On this basis is here a long discussion about gender and related topics- in short, it is rude to gender male by default.
(Someone made a prediction somewhere along the line of "by 20XX there will be a group norm to use neutral pronouns as strong as the taboo on politics is", but I can`t find it.)
in short, it is rude to gender male by default.
"He" remains a standard gender-neutral pronoun in common usage of the English language. Its use does not imply and should not be read to imply superiority of the masculine.
In short; I reject the notion that it is "rude" to use the descriptivist standard of the language. Awkward? Certainly. But so too are all yet-proposed solutions to said problem.
I.e.; I didn't assume anything. I used a gender-neutral pronoun.
Scott Adams, author of Dilbert, believes that trying to try is more effective than trying:
Regular Less Wrong readers will remember Eliezer Yudkowsky's warning about trying to try:
Adams says the danger of trying is that you will fail in trying, which will bruise your self-esteem and cripple your motivation to try again. Yudkowsky says the danger of trying to try is that you will succeed in trying to try, leaving you too easily satisfied and unmotivated to actually do the thing you were trying to try to do.
Have any readers had success in trying to try?