I’m not sure if this post is meant to be taken seriously. It’s always “easy” to make fun of X; what’s difficult is to spread your opinion about X by making fun of X. Obviously this requires a target audience that doesn’t already share your opinion about X, and if you look at people making fun of things (e.g. on the net), usually the audience they’re catering to already shares their views. This is because the most common objective of making fun of things is not to convince people of anything, but to create a group identity, raise team morale, and so on. There is zero point talking about the difficulty of that because there is none.
Someone would have to be very susceptible to be influenced by people making fun of things. I guess rationality doesn’t have all that much to do with how influenceable you are, but this post strikes me as overly naïve concerning the intentions of people. If someone makes fun of X, they’re clearly not interested in an objective discussion about X, so why would you be swayed by their arguments?
Whether or not people are making fun of it is not necessarily a good signal as to whether or not it’s actually good.
I’m not sure if this post is meant to be taken seriously. It’s always “easy” to make fun of X; what’s difficult is to spread your opinion about X by making fun of X. Obviously this requires a target audience that doesn’t already share your opinion about X, and if you look at people making fun of things (e.g. on the net), usually the audience they’re catering to already shares their views.
I’d rather argue that this doesn’t work to convince people who already like X (although it may make them more inclined to keep their opinions to themselves), but does influence people who have no opinion of X (possibly because they’ve never heard of X before) dislike X and cause people who mildly dislike X to strengthen their opinion.
I’m not sure if this post is meant to be taken seriously. It’s always “easy” to make fun of X; what’s difficult is to spread your opinion about X by making fun of X. Obviously this requires a target audience that doesn’t already share your opinion about X, and if you look at people making fun of things (e.g. on the net), usually the audience they’re catering to already shares their views. This is because the most common objective of making fun of things is not to convince people of anything, but to create a group identity, raise team morale, and so on. There is zero point talking about the difficulty of that because there is none.
Someone would have to be very susceptible to be influenced by people making fun of things. I guess rationality doesn’t have all that much to do with how influenceable you are, but this post strikes me as overly naïve concerning the intentions of people. If someone makes fun of X, they’re clearly not interested in an objective discussion about X, so why would you be swayed by their arguments?
Gee, you think?
I’d rather argue that this doesn’t work to convince people who already like X (although it may make them more inclined to keep their opinions to themselves), but does influence people who have no opinion of X (possibly because they’ve never heard of X before) dislike X and cause people who mildly dislike X to strengthen their opinion.