There’s also a failure mode of focusing on “which arguments are the best” instead of “what is actually true”. I don’t understand this failure mode very well, except that I’ve seen myself and others fall into it. Falling into it looks like focusing a lot on specific arguments, and spending a lot of time working out what was meant by the words, rather than feeling comfortable adjusting arguments to fit better into your own ontology and to fit better with your own beliefs.
The most obvious way of addressing this, “just feel more comfortable adjusting arguments to fit better into your own ontology and to fit better with your own beliefs”, has its own failure mode, where you end up attacking a strawman that you think is a better argument than what they made, defeating it, and thinking you’ve solved the issue when you haven’t. People have complained about this failure mode of steelmanning a coupleof times. At a fixed level of knowledge and thought about the subject, it seems one can only trade off one danger against the other.
However, if you’re planning to increase your knowledge and time-spent-thinking about the subject, then during that time it’s better to focus on the ideas than on who-said-or-meant-what; the latter is instrumentally useful as a source of ideas.
The most obvious way of addressing this, “just feel more comfortable adjusting arguments to fit better into your own ontology and to fit better with your own beliefs”, has its own failure mode, where you end up attacking a strawman that you think is a better argument than what they made, defeating it, and thinking you’ve solved the issue when you haven’t. People have complained about this failure mode of steelmanning a couple of times. At a fixed level of knowledge and thought about the subject, it seems one can only trade off one danger against the other.
However, if you’re planning to increase your knowledge and time-spent-thinking about the subject, then during that time it’s better to focus on the ideas than on who-said-or-meant-what; the latter is instrumentally useful as a source of ideas.