I think the answer “I’ll be like whoaaa, because this question is interesting!” is a helpful, non-nothing answer
But that is a ‘nothing’ answer. Just finding a question and answer interesting isn’t doing something with the answer. And while I agree that having really bad reasons for trying to answer questions is really bad, I’m still not sure what to make of the original ‘nothing’ comment. Is ‘nothing’ indicative of a bad reason for trying to answer a question? If it is, is it merely evidence for, or does it (or the motivations it reflects) constitute a bad reason?
I will experience an increase in utility from the process of finding out the answer? I will bask in the good feeling of having my question answered? I will gleefully tell like-minded friends about it, thus infecting them with my enthusiasm?
I guess it’s hard to tell the difference if you haven’t encountered the second type of question, where you think, “Oh well, I better develop an opinion on this whole gay marriage thing because everyone is talking about it and I’m the type of person that has opinions.” It feels kinda like a chore you should do. (It’s even worse when you feel pressure to make the opinion unique and interesting.) The difference between that feeling and realizing you don’t know something and then checking it on wikipedia and going “ohhhh” is really big.
But that is a ‘nothing’ answer. Just finding a question and answer interesting isn’t doing something with the answer. And while I agree that having really bad reasons for trying to answer questions is really bad, I’m still not sure what to make of the original ‘nothing’ comment. Is ‘nothing’ indicative of a bad reason for trying to answer a question? If it is, is it merely evidence for, or does it (or the motivations it reflects) constitute a bad reason?
I will experience an increase in utility from the process of finding out the answer? I will bask in the good feeling of having my question answered? I will gleefully tell like-minded friends about it, thus infecting them with my enthusiasm?
I guess it’s hard to tell the difference if you haven’t encountered the second type of question, where you think, “Oh well, I better develop an opinion on this whole gay marriage thing because everyone is talking about it and I’m the type of person that has opinions.” It feels kinda like a chore you should do. (It’s even worse when you feel pressure to make the opinion unique and interesting.) The difference between that feeling and realizing you don’t know something and then checking it on wikipedia and going “ohhhh” is really big.