(I accidentally misread Kindlys post, the response to his actual wording is in a comment below.)
Would you go into a room full of strangers and announce that you’re an elitist? Have you ever tried talking about this with everyday people? Talking about intellectual differences, giftedness, elitism, etc. often triggers a bad reaction, even if you try to do it carefully. This is socially inept to an extreme. When the masses don’t like something, they don’t stop to make distinctions about it. If you guys aren’t doing anything to prevent users from smearing the whole organization as “elitist” then all of you are going to be deemed guilty by association. There are people using their real names here—their IRL reputations may be effected by elitism or the appearance of elitism. Just as you shouldn’t abuse a person by slandering them, you shouldn’t abuse a group of people by smearing them all as elitists—unless they deserve that. That’s why it’s important—because people like me take offense to being labeled an “elitist”, knowing what resentment that can provoke in the average Joe, and I don’t appreciate being smeared this way with the rest of you.
Also, don’t misquote my wording. What I said was that people shouldn’t be let to smear LessWrong by using the word “elitism” lightly. That’s different from banning it from use. I’m essentially saying “don’t let them slander the group”. Of course, if you guys really do think you’re better than everyone else and that you should have special treatment and exceptions to rules, go ahead and use the word “elitist” to describe that, as it will give the rest of the world the right idea. I will definitely be leaving if that’s what the group decides, though, and you’ll be scaring off the other non elitist intellectuals and donations from anyone who isn’t an intellectual elitist.
Can you stop using the word “elitist”? You can go on mentioning it, since part of your claim seems to be about where that word should and should not appear, but please stop using it.
Ok, I see what you mean. I also see that asking me to quit using the words “elitist” and “elitism” is the equivalent of asking me to quit talking about the subject of elitism. I do not see why it would help any of us improve if I quit talking about elitism. Even if I’m the one that’s confused, I doubt I will realize it if I refrain from talking about it.
Sorry, I didn’t mean to misquote you. When I said “a policy of “not using the word “elitist”″” I meant it as shorthand for the second policy you suggested (the one under the letter B), not as a summary.
And I’m afraid you misunderstood my question. I didn’t mean to ask why “Not letting people behave in an abusive or insulting way toward people who may not have the same education or IQ” is a good idea—that’s pretty much obvious. What my question was, what makes you think this needs to be an explicit policy?
(By the way, I would appreciate it if you didn’t confuse my own point of view with the “Less Wrong point of view”. If such a thing even exists, I’m not a spokesperson for it.)
Oh I misread your post. Okay. Now I am baffled as to why you don’t seem to agree that it would be good to have a policy. Well here are a few reasons:
1.) If there’s no formal policy against elitism, and there are a bunch of people creating the appearance of elitism on the site, that looks bad. It looks much better if we have it in writing that the people who run the site don’t want elitism.
2.) It’s obvious to you and me that that’s a bad way to act, but it’s not obvious to everybody. If a bunch of people create the appearance of elitism on a website, might it be because they are elitists? That was what I thought at first… I didn’t think a group of people would be crazy enough to brand themselves as elitists unless they actually were elitists. I did think to question that perception, but it still seems like a valid question to ask whether the reason these people seem so willing to look like elitists might be a sign that they actually are.
3.) If a bunch of people create the appearance of elitism on a website, isn’t that likely to draw elitists? I would think so. And if people are getting away with creating the appearance of elitism, that may encourage elitists who are attracted to this site from acting in an abusive manner. Having a policy may prevent that or encourage moderators to do something about it after the fact.
There are two broad reasons why one might have such a policy.
First, if in fact it were a common tendency on Less Wrong to dismiss outsiders as inferior (based on education or IQ? I don’t think this is necessary for elitism, but you seem to be focused on these) then the policy might be a step to help prevent this. I don’t see such a tendency, and I think I’m more disgusted than average by people saying things like “If you have less than 130 IQ, you’re not worth talking to”. Do you have examples of people actually acting like this? Note that this is different from saying that people outside Less Wrong have lower standards for discussion.
Second, if Less Wrong appears to be “elitist”, an “anti-elitist” formal policy might counter this appearance. I believe this is what you’re suggesting. I don’t think this is a good idea. First of all, I don’t think it would work. For example, if I saw a forum’s policy explicitly state “No racist comments will be condoned” then I would actually think racism is more of a problem than average on that forum.
Furthermore, I read Less Wrong because people here prefer not to say one thing to mean another, which is exactly what this is suggesting. I expect users here to notice the difference between a policy that does something, and one that puts up an appearance of doing something. I don’t want a policy of the second kind.
(I accidentally misread Kindlys post, the response to his actual wording is in a comment below.)
Would you go into a room full of strangers and announce that you’re an elitist? Have you ever tried talking about this with everyday people? Talking about intellectual differences, giftedness, elitism, etc. often triggers a bad reaction, even if you try to do it carefully. This is socially inept to an extreme. When the masses don’t like something, they don’t stop to make distinctions about it. If you guys aren’t doing anything to prevent users from smearing the whole organization as “elitist” then all of you are going to be deemed guilty by association. There are people using their real names here—their IRL reputations may be effected by elitism or the appearance of elitism. Just as you shouldn’t abuse a person by slandering them, you shouldn’t abuse a group of people by smearing them all as elitists—unless they deserve that. That’s why it’s important—because people like me take offense to being labeled an “elitist”, knowing what resentment that can provoke in the average Joe, and I don’t appreciate being smeared this way with the rest of you.
Also, don’t misquote my wording. What I said was that people shouldn’t be let to smear LessWrong by using the word “elitism” lightly. That’s different from banning it from use. I’m essentially saying “don’t let them slander the group”. Of course, if you guys really do think you’re better than everyone else and that you should have special treatment and exceptions to rules, go ahead and use the word “elitist” to describe that, as it will give the rest of the world the right idea. I will definitely be leaving if that’s what the group decides, though, and you’ll be scaring off the other non elitist intellectuals and donations from anyone who isn’t an intellectual elitist.
Can you stop using the word “elitist”? You can go on mentioning it, since part of your claim seems to be about where that word should and should not appear, but please stop using it.
I’m not sure what you’re asking.
Use-mention distinction. Please stop using the word “elitism”.
Ok, I see what you mean. I also see that asking me to quit using the words “elitist” and “elitism” is the equivalent of asking me to quit talking about the subject of elitism. I do not see why it would help any of us improve if I quit talking about elitism. Even if I’m the one that’s confused, I doubt I will realize it if I refrain from talking about it.
You can play Rationalist Taboo, yes?
I decided to take your suggestion, thanks.
Actually, I think Alicorn is asking you to unpack what you mean by elitism, or else we are in danger of arguing about trees falling in a forest.
Sorry, I didn’t mean to misquote you. When I said “a policy of “not using the word “elitist”″” I meant it as shorthand for the second policy you suggested (the one under the letter B), not as a summary.
And I’m afraid you misunderstood my question. I didn’t mean to ask why “Not letting people behave in an abusive or insulting way toward people who may not have the same education or IQ” is a good idea—that’s pretty much obvious. What my question was, what makes you think this needs to be an explicit policy?
(By the way, I would appreciate it if you didn’t confuse my own point of view with the “Less Wrong point of view”. If such a thing even exists, I’m not a spokesperson for it.)
Oh I misread your post. Okay. Now I am baffled as to why you don’t seem to agree that it would be good to have a policy. Well here are a few reasons:
1.) If there’s no formal policy against elitism, and there are a bunch of people creating the appearance of elitism on the site, that looks bad. It looks much better if we have it in writing that the people who run the site don’t want elitism.
2.) It’s obvious to you and me that that’s a bad way to act, but it’s not obvious to everybody. If a bunch of people create the appearance of elitism on a website, might it be because they are elitists? That was what I thought at first… I didn’t think a group of people would be crazy enough to brand themselves as elitists unless they actually were elitists. I did think to question that perception, but it still seems like a valid question to ask whether the reason these people seem so willing to look like elitists might be a sign that they actually are.
3.) If a bunch of people create the appearance of elitism on a website, isn’t that likely to draw elitists? I would think so. And if people are getting away with creating the appearance of elitism, that may encourage elitists who are attracted to this site from acting in an abusive manner. Having a policy may prevent that or encourage moderators to do something about it after the fact.
Sorry if the misinterpretation annoyed you.
There are two broad reasons why one might have such a policy.
First, if in fact it were a common tendency on Less Wrong to dismiss outsiders as inferior (based on education or IQ? I don’t think this is necessary for elitism, but you seem to be focused on these) then the policy might be a step to help prevent this. I don’t see such a tendency, and I think I’m more disgusted than average by people saying things like “If you have less than 130 IQ, you’re not worth talking to”. Do you have examples of people actually acting like this? Note that this is different from saying that people outside Less Wrong have lower standards for discussion.
Second, if Less Wrong appears to be “elitist”, an “anti-elitist” formal policy might counter this appearance. I believe this is what you’re suggesting. I don’t think this is a good idea. First of all, I don’t think it would work. For example, if I saw a forum’s policy explicitly state “No racist comments will be condoned” then I would actually think racism is more of a problem than average on that forum.
Furthermore, I read Less Wrong because people here prefer not to say one thing to mean another, which is exactly what this is suggesting. I expect users here to notice the difference between a policy that does something, and one that puts up an appearance of doing something. I don’t want a policy of the second kind.