing aspie SOP (what you’d do anyway).
It’s different in that it’s a kind of unusual behavior that helps one learn skills that can then be used to make one appear less abnormal.
Isomorphically, someone who was just learning to drive would not immediately try to drive on a busy highway; they would start by practicing in an empty parking lot, even though that’s not a normal venue for driving. Once they were confident in their ability to get the results that they wanted from their car, then they’d try driving on roads.
I concur with Lady Airedale, but from what I understand Alicorn is mostly extroverted in one-on-one settings and less so in large groups. I’m not sure how common this is for extroverts generally.
So then she is like most autistics, but still hasn’t actually systematized the problem in a way that she can articulate the solution to other real autistics.
I’m planning an article/series on how to explain, and I can definitely see more and more people every day who need it.
I’m not familiar with this “infamous” remark and I’m not sure what you’re suggesting it proves or even implies. I recently read the book Born on a Blue Day, which was written by Daniel Tammet, a man with Asperger’s. He writes at one point:
There is something exciting and reassuring for individuals on the autistic spectrum about communicating with other people over the Internet. For one thing, talking in chat rooms or by email does not require you to know how to initiate a conversation or when to smile or the numerous intricacies of body language, as in other social situations. The use of “emoticons” . . . also makes it easier to know how the other person is feeling because he or she tells you in a simple, visual method.
Tammet met his partner on the Internet. His reasoning makes sense to me. Is there something ridiculous that I am missing about the suggestion that people, especially those with autism spectrum diagnoses, meet other people on the Internet, as opposed to real life?
Of course. Just check out HughRistik’s detailed explanation of how such a suggestion, like “let them eat cake” completely misunderstands the state of an AS male.
Yes, in some time and place it was possible for these internet chats to easily translate into dating for aspies, but apparently, everyone on the site seemed to disagree with Alicorn’s assessment.
But taking it as a given that Alicorn’s comment completely misunderstood the state of an AS male, how does it show that she also completely misunderstands the state of an AS female, and how does the comment therefore provide support for your suggestion that Alicorn’s AS is in doubt because she made that comment?
Because if she had AS, she would be approaching sociality from (more of a) blank slate, and would have to get explicit, conscious knowledge of the rules of sociality she learned, which could then be explained to other AS blank slates, male or female. But her advice is spoken from the perspective of someone who never had to systematize, but only had tacit understanding of sociality—and hence sounds vague to those who really need the advice.
I think it will create an good case to smoke some peace pipes
Sorry, that ship has already sailed. Alicorn’s not interested until first I follow a divaesque list of demands, including “justifying the [probably fake] psychological stress” of having to deal with me, the same stress that somehow manages to disappear when higher-status members do the exact same things she doesn’t like.
Alicorn has acted in a way that is fully determined by your behavior towards her, and anyone else would do the same in her place.
No, everyone else who’s voiced an opinion on this has said that they would never ask someone what Alicorn has asked of me: that I never post a reply to her comments, even if it’s not directed at her.
When you speak someone’s name and know that they can hear you, you are, in effect, attempting to summon them. … If you attempt to initiate conversation with someone, they give you a negative response, and you knew or should have known that they would give you a negative response, then you are pestering them.
I think that’s a large part of why I didn’t do any of that in the original comment, just in the version that Kaj asked me to post instead! Who should I listen to here, you or Kaj? Which is the real neurotypical standard that I violated?
So here is the story, as I understand it. After an interaction that did not go well, Alicorn asked you not to reply to her comments. This means “don’t pester me” (or more succinctly, “go away”).
No, as I said in my other reply to you, this isn’t Alicorn’s request at all. It’s:
-Don’t post any comments nested under Alicorn’s, irrespective of content or who the comment is directed at. -Don’t PM Alicorn, even and especially if it’s something she would want to know but prefer not be said publicly. (?) -But posting comments in reply to top-level posts is okay, because Alicorn wants to do so on my top-level posts.
You continued to participate in conversations Alicorn was involved in, by responding to other commenters, but every time you did so you spoke Alicorn’s name, even when you had no pretext for doing so.
Which comments are you talking about? Be specific. I don’t recall violating what Alicorn’s request actually was until this conversation, and even then, it wasn’t until I substituted my comment for what Kaj asked me to say, and I warned of this at the time!
You interpreted her request in a literal-minded but incorrect way; you failed to generalize from “don’t respond to my comments” to “don’t try to pull me into a conversation with you by any means”.
That’s certainly the narrative you want to put on it, sure, but if you actually look at the history of what exactly she asked for (including the very specific clarificaitons), your interpretation is mistaken.
And while I’m believably non-NT, I think I can safely guess there wasn’t a lot of nobility in your intent to reply to this comment—not when anything I could have done would have given you a pretense to build yourself up by pointing out the “obvious” error on my part.
I think that’s a large part of why I didn’t do any of that in the original comment, just in the version that Kaj asked me to post instead! Who should I listen to here, you or Kaj? Which is the real neurotypical standard that I violated?
For the record: I wasn’t fully aware of the history and magnitude of this conflict, and I didn’t realize Alicorn had specifically asked for you to not reply to her at all.
Regardless, as I remember, both versions of the comment were (are) addressed to Alicorn. It was just more implicit in the first one (“I know someone this advice hasn’t been applied to” or something along those lines, I think), but it was still pointing out that Alicorn hadn’t applied the technique to you. Therefore it was referencing her, just as strongly as if you’d mentioned her.
psst! I’m still waiting for you to revise this comment in light of the demonstrable misconceptions you grounded it on.
Though if retracting some of your bold, noble statements would cost you a little status here and there, I just want to let you know, I completely understand why you wouldn’t want to step down from your position on the bandwagon. That’s just a decision you have to make between you and your god (or Omega, as the case may be).
EDIT: I’ve reconsidered this, and what I wrote here is unfair to SilasBarta. What really happened here, I think, is that Alicorn’s actions inadvertantly set up a feedback loop, which no one understood well enough to shut down before it blew up here. In this post, I chided Silas for not recognizing and disarming that feedback loop—but the truth is, there were plenty of people, including both Alicorn and myself, who could’ve repaired the situation with a little more awareness, and this comment really didn’t help.
And to clarify—what started this whole thing was Alicorn asking Silas not to respond to any of her comments, which was a strange and hostile thing to ask. In this comment, I interpreted that request by rounding it to the nearest non-strange request, which more than I thought. Unfortunately, when asked to clarify, Alicorn clarified it as literally “don’t reply to comments”, rather than “don’t try to initiate conversations”, as she should have.
Original comment below:
Ok, this has gotten painful to watch, and since no one has explained it properly, I feel I ought to overcome the bystander effect and step in. SilasBarta, you have dramatically misunderstood what is happening here. You are flagrantly violating a social norm that you do not seem to understand. Alicorn has acted in a way that is fully determined by your behavior towards her, and anyone else would do the same in her place.
When you speak someone’s name and know that they can hear you, you are, in effect, attempting to summon them. It effectively forces them to listen; if in public, they may need to step in to defend their reputation, and if in private they know they’re specifically being addressed. Attempts to initiate conversation are a social primitive; neurotypicals track a statistical overview of the nature, frequency, and response given to conversations with each person, and expect each other to do the same.
If you attempt to initiate conversation with someone, they give you a negative response, and you knew or should have known that they would give you a negative response, then you are pestering them. By “negative response”, I mean visible irritation, anger, or an attempt to push you out of their sphere of attention without using a pretext. If you repeatedly pester someone who has specifically asked you not to, and you don’t have a sufficiently suitable and important pretext, then you are harrassing them. Pestering someone is frowned upon. Harrassing someone is frowned upon, and can also be illegal if it either carries an implied threat or is sufficiently flagrant. Also, our culture assigns additional penalty points for this if you are male and the person you’re harrassing is female.
So here is the story, as I understand it. After an interaction that did not go well, Alicorn asked you not to reply to her comments. This means “don’t pester me” (or more succinctly, “go away”). This is one of a small number of standard messages which all neurotypicals expect each other to be able to recognize reliably and to pick out of subtext. You continued to participate in conversations Alicorn was involved in, by responding to other commenters, but every time you did so you spoke Alicorn’s name, even when you had no pretext for doing so. You interpreted her request in a literal-minded but incorrect way; you failed to generalize from “don’t respond to my comments” to “don’t try to pull me into a conversation with you by any means”.
I’m curious now about this community’s perceptions of a person A’s requests for a person B not to reply to A’s comments. (Note: I’m using letters A and B because this isn’t about the particular situation or the individuals in question, and I don’t want the individuals’ identities to distract from the issue here.)
I posted a comment stating that it wasn’t reasonable to ask someone not to reply, which got downvoted. I’m assuming this got downvoted because people disagree.
One person replied stating that A’s original request was not to avoid replying to any of A’s comments, but to stop making comments that specifically single A out. However, this was not B’s interpretation of the request. B seems to think, possibly incorrectly, that A asked B not to reply to any of A’s comments on LW.
For people who think this is a reasonable request, here’s a hypothetical: suppose C and D are enrolled in a philosophy class together. C and D have an unpleasant interaction, and C requests that D not raise her hand in class and participate in class discussion after C has made a comment. Do people agree that this would be an unreasonable request, unlike, say, “please don’t call or email me”? If so, why is a request to not reply to someone’s LW comments substantially different?
It depends on whether D’s intention in responding to a comment of C is to contribute to the class discussion or to needle C.
No, the request we’re talking about is “don’t comment at all in reply to my comments.”
Edited to fix link.
ETA: Also see here
In a classroom setting, the right to ask people to leave or to not participate is reserved exlusively for the professor; a student could not ask another student to shut up without the teacher’s express consent. On a blog, however, no such authority exists, so anyone can make such requests—but only in response to breaking certain social norms without a good excuse.
Well, blogs do have administrators, who hold a similar authority. I believe Eliezer has banned several people from LW for making only poor quality or trollish posts, for instance.
Well, yes, anyone can make such requests, just like I can request that LW commentors refrain from using the word “the” because I find it incredibly offensive. The point is that it isn’t a reasonable request. If someone’s violated enough of the community norms to be banned, that’s a matter for the administrator, but that’s different than an individual requesting “please don’t reply to my comments in a public discussion forum” as if it were comparable to “please don’t email or call me.”
Upvoted for the good explanation of the social norm of name-speaking; not necessarily because of the criticism of SilasBarta.
Ok, that’s ridiculous. Comments on LW are part of a large group discussion. A person can tell someone else to stop bugging them or emailing them or calling them, but it is not reasonable to ask someone to not make public comments on LW. No one has the right to do that, any more than I have the right to say “stop using the Internet; it bugs me.”
True, but that’s not the request that was made. She asked him to stop making comments which specifically single her out.
Sorry, jimrandomh, but you are flatly wrong here, and this misunderstanding underpins your entire criticism. Alicorn has asked that I not post any comments as a reply to hers, even if they don’t single her out, and even if they involve asking others not to mod her down because of the context of her comment! See here, and here.
Now, please revise your diplomatic comments in light of this new information.
(The funniest part is how Alicorn keeps appealing to her own non-neurotypicality, despite my being the only one accused of missing something due to non-NT. Go fig.)
The most accurate phrasing of the intended meaning of Alicorn’s request is the one I wrote in my first post: “do not try to pull me into a conversation with you by any means”. A direct reply does that; it singles out the author of the parent, to a degree that depends on how easily someone else could step in and take their place in the conversation. Non-reply comments also do that if they name her; she didn’t explicitly say that wasn’t allowed, but “leave me the fuck alone” should’ve covered it.
Except that I stated what I took the request to mean, and she agreed with that. And “do no try to pull me into a conversation …” just ain’t part of it. Take, for example, this comment and this one. Off limits? Well, Alicorn certainly reserves the right to make such comments on my top-level posts. And it doesn’t obligate her to respond directly.
So you still appear very confused about the topic you’re opining on so strongly and confidently.
Not even close: see here, another major example of Alicorn saying what is and is not okay. The comment I made, though nested under her comment, does not in any way draw her into a conversation, because it is a remark about someone else. It is not addressed to her, but to the group in general, regarding a different poster. Still off limits, for some reason.
Is it starting to dawn on you how you’ve misinterpreted Alicorn’s past demands, and why you should maybe withdraw your misconception -rounded, “noble” criticism of me from earlier?
I see two problems with your selected case.
First, you appeared to violate the stated version of the rule. You need a better reason just to create that appearance than wanting to make a jocular remark.
Second, jocular remarks are drawing people into conversations—they’re probably the number-one way to draw someone into a conversation. People joke around with people that they like, and Alicorn does not like you.
I had no idea the concept of “jocular” even applied at the time (and remember, the aspie defense can only be used by Alicorn, not me!) I still don’t see how such a remark somehow draws Alicorn to post further (maybe in real life, in-person situations that might be true?).
Does anyone really see why that general, light-hearted jab at Mitchell somehow gives Alicorn a social obligation to continue?
As for violating the stated rule, my (quite reasonable) understanding at the time (though not anymore) was that the mere nesting of the comment doesn’t matter; what matters is who it’s directed at. And from context, it’s clear it’s a general, big-picture remark bout Mitchell’s theory’s inadequacy. (And a bit of a rude one, but not to Alicorn.)
So it’s far from obvious I was doing anything wrong at the time—but apparently, even defending Alicorn for saying “leave me the fuck alone” is blatant disregard for her—go fig!
Your defense of Alicorn is at +1. Your original remark is at −6. This is because the former comment was appropriate, and the latter not.
Edit 5/27: I have been reminded that the primary reason given for downvoting the original comment was that it was rude, not that it was a reply to Alicorn—I had forgotten this, and left a misleading impression as a consequence.
I hope you know this already, but your social coprocessor is crap, dude. You really need to put in some hard work developing a better set of heuristics, because you’ve been making a lot of blunders, and it’s turning people off.
The defense of Alicorn was at 0 earlier today, and long ago it went negative very quickly. It has nothing to do with appropriateness and everything to do with Alicorn wanting to impose unreasonable rules on me out of some misguided spite.
Thanks—I’m glad that won’t work as a self-fulfilling prophesy or anything, and it’s not the kind of thing you could have said privately—very thoughtful of you.
Well, I’m glad to know that on a site like LW, I will be given more patience because of the understanding of non-neurotypicality, so long as you use Alicorn rather than SilasBarta as your handle.
SilasBarta, let me tell you something. I am bad with names. Very, very bad with names. So bad that I know a guy who made bet that I wouldn’t know the name of his friend, who I had been hanging out with for years—and won the bet. If someone tells me in public, “Robin, you are terrible with names”, I have no grounds whatsoever to take that as an insult. It would be like being insulted that people thought I was a man. I have a beard, no breasts, and worse recall for names than the average parakeet, and all these things are painfully obvious in a short period of time.
SIlasBarta, you get caught up in more flamewars than almost anyone on Less Wrong. Drop the conspiracy theorists and you’re a lock. That’s a warning sign, man, just as much as the crazy differential between people knowing my name and my knowing theirs—it’s a clue that you’re in the wrong tail of the distribution. If you want to say that Alicorn is on the same side of the peak, I won’t argue with you, but that’s Alicorn’s problem, not yours. You need to figure out what you’re doing that can explain why the population gets peeved at you more often than it does at other people, because the difference is too large to explain by chance.
Request reason for downmod.
To be fair, I’m not a neurotypical and have advertised this on the Internet.
I think jimrandomh may be mistaken in selecting “neurotypical” as the relevant criterion—the correlated criterion of “well-socialized” may be nearer the mark.
Good point; that terminology would do a better job of hiding the dissonance in scolding me for my autistic errors, even as Alicorn alone gets the sympathy for being non-NT. Make sure to tell Jim!
“Well-socialized”, like “real number”, is a perniciously misleading term.
Why?
Because society is not particularly well optimized, the implication of goodness in the modifier “well” is deceptive—a well-socialized person is quite likely to be tribalistic and repressed, for example.
They are? I would expect a well-socialized person to be secure and comfortable and friendly.
Sounds like your definition of “well-socialized” is closer to “well-adjusted” than RobinZ’s.
As I understand them, skill in navigating social situations, epistemic rationality and psychological well-being are all separate features. They do seem to correlate, but the causal influences are not obvious.
ETA: Depends a lot on the standard you use, too. RobinZ is probably correct if you look at the upper quartile but less so for the 99th percentile.
As an aside, I would say that jimrandomh’s point relies upon describing a substantial population—more like the set of those above the upper quartile than those above the 99th percentile.
I don’t know nearly enough to defend my original stance. Consider me confused.
I think the point was that Silas is and he should have responded appropriately. Personally I think NT issue is irrelevant here unless the person receiving the message is not NT, in which case not getting it is a somewhat valid excuse.
Since you advertised it, which “bucket” are you in? My son is on the spectrum, somewhat high functioning, so potential development branches are of personal interest.
I have an Asperger’s diagnosis. People who know me in person and know the details of autism symptoms find it entirely credible. People who wouldn’t know an autie from any other neuroatypicality are surprised when I tell them (I’m high functioning and have decent social heuristics, and in the minds of the completely uninformed, autism = retardation plus rocking and hand flapping).
Show of hands: who thinks I’m neurotypical?
My hand is horizontal; I think Jim’s assumption is that you are. If you are credibly not, and feel you did not get Alicorn’s signal due to this you should say so—I think it will create an good case to smoke some peace pipes. Personally, I like you both and wish to see this settled.
Actually, my assumption was that he isn’t, although this was not based on any strong evidence.
Whoa, when was evidence a pre-requisite for you to post strongly about something? Since two minutes ago?
I’m going to go out on a limb and guess that you put full credence in Alicorn’s self-serving, unverifiable claim to having been diagnosed with Asberger’s, despite her infamous, “Why not just meet women on the internet?” line … am I right?
And yet the very basis for your criticism of me was that I’m making a non-NT-characteristic mistake in interpreting a social situation? Did your arguments come before or after your conclusion?
I, Lucas Sloan, do solemnly swear that Alicorn is not neurotypical, and very probably has Asperger’s. I further attest that the information this comment is based on is the result of having physically interacted with her.
Are you also solemnly swearing to ignorance of Alicorn’s long-time inarticulable ease with which she makes long-term friendships, a strong non-Asperger’s indicator?
I did not know of her ability to purposefully create friendships in any way.
Systematizing something which most people do naturally (ie making friends with people) is an indicator of Aspergers.
Except that she’d done it naturally all her life without any rigorous systematization—which is why she finds her methods so inarticulable (“why not just meet girls/friends on the internet?”). Someone who’s systematized it has gone through all the steps (the “nuts and bolts”) explicitly and has no trouble telling others how to do it—yet Alicorn has spectacularly, laughably failed at that.
(Good for her if she can make friends—but she can’t seem to pass that skill on.)
So the evidence suggests that this friendship ability did not originate from Asperger’s-type systematization, rendering it unable to substantiate claims of Aspberger’s.
:\
I know you saw this, you replied to one of the replies to it.
Yes, to criticize the advice’s actual vacuousness.
The advice requires you to know things that, as an AS type, you wouldn’t know to begin with. Her advice is just another form of “do what the other person believes is okay for you to do, and do it right and stuff”—this shows serious lack of systematization.
And what kind of advice is it anyway, to say, “Um, okay, first assume the other person has started the conversation...”
I’ve read everything that Alicorn wrote in that thread four times now, and don’t see anywhere where she said to assume that the other person has started the conversation. She didn’t give explicit advice on how to start a conversation, but note that the original comment is marked “some tidbits”, not “everything you need to know about having a conversation”.
She does give a useful, if rough, heuristic for determining when one shouldn’t try to start a conversation with a stranger:
Further, auties can learn heuristics that mitigate some of our social skills deficits, and Alicorn’s advice is generally within the realm of such heuristics; she doesn’t suggest reading the other person’s body language, for example, but gives advice that is likely to work without the knowledge that body language gives. Also, as a strong extrovert, Alicorn is more likely than most auties to have developed those heuristics to the point where they can be built on to create more advanced heuristics that go well beyond what is stereotypically expected of an autie.
What about the thing I just quoted:
Next:
Except that’s not useful, because socially-adept people violate that in spades.
Wait, I thought she was autistic?
As I discussed here, I don’t think being autistic and being extroverted are mutually exclusive, although they may co-occur in many individuals. Alicorn was actually one of the people I had in mind as someone whom I’ve met who has AS and is also extroverted.
Yes, I’m quite aware of that. And be that as it may, the experience of an extroverted autistic is going to be significantly different from that of a normal autistic, questioning the usefulness of the former’s insight into the latter.
I agree with you on this point. To the extent that Alicorn has presented her socialization/luminosity advice as being applicable to all people (or all autistic people), she has certainly overstated her case. Indeed, I would guess the reason her comment about meeting people on the Internet was downvoted was that it appeared to promise universally applicable advice, and as HughRistik ably pointed out, it did not fulfill that promise.
But my guess, based on Alicorn’s posts, would be that at this point, even Alicorn would agree that her advice may not work for all people. She backed off somewhat on the universal applicability of her Internet-socializing advice in response to HughRistik’s comment (“It is possible I was overgeneralizing”). And I think her more recent posts have mostly recognized that her advice may not be helpful to all people. For example, in the introduction to the luminosity sequence, she wrote:
Yes, she backed down in response to my comment, which I noticed and greatly appreciated. But she never made any personal admission of fault or retraction to Silas, so I understand why he held a grudge. After all, she did tell him:
At this point in the conversation, I really don’t see what Silas had done to deserve such as assessment, other than proclaim frustration at his dating situation, and point out that her advice wasn’t helpful to him.
If Alicorn had given Silas some kind of personal apology or retraction, admitting that it was premature to try to give him advice without understanding his situation, and imputing negative characteristics to him because of his difficulty accepting that advice, then perhaps the whole communication breakdown might not have happened.
While Silas has handled the interpersonal aspects of their interaction badly, so has Alicorn. I understand why he was frustrated, and felt motivated to point out seeming contradictions between the way she treated him and his arguments, and some of the other posting she did on LessWrong (I also noticed a contradiction between her excellent post on problems vs tasks, and her “let them eat cake” style dating advice to Silas). Along the way, Silas dug himself into a deeper and deeper hole with sarcasm and abrasiveness (despite the urging of me and many others to cool down) and convinced Alicorn and a bunch of other people that he is a jerk, even though he also seems to have made good faith efforts to have discussions with Alicorn on other subjects.
As a result, judgments of Silas by Alicorn or others based on his recent behavior risk falling prey to the fundamental attribution error that Alicorn correctly warns against in the original post. He does have (in my mind) a valid, unresolved beef with a certain lack of charity and hasty negative conclusions that Alicorn displayed to his arguments and character in the past. I strongly, strongly disagree with how he has been expressing it, but he does have a valid beef that people need to realize before piling on him (it’s a testament to the failure of his communication skills that he has slowly managed to alienate a large segment of the community even when he started out being in the right.)
Indeed with this single post you are a much better advocate for Silas than he has been with his many posts. I had not previously seen that post from Alicorn, and I suspect I am not the only one. I agree that Silas, while he has made some good points here and there, has mostly just dug himself a deeper and deeper hole. Whereas Alicorn’s radio silence, particularly in comparison with the frequency of Silas’s posting, has been the wiser move, whether or not it was calculated to be so.
Yes, they can afford to violate it because they can pick up on the relevant subtle cues. Any attempt at systematization in this sort is going to require having a more restrained set of options than that used by socially-adept people. That’s because the rules for how humans interact are really complicated. So even if you did have a decent descriptor for how they all worked, keeping track of all those rules would be really difficult.
And adhering to this rule will so constrain you and mark you as unusual, that it’s no different from just doing aspie SOP (what you’d do anyway).
If I could afford to only talk to people in these circumstances, I wouldn’t be asking for social advice.
It’s different in that it’s a kind of unusual behavior that helps one learn skills that can then be used to make one appear less abnormal.
Isomorphically, someone who was just learning to drive would not immediately try to drive on a busy highway; they would start by practicing in an empty parking lot, even though that’s not a normal venue for driving. Once they were confident in their ability to get the results that they wanted from their car, then they’d try driving on roads.
I concur with Lady Airedale, but from what I understand Alicorn is mostly extroverted in one-on-one settings and less so in large groups. I’m not sure how common this is for extroverts generally.
So then she is like most autistics, but still hasn’t actually systematized the problem in a way that she can articulate the solution to other real autistics.
I’m planning an article/series on how to explain, and I can definitely see more and more people every day who need it.
Downvote explanation requested.
Sorry, first hand knowledge wins.
I’m not familiar with this “infamous” remark and I’m not sure what you’re suggesting it proves or even implies. I recently read the book Born on a Blue Day, which was written by Daniel Tammet, a man with Asperger’s. He writes at one point:
Tammet met his partner on the Internet. His reasoning makes sense to me. Is there something ridiculous that I am missing about the suggestion that people, especially those with autism spectrum diagnoses, meet other people on the Internet, as opposed to real life?
Of course. Just check out HughRistik’s detailed explanation of how such a suggestion, like “let them eat cake” completely misunderstands the state of an AS male.
Yes, in some time and place it was possible for these internet chats to easily translate into dating for aspies, but apparently, everyone on the site seemed to disagree with Alicorn’s assessment.
But taking it as a given that Alicorn’s comment completely misunderstood the state of an AS male, how does it show that she also completely misunderstands the state of an AS female, and how does the comment therefore provide support for your suggestion that Alicorn’s AS is in doubt because she made that comment?
Because if she had AS, she would be approaching sociality from (more of a) blank slate, and would have to get explicit, conscious knowledge of the rules of sociality she learned, which could then be explained to other AS blank slates, male or female. But her advice is spoken from the perspective of someone who never had to systematize, but only had tacit understanding of sociality—and hence sounds vague to those who really need the advice.
Sorry, that ship has already sailed. Alicorn’s not interested until first I follow a divaesque list of demands, including “justifying the [probably fake] psychological stress” of having to deal with me, the same stress that somehow manages to disappear when higher-status members do the exact same things she doesn’t like.
No, everyone else who’s voiced an opinion on this has said that they would never ask someone what Alicorn has asked of me: that I never post a reply to her comments, even if it’s not directed at her.
I think that’s a large part of why I didn’t do any of that in the original comment, just in the version that Kaj asked me to post instead! Who should I listen to here, you or Kaj? Which is the real neurotypical standard that I violated?
No, as I said in my other reply to you, this isn’t Alicorn’s request at all. It’s:
-Don’t post any comments nested under Alicorn’s, irrespective of content or who the comment is directed at.
-Don’t PM Alicorn, even and especially if it’s something she would want to know but prefer not be said publicly. (?)
-But posting comments in reply to top-level posts is okay, because Alicorn wants to do so on my top-level posts.
Which comments are you talking about? Be specific. I don’t recall violating what Alicorn’s request actually was until this conversation, and even then, it wasn’t until I substituted my comment for what Kaj asked me to say, and I warned of this at the time!
That’s certainly the narrative you want to put on it, sure, but if you actually look at the history of what exactly she asked for (including the very specific clarificaitons), your interpretation is mistaken.
And while I’m believably non-NT, I think I can safely guess there wasn’t a lot of nobility in your intent to reply to this comment—not when anything I could have done would have given you a pretense to build yourself up by pointing out the “obvious” error on my part.
For the record: I wasn’t fully aware of the history and magnitude of this conflict, and I didn’t realize Alicorn had specifically asked for you to not reply to her at all.
Regardless, as I remember, both versions of the comment were (are) addressed to Alicorn. It was just more implicit in the first one (“I know someone this advice hasn’t been applied to” or something along those lines, I think), but it was still pointing out that Alicorn hadn’t applied the technique to you. Therefore it was referencing her, just as strongly as if you’d mentioned her.
psst! I’m still waiting for you to revise this comment in light of the demonstrable misconceptions you grounded it on.
Though if retracting some of your bold, noble statements would cost you a little status here and there, I just want to let you know, I completely understand why you wouldn’t want to step down from your position on the bandwagon. That’s just a decision you have to make between you and your god (or Omega, as the case may be).