at least that a large enough portion of women do X that the rest are a minority small enough to be safely ignored
I interpret Luke’s claim as being about what women do more than men. It’s an aid to model other minds that, along several axes, tend to systematically differ. I disagree with “ignored”, I think that’s inserting a charged intention into Luke’s essay that is obviously not intended.
it tends to come across as judgmental: “Real” men/women/rationalists/whatever do X or Y or Z, so if I don’t, does that mean something’s wrong with me?
Women (generally) want to have children more than men do (I think, which is sufficient for the example). I personally very much want to have children one day. I don’t think that makes me “not a real man” or anything like that.
Even if that’s not the intention
It’s obviously not.
cached thoughts that can be very frustrating to deal with.
I disagree with “ignored”, I think that’s inserting a charged intention into Luke’s essay that is obviously not intended.
Would you agree that Luke communicated that it’s fairly safe to assume that all women X? That’s a more diplomatic way of putting it, but to my way of thinking boils down to essentially the same message.
Women (generally) want to have children more than men do (I think, which is sufficient for the example). I personally very much want to have children one day. I don’t think that makes me “not a real man” or anything like that.
This seems to miss the bulk of my point. If one leaves out the ‘generally’, and just says “women want to have children more than men do”, a man who is very interested in having children can think that women want children even more. He’ll probably be incorrect, but he can think that, without it being a source of immediate stress or drama. But a woman who has no desire to have children is in a different situation—there’s no plausible way that the average degree of wanting-children in men is lower than that, so it’s immediately obvious that she doesn’t fit the speaker’s definition of ‘women’, which can be quite stressful. The case where men aren’t referred to at all is similar, except that the man seeing the message is likely to come to a conclusion that’s a bit closer to correct.
(Also, does it change your perception of this conversation at all if I point out that 1) I’m in a particularly a-gendered phase of genderfluidity right now and don’t identify as female at the moment, and 2) my most recent priming for having this kind of argument actually came from a male-focused gender-egalitarianism blog? These things do run both ways, even if the example at hand is female-focused.)
So I upvoted this comment and then saw when I looked at it again that it was now at zero. I’m deeply curious what in it someone thought deserved a downvote.
It’s quite likely that I’m being downvoted for having a conversation about gender at all, given that those have a bit of a habit of exploding when they happen here.
Has anyone else noticed considerably more downvotes than usual in the past week- in particular for comments which are well above what we expect here in terms of writing, manner, education and rationality? (I may have just spent too much time in threads that got political.)
If I voted this comment down, would you take that as supporting evidence that there are recently more downvotes than usual, or as evidence opposing that theory?
I would take it as evidence supporting my sense that there have been more downvotes than usual recently (or that you were just screwing with me). I asked a reasonable question regarding whether or not others had noticed more downvotes lately. Downvoting the comment signals that someone doesn’t want to see comments like it—not that they disagree with my impression.
(I personally think that downvoting to merely express disagreement is unwarranted except with comments that already have, say 6+ karma in which case a downvote is helpful to demonstrate that there is no consensus on the matter. To no one does −2 indicate that two people merely disagreed with the opinion in the comment. Downvoting someone who is stupidly, irrationally or wrong beyond the standards of LW is a different story.)
I just meant someone might find it funny to downvote a comment talking about how many downvotes they’ve seen- I wasn’t talking about you in particular.
Has anyone else noticed considerably more downvotes than usual in the past week- in particular for comments which are well above what we expect here in terms of writing, manner, education and rationality? (I may have just spent too much time in threads that got political.)
No, I haven’t noticed it. But I confess my standards are rather brutal and I haven’t been paying close attention.
Can you point to a few examples that you would not expect to be voted down as much at other times?
The parent and lessdazed’s reply (before my upvote) for instance. This thread was full of examples until most of the negative karma comments eventually got voted back up. It’s hard to find examples since negative karma comments so often get brought back up to zero.
Could also be that I was away from Less Wrong for a while and I’m not used to the current level of traffic- I suppose I’ve also been surprised by how upvoted some comments have been.
People should be somewhat aware of the averse and irrational reactions negative karma tends to evoke in people—it can lead to the downvotee downvoting more aggressively in turn and become more defensive and arrogant in his comments. Which isn’t to say people should lower their standards about what is acceptable here, exactly.
Would you agree that Luke communicated that it’s fairly safe to assume that all women X?
It depends on the passage. For example, “Women want men to be better at making them laugh and feel good and get aroused and not be creeped out,” applies to basically all women, and also applies to all men but the message from context is that it is generally more important to women than to men. So yes to “all women want X” and “women generally want X more than men want X” but no to “all women want X more than men want X”.
If one leaves out the ‘generally’,
One has to assume something from context and insert either “generally”, “exclusively”, “equally”, or whatever, if it isn’t explicit. My assumption that the intention was best captured by “generally” was a) the charitable reading b) the most likely reading.
The argument that a sentence could be interpreted as offensive seems like it unfairly ignores the principle of charity.
a woman who has no desire to have children is in a different situation—there’s no plausible way that the average degree of wanting-children in men is lower than that, so it’s immediately obvious that she doesn’t fit the speaker’s definition of ‘women’
I’m going to have to let my response to this stew for a bit before it’s suitable to post, if I can get the inferential distances reasonable at all.
The short, probably-won’t-work, only-posting-it-so-the-above-doesn’t-sound-like-an-evasion version is that your assumption that people will automatically parse things like that assumes that such people are at stage 4 (possibly 5) or better of Perry’s development theory (or equivalent), and that such an assumption is not safe to make, even here.
The principle of charity forces people to privilege interpretations they consider unlikely, even if they aren’t the readings they glean automatically. If their first reading implies that the author is innately evil or incredibly stupid, that indicates reinterpretation is in order.
If your point is that it pattern matches for bad things, OK, Luke is communicating suboptimally in the context of many readers being systematically biased and unfair and other writers using similar words to mean mean things.
If their first reading implies that the author is innately evil or incredibly stupid, that indicates reinterpretation is in order.
You seem to be assuming that people can make such reinterpretations in the way you’re looking for. This is not always true. And, even in cases where it is, I suspect that the initial interpretation—the one that’s considered most likely—is the one that counts in terms of affecting the person’s psychological/emotional state.
I interpret Luke’s claim as being about what women do more than men. It’s an aid to model other minds that, along several axes, tend to systematically differ. I disagree with “ignored”, I think that’s inserting a charged intention into Luke’s essay that is obviously not intended.
Women (generally) want to have children more than men do (I think, which is sufficient for the example). I personally very much want to have children one day. I don’t think that makes me “not a real man” or anything like that.
It’s obviously not.
Fair enough.
Would you agree that Luke communicated that it’s fairly safe to assume that all women X? That’s a more diplomatic way of putting it, but to my way of thinking boils down to essentially the same message.
This seems to miss the bulk of my point. If one leaves out the ‘generally’, and just says “women want to have children more than men do”, a man who is very interested in having children can think that women want children even more. He’ll probably be incorrect, but he can think that, without it being a source of immediate stress or drama. But a woman who has no desire to have children is in a different situation—there’s no plausible way that the average degree of wanting-children in men is lower than that, so it’s immediately obvious that she doesn’t fit the speaker’s definition of ‘women’, which can be quite stressful. The case where men aren’t referred to at all is similar, except that the man seeing the message is likely to come to a conclusion that’s a bit closer to correct.
(Also, does it change your perception of this conversation at all if I point out that 1) I’m in a particularly a-gendered phase of genderfluidity right now and don’t identify as female at the moment, and 2) my most recent priming for having this kind of argument actually came from a male-focused gender-egalitarianism blog? These things do run both ways, even if the example at hand is female-focused.)
Edit: Downvote of parent comment: Not me.
So I upvoted this comment and then saw when I looked at it again that it was now at zero. I’m deeply curious what in it someone thought deserved a downvote.
It’s quite likely that I’m being downvoted for having a conversation about gender at all, given that those have a bit of a habit of exploding when they happen here.
Has anyone else noticed considerably more downvotes than usual in the past week- in particular for comments which are well above what we expect here in terms of writing, manner, education and rationality? (I may have just spent too much time in threads that got political.)
If I voted this comment down, would you take that as supporting evidence that there are recently more downvotes than usual, or as evidence opposing that theory?
I would take it as evidence supporting my sense that there have been more downvotes than usual recently (or that you were just screwing with me). I asked a reasonable question regarding whether or not others had noticed more downvotes lately. Downvoting the comment signals that someone doesn’t want to see comments like it—not that they disagree with my impression.
(I personally think that downvoting to merely express disagreement is unwarranted except with comments that already have, say 6+ karma in which case a downvote is helpful to demonstrate that there is no consensus on the matter. To no one does −2 indicate that two people merely disagreed with the opinion in the comment. Downvoting someone who is stupidly, irrationally or wrong beyond the standards of LW is a different story.)
Of the 26 comments on your first page, I had upvoted five and downvoted none, including the parent and great grandparent of this comment.
If I disagreed enough with the great grandparent I might simply downvote it, which is why the situation is peculiar.
I just meant someone might find it funny to downvote a comment talking about how many downvotes they’ve seen- I wasn’t talking about you in particular.
I do think it’s funny so I wrote the comment instead of downvoting.
No, I haven’t noticed it. But I confess my standards are rather brutal and I haven’t been paying close attention.
Can you point to a few examples that you would not expect to be voted down as much at other times?
The parent and lessdazed’s reply (before my upvote) for instance. This thread was full of examples until most of the negative karma comments eventually got voted back up. It’s hard to find examples since negative karma comments so often get brought back up to zero.
Could also be that I was away from Less Wrong for a while and I’m not used to the current level of traffic- I suppose I’ve also been surprised by how upvoted some comments have been.
People should be somewhat aware of the averse and irrational reactions negative karma tends to evoke in people—it can lead to the downvotee downvoting more aggressively in turn and become more defensive and arrogant in his comments. Which isn’t to say people should lower their standards about what is acceptable here, exactly.
It depends on the passage. For example, “Women want men to be better at making them laugh and feel good and get aroused and not be creeped out,” applies to basically all women, and also applies to all men but the message from context is that it is generally more important to women than to men. So yes to “all women want X” and “women generally want X more than men want X” but no to “all women want X more than men want X”.
One has to assume something from context and insert either “generally”, “exclusively”, “equally”, or whatever, if it isn’t explicit. My assumption that the intention was best captured by “generally” was a) the charitable reading b) the most likely reading.
The argument that a sentence could be interpreted as offensive seems like it unfairly ignores the principle of charity.
Is it a definition?
Not consciously.
I’m going to have to let my response to this stew for a bit before it’s suitable to post, if I can get the inferential distances reasonable at all.
The short, probably-won’t-work, only-posting-it-so-the-above-doesn’t-sound-like-an-evasion version is that your assumption that people will automatically parse things like that assumes that such people are at stage 4 (possibly 5) or better of Perry’s development theory (or equivalent), and that such an assumption is not safe to make, even here.
The principle of charity forces people to privilege interpretations they consider unlikely, even if they aren’t the readings they glean automatically. If their first reading implies that the author is innately evil or incredibly stupid, that indicates reinterpretation is in order.
If your point is that it pattern matches for bad things, OK, Luke is communicating suboptimally in the context of many readers being systematically biased and unfair and other writers using similar words to mean mean things.
You seem to be assuming that people can make such reinterpretations in the way you’re looking for. This is not always true. And, even in cases where it is, I suspect that the initial interpretation—the one that’s considered most likely—is the one that counts in terms of affecting the person’s psychological/emotional state.