My experience is that readability doesn’t translate much to quality and might even be negatively correlated, because reality is messy and simplifications are easier to read. I do think works that make themselves easy to double check are probably higher quality on average, but haven’t rigorously tested this.
It’s hard to nail down; it’d probably be a very long essay to even try.
And it’s not a perfect predictor, alas — just evidence.
But I believe there’s a certain way to spot “good reasoning” and “having thoroughly worked out the problem” from one’s writing. It’s not the smoothness of the words, nor the simplicity.
I’s hard to describe, but it seems somewhat consistently recognizable. Yudkowsky has it, incidentally.
My experience is that readability doesn’t translate much to quality and might even be negatively correlated, because reality is messy and simplifications are easier to read. I do think works that make themselves easy to double check are probably higher quality on average, but haven’t rigorously tested this.
The quality I’m describing isn’t quite “readability” — it overlaps, but that’s not quite it.
Feynman has it —
http://www.faculty.umassd.edu/j.wang/feynman.pdf
It’s hard to nail down; it’d probably be a very long essay to even try.
And it’s not a perfect predictor, alas — just evidence.
But I believe there’s a certain way to spot “good reasoning” and “having thoroughly worked out the problem” from one’s writing. It’s not the smoothness of the words, nor the simplicity.
I’s hard to describe, but it seems somewhat consistently recognizable. Yudkowsky has it, incidentally.