In my experience, if there are several concepts that seem similar, understanding how they relate to one another usually helps with clarity rather than hurting.
That depends on how strict your criteria are for evaluating “similarity”. Often concepts that intuitively evoke a similar “feel” can differ in important ways, or even fail to be talking about the same type of thing, much less the same thing.
In any case, how do you feel law thinking (as characterized by Eliezer) relates to the momentum-fitness distinction (as characterized by ricraz)? It may turn out that those two concepts are in fact linked, but in such a case it would nonetheless be helpful to make the linking explicit.
In my experience, if there are several concepts that seem similar, understanding how they relate to one another usually helps with clarity rather than hurting.
That depends on how strict your criteria are for evaluating “similarity”. Often concepts that intuitively evoke a similar “feel” can differ in important ways, or even fail to be talking about the same type of thing, much less the same thing.
In any case, how do you feel law thinking (as characterized by Eliezer) relates to the momentum-fitness distinction (as characterized by ricraz)? It may turn out that those two concepts are in fact linked, but in such a case it would nonetheless be helpful to make the linking explicit.