(Not that that’s a bad idea, but regarding both this idea and my original comment:)
My guess is that there’s core aspects of the Said dispute (as far as I understand it, not really being read in) that Crocker’s rules and butterfly ideas doesn’t address—issues around coordination and cognitive labor.
As an example to illustrate the type of thing I’m gesturing at:
Suppose I start talking about X, and you are interested in Y. Then you ask me elliptical questions that could ambiguously be “about X” (in the sense of having the Gricean mental context of investigating X together), causing me to go down this rabbit hole where you’re not actually trying to talk about X.
This can be construed as a kind of defection against the conversational project of even talking about the same thing.
This can be largely orthogonal to butterfly/Crocker (if those are properly opposed). E.g. you could be pretty polite while derailing. And conversely, in some contexts you can be “Crockerish” productively and normatively even with butterfly ideas. For example, quickly coming up with counterexamples to a conjectured generalization, disregarding hopes about the hypothesis being true, can still be a cooperative butterfly sanctuary—because, for example, you are not being dismissive in tone, and are devoting attention to the actual butterfly idea, and are rolling with frequent revisions of the conjecture without getting snippy.
(A further random guess I have, again not being read in including not having fully read the OP, would be that talk of “hurt feelings” in this whole context is confused about some of the cases, because the feelings aren’t “you said mean things about me” but more like “I turned out to be frustrated with this thread, and even if I can’t explain exactly what’s happening I still think it was kinda adversarial and a regretted use of my time, which is an annoying situation and I just want to avoid this.”, or something like that. In other words, the thing that’s going wrong in some of these cases might be NOT something that Crocker’s rules are even supposed to be opting you into.)
talk of “hurt feelings” in this whole context is confused about some of the cases, because the feelings aren’t “you said mean things about me” but more like “I turned out to be frustrated with this thread, and even if I can’t explain exactly what’s happening I still think it was kinda adversarial and a regretted use of my time, which is an annoying situation and I just want to avoid this.”
I think it’s pretty gullible to treat those different self-reports as representing relevantly different things in the territory. My theory is that the “kinda adversarial” thing that’s happening that the person “can’t explain exactly” is: disagreement unadulterated by social improv games—disagreement with someone who refuses to soften, hedge, or obfuscate their vision of reality in order to maintain a cooperative vibe of mutual respect. It’s annoying and people want to avoid it because it’s less socially rewarding than the improv game.
I think it would be gullible to uncritically assume all self reports of hurt feelings are not covering up some sort of bad behavior. I don’t think that’s what you’re saying, but I’m not actually sure what you’re actually saying. My best guess literal reading of what you wrote is that you’re saying that all these self-reports are more or less always (or usually? or what?) mainly motivated by a kind of coverup for poor reasoning. If you’re saying this, then I probably pretty strongly disagree. It could depend on which people we’re talking about, but I think there are other frequent main reasons for someone to end up with that report, such as the one I sketched in my example.
I think your “go down this rabbit hole where you’re not actually trying to talk about” story could potentially fit the improv game framework, actually? (Briefly: improv performers and people who don’t like adversarial debate try to “Yes, and” each other’s bids to steer the scene, rather than “blocking”, denying the other’s bid.)
Say: I write about my research program which you think is fundamentally flawed. I’m interested in hearing about in-paradigm improvements on my ideas, but not interested in hearing that the whole research program is shot. You ask questions that you think I should be able to answer if my research program were good. I have trouble answering the questions, and get frustrated that you weren’t talking about what I wanted you to talk about. (I wanted you to build on my ideas, not try to destroy them! Whether the research program is good is a separate topic, not what I wanted to talk about!)
Maybe there’s a case that you should have more clearly flagged that you were commenting in an “adversarial” role rather than a “cooperative” one with respect to my research program, so that I could have made the decision to ignore you earlier. But maybe I should stop trying to be so controlling of how other people interact with my ideas? (Maybe you could have been won over on the merits of the program if I had successfully answered your questions, and you couldn’t know until you asked.)
I think your “go down this rabbit hole where you’re not actually trying to talk about” story could potentially fit the improv game framework, actually?
Absolutely not, no. I hope the following can help explain.
you should have more clearly flagged that you were commenting in an “adversarial” role rather than a “cooperative” one with respect to my research program
Yes, IMO this is a much more prosocial pattern and tends to go better for everyone involved. You’re saying this is “controlling”, but again, there’s a simple matter of matching intents. Like a traffic light.
Suppose this happens:
I write a big post that assumes X and goes on to discuss Y. Then you come in and say “It seems like this post assumes X; Is that right? Maybe this is a bit off topic / off of your interests, but I think that X is false, and I think this affects/invalidates your conclusions about Y in reality.”.
Now, I could be annoyed or something that I’m not getting the engagement I want, or annoyed that you’re getting more attention, or something. But I think in this case that annoyance is probably largely my problem, or possibly a problem with the local discourse [i.e. collective user behavior] (e.g. because it’s not able to allocate its cognitive resources properly). It’s a perfectly valid way for you to engage in discourse in a public forum; it’s interesting + relevant to discuss whether X is true, whether it affects my conclusions about Y, and whether my post does assume X.
However, suppose you come in and make an ambiguous comment, e.g. “just asking questions”, while in fact you mostly already have an opinion which you are for some reason not stating. Specifically, highly ambiguous about what you care about / what you’re trying to talk about / what topic you’re trying to get at. (And perhaps, further, the comment is elliptical, or seems to presume something about what I said incorrectly, or seems to signal that I “ought” to engage or have a response or something.) Well, now I might want to engage on the assumption that you’re talking about Y. There might also be attentional presumptions that I ought to engage. For example, it could be that most readers / the community broadly agrees that X is true, and doesn’t view it as that worthwhile to debate whether X is true unless there’s important new evidence. But if your comment is ambiguous, then I as the author and especially the audience would not have common knowledge that you’re not arguing against my claims about Y (presuming X).
If you signpost what you’re doing, then IMO what’s supposed to happen is this:
If your arguments are bad, you get ignored.
If your arguments are kind good / interesting, you get upvoted and discussed, but I may ignore because I believe X.
If your arguments are really good, then I’m eventually “forced” (within some ideal discourse community) to grapple with what you’re saying somehow.
This seems to be like both feasible and a much better sort of attentional traffic-light coordination. (Though plausibly I’m confused / missing important stuff, and I’m confident this is far from comprehensively addressing the overall conflict at hand.)
As a random illustration (forgive my poor memory), for something like a year or two (? not sure), I had various “debates / debate skirmishes” with various other people doing agent foundations research at MIRI (circa 2019-2021 I guess, though I’m quite fuzzy on that). This would generally take the form of me saying stuff like “this whole research program is dooomed because it is too slow / it looks at the wrong data / it’s asking the wrong questions / it’s presuming away too much of the important stuff / it’s not sufficiently grappling with our lack of the appropriate concepts / etc.” or similar, and then trying to communicate about that, mostly by waving my arms around. IDK how much of an impression it made, but anyway, eventually I realized that I and the other researchers just had “fundamentally” different background presumptions about how to approach the whole problem of alignment / research taste / how to think / what questions to ask / how important methodology is / etc.; and therefore they weren’t trying to orient to the same things I was trying to orient towards; and therefore it was somewhat of a waste of effort to invest too much (beyond more initial fun versions) in these debates, and generally stop trying to attack the core parts of the problem together as a team with them. If I had been able to more quickly figure out, and state explicitly, these fundamental positions / orientations, then I could have avoided derailing other people’s research conversations as much. (I don’t think this is a direct analogy in most respects to the topic; my intent is to exemplify the structure of “unexpressed basic difference of orientation --> wasted effort; expressed basic difference --> more efficiently parallel / independent processing” or something like that. My guess is that in the cases at hand, it would be much easier to just state the disagreement directly, though maybe that’s incorrect?)
Ideating: What if authors could opt into Crocker’s rules for particular posts? With a tag or or something?
Or maybe a “Crocker’s rules” tag and a “butterfly idea” tag, with the default being something between those two extremes?
(Not that that’s a bad idea, but regarding both this idea and my original comment:)
My guess is that there’s core aspects of the Said dispute (as far as I understand it, not really being read in) that Crocker’s rules and butterfly ideas doesn’t address—issues around coordination and cognitive labor.
As an example to illustrate the type of thing I’m gesturing at:
This can be construed as a kind of defection against the conversational project of even talking about the same thing.
This can be largely orthogonal to butterfly/Crocker (if those are properly opposed). E.g. you could be pretty polite while derailing. And conversely, in some contexts you can be “Crockerish” productively and normatively even with butterfly ideas. For example, quickly coming up with counterexamples to a conjectured generalization, disregarding hopes about the hypothesis being true, can still be a cooperative butterfly sanctuary—because, for example, you are not being dismissive in tone, and are devoting attention to the actual butterfly idea, and are rolling with frequent revisions of the conjecture without getting snippy.
(A further random guess I have, again not being read in including not having fully read the OP, would be that talk of “hurt feelings” in this whole context is confused about some of the cases, because the feelings aren’t “you said mean things about me” but more like “I turned out to be frustrated with this thread, and even if I can’t explain exactly what’s happening I still think it was kinda adversarial and a regretted use of my time, which is an annoying situation and I just want to avoid this.”, or something like that. In other words, the thing that’s going wrong in some of these cases might be NOT something that Crocker’s rules are even supposed to be opting you into.)
I think it’s pretty gullible to treat those different self-reports as representing relevantly different things in the territory. My theory is that the “kinda adversarial” thing that’s happening that the person “can’t explain exactly” is: disagreement unadulterated by social improv games—disagreement with someone who refuses to soften, hedge, or obfuscate their vision of reality in order to maintain a cooperative vibe of mutual respect. It’s annoying and people want to avoid it because it’s less socially rewarding than the improv game.
[NB: I disagree voted but not karma voted.]
I think it would be gullible to uncritically assume all self reports of hurt feelings are not covering up some sort of bad behavior. I don’t think that’s what you’re saying, but I’m not actually sure what you’re actually saying. My best guess literal reading of what you wrote is that you’re saying that all these self-reports are more or less always (or usually? or what?) mainly motivated by a kind of coverup for poor reasoning. If you’re saying this, then I probably pretty strongly disagree. It could depend on which people we’re talking about, but I think there are other frequent main reasons for someone to end up with that report, such as the one I sketched in my example.
I think your “go down this rabbit hole where you’re not actually trying to talk about” story could potentially fit the improv game framework, actually? (Briefly: improv performers and people who don’t like adversarial debate try to “Yes, and” each other’s bids to steer the scene, rather than “blocking”, denying the other’s bid.)
Say: I write about my research program which you think is fundamentally flawed. I’m interested in hearing about in-paradigm improvements on my ideas, but not interested in hearing that the whole research program is shot. You ask questions that you think I should be able to answer if my research program were good. I have trouble answering the questions, and get frustrated that you weren’t talking about what I wanted you to talk about. (I wanted you to build on my ideas, not try to destroy them! Whether the research program is good is a separate topic, not what I wanted to talk about!)
Maybe there’s a case that you should have more clearly flagged that you were commenting in an “adversarial” role rather than a “cooperative” one with respect to my research program, so that I could have made the decision to ignore you earlier. But maybe I should stop trying to be so controlling of how other people interact with my ideas? (Maybe you could have been won over on the merits of the program if I had successfully answered your questions, and you couldn’t know until you asked.)
Absolutely not, no. I hope the following can help explain.
Yes, IMO this is a much more prosocial pattern and tends to go better for everyone involved. You’re saying this is “controlling”, but again, there’s a simple matter of matching intents. Like a traffic light.
Suppose this happens:
Now, I could be annoyed or something that I’m not getting the engagement I want, or annoyed that you’re getting more attention, or something. But I think in this case that annoyance is probably largely my problem, or possibly a problem with the local discourse [i.e. collective user behavior] (e.g. because it’s not able to allocate its cognitive resources properly). It’s a perfectly valid way for you to engage in discourse in a public forum; it’s interesting + relevant to discuss whether X is true, whether it affects my conclusions about Y, and whether my post does assume X.
However, suppose you come in and make an ambiguous comment, e.g. “just asking questions”, while in fact you mostly already have an opinion which you are for some reason not stating. Specifically, highly ambiguous about what you care about / what you’re trying to talk about / what topic you’re trying to get at. (And perhaps, further, the comment is elliptical, or seems to presume something about what I said incorrectly, or seems to signal that I “ought” to engage or have a response or something.) Well, now I might want to engage on the assumption that you’re talking about Y. There might also be attentional presumptions that I ought to engage. For example, it could be that most readers / the community broadly agrees that X is true, and doesn’t view it as that worthwhile to debate whether X is true unless there’s important new evidence. But if your comment is ambiguous, then I as the author and especially the audience would not have common knowledge that you’re not arguing against my claims about Y (presuming X).
If you signpost what you’re doing, then IMO what’s supposed to happen is this:
If your arguments are bad, you get ignored.
If your arguments are kind good / interesting, you get upvoted and discussed, but I may ignore because I believe X.
If your arguments are really good, then I’m eventually “forced” (within some ideal discourse community) to grapple with what you’re saying somehow.
This seems to be like both feasible and a much better sort of attentional traffic-light coordination. (Though plausibly I’m confused / missing important stuff, and I’m confident this is far from comprehensively addressing the overall conflict at hand.)
As a random illustration (forgive my poor memory), for something like a year or two (? not sure), I had various “debates / debate skirmishes” with various other people doing agent foundations research at MIRI (circa 2019-2021 I guess, though I’m quite fuzzy on that). This would generally take the form of me saying stuff like “this whole research program is dooomed because it is too slow / it looks at the wrong data / it’s asking the wrong questions / it’s presuming away too much of the important stuff / it’s not sufficiently grappling with our lack of the appropriate concepts / etc.” or similar, and then trying to communicate about that, mostly by waving my arms around. IDK how much of an impression it made, but anyway, eventually I realized that I and the other researchers just had “fundamentally” different background presumptions about how to approach the whole problem of alignment / research taste / how to think / what questions to ask / how important methodology is / etc.; and therefore they weren’t trying to orient to the same things I was trying to orient towards; and therefore it was somewhat of a waste of effort to invest too much (beyond more initial fun versions) in these debates, and generally stop trying to attack the core parts of the problem together as a team with them. If I had been able to more quickly figure out, and state explicitly, these fundamental positions / orientations, then I could have avoided derailing other people’s research conversations as much. (I don’t think this is a direct analogy in most respects to the topic; my intent is to exemplify the structure of “unexpressed basic difference of orientation --> wasted effort; expressed basic difference --> more efficiently parallel / independent processing” or something like that. My guess is that in the cases at hand, it would be much easier to just state the disagreement directly, though maybe that’s incorrect?)