Gunnar_Zarncke comments on Skills and Antiskills - Less Wrong
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I agree that there is a (context-dependent) spectrum of usefulness of a skill.
But I don't like the term "anti-skill" because "anti" implies the opposite of a skill - the inability to do something instead of a net negative effect. Additionally it is not clear what to call the neutral form. Also your examples are highly context sensitive - as you agree. I'd first like to see an example that is at least net-negative for the average case.
Instead I'd propose detach the usefulness from the word. Say advantagegous/neutral/disadvantageous skill.
I disagree with your preconceptions about the "anti" prefix. For example, an anti-hero is certainly a hero. I think it is reasonable to consider "anti" a contextually overloaded semantic negater whose scope does not have to be the naive interpretation: anti-X can refer to "opposite of X" or "opposite or lacking of a trait highly correlated with X" with the exact choice clear from context.
Hm, yes. "anti" can and is used in that way. I agree. But as always the readings of a word are disambiguated by context. And here I'm not so sure. But OK, I can live with anti-skill.
It feels good knowing you changed your mind in response to my rebuttal.