You should probably link some posts, it’s hard to discuss this so abstractly. And popular rationalist thinkers should be able to handle their posts being called mediocre (especially highly-upvoted ones).
This was also on my mind after seeing Jesse’s short form yesterday. Ryan’s “this is good” comment was above Louis’ thorough explanation of an alternative formal motivation for IFs. That would still be the case if I hadn’t heavy upvoted and weak downvoted.
I personally cast my comment up/downvotes as an expression of my preference ordering for visibility. I would encourage others to also do so. For instance, I suggest Ryan’s comment should’ve been agreement voted rather than upvoted by others. This stance has as a corollary to not vote if you haven’t read the other comments whose rankings you are affecting—or rather vote with any other marker of which LW has many.
This ‘upvotes as visibility preferences’ policy isn’t tractable for posts, so I suspect the solution there—if one is needed—would have to be done on the backend by normalization. Not sure whether this is worth attempting.
A salient example to me: This post essentially consists of Paul briefly remarking on some mildly interesting distinctions about different kinds of x-risks, and listing his precise credences without any justification for them. It’s well-written for what it aims to be (a quick take on personal views), but I don’t understand why this post was so strongly celebrated.
You should probably link some posts, it’s hard to discuss this so abstractly. And popular rationalist thinkers should be able to handle their posts being called mediocre (especially highly-upvoted ones).
This was also on my mind after seeing Jesse’s short form yesterday. Ryan’s “this is good” comment was above Louis’ thorough explanation of an alternative formal motivation for IFs. That would still be the case if I hadn’t heavy upvoted and weak downvoted.
I personally cast my comment up/downvotes as an expression of my preference ordering for visibility. I would encourage others to also do so. For instance, I suggest Ryan’s comment should’ve been agreement voted rather than upvoted by others. This stance has as a corollary to not vote if you haven’t read the other comments whose rankings you are affecting—or rather vote with any other marker of which LW has many.
This ‘upvotes as visibility preferences’ policy isn’t tractable for posts, so I suspect the solution there—if one is needed—would have to be done on the backend by normalization. Not sure whether this is worth attempting.
Link here since I don’t particularly want to call out Ryan, his comment was fine. https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/7X9BatdaevHEaHres/jesse-hoogland-s-shortform
A salient example to me: This post essentially consists of Paul briefly remarking on some mildly interesting distinctions about different kinds of x-risks, and listing his precise credences without any justification for them. It’s well-written for what it aims to be (a quick take on personal views), but I don’t understand why this post was so strongly celebrated.