It sounds like you’re viewing the goal of thinking about DT as: “Figure out your object-level intuitions about what to do in specific abstract problem structures. Then, when you encounter concrete problems, you can ask which abstract problem structure the concrete problems correspond to and then act accordingly.”
I think that approach has its place. But there’s at least another very important (IMO more important) goal of DT: “Figure out your meta-level intuitions about why you should do one thing vs. another, across different abstract problem structures.” (Basically figuring out our “non-pragmatic principles” as discussed here.) I don’t see how just asking Claude helps with that, if we don’t have evidence that Claude’s meta-level intuitions match ours. Our object-level verdicts would just get reinforced without probing their justification. Garbage in, garbage out.
It sounds like you’re viewing the goal of thinking about DT as: “Figure out your object-level intuitions about what to do in specific abstract problem structures. Then, when you encounter concrete problems, you can ask which abstract problem structure the concrete problems correspond to and then act accordingly.”
I think that approach has its place. But there’s at least another very important (IMO more important) goal of DT: “Figure out your meta-level intuitions about why you should do one thing vs. another, across different abstract problem structures.” (Basically figuring out our “non-pragmatic principles” as discussed here.) I don’t see how just asking Claude helps with that, if we don’t have evidence that Claude’s meta-level intuitions match ours. Our object-level verdicts would just get reinforced without probing their justification. Garbage in, garbage out.