The LessWrong dev team is hard at work creating Talk Pages/Discussion pages for tags. When they're done, every tag page will have a corresponding talk page which lets users discuss changes and improvements related to that tag.
We don't have that yet, so in the meantime, please make comments you have about tags (generally or for specific-tags) here. If you're talking about a specific tag, of course, make sure to link to it. You might also want to link back to your comment in the body of the tag description, e.g., "Tag Discussion here"
Examples of things you might comment about a tag:
- Wow, this is a great tag! / I think this tag makes no sense.
- I propose renaming this tag to X for clarity.
- I want feedback on these proposed changes to this tag description.
- I am confused why <post> has been tagged under this tag.
- I have made several improvements. Mods, please review this tag's grading. I think it is now a B-Class tag.
Or:
- Why doesn't a tag for Z exist?
- I really want <feature>, that would make my life much better.
- <Thing> seems broken.
Also, feel free to use this space to claim credit for tags you've worked hard to make great! (we'll give you karma!)
Other relevant pages about tagging
- Tagging FAQ
- Tag Grading Scheme
- Tags Spreadsheet (GSheet, good way to find tags to work on)
I missed this comment till now, sorry. Seems no one else opined yet, so my thoughts:
I don't feel like I can confidently say something about the value of distinguishing the two, but I can offer the broader questions I see.
I've seen already that tag creators will have one narrow thing in mind when they make a tag, and then other people will come along and apply it very broadly, e.g. Biology getting applied to anything involving a biological system at all even if it'd be of no interest to a biologist or someone look for biologist content. If two tags are very adjacent, I might expect things to haphazardly go in one or the other or both.
2. If it's important, how do we maintain two tags?
I could see preserving a space to just discuss the formal side separately from the psychological being quite valuable. Especially if there's a sustained back-and-forth on technical stuff. If it is, then I think there's effort we could put in to maintain the distinction in the face of entropy.
Overall, the seeming cost of maintaining separate tags makes me by default want to just aim for broader, more-inclusive tags. But if a distinction is worth it and/or we end up with a committed community and people who want to keep tags clean and true to their intention, might be worth it.