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Perplexed comments on Are You a Paralyzed Subordinate Monkey? - Less Wrong Discussion

26 Post author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 02 March 2011 09:12PM

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Comment author: Perplexed 03 March 2011 12:27:15AM 7 points [-]

I find it curious that this posting is tagged Gryffindor and Hufflepuff, when the title and subject matter are entirely Slytherin and the analysis style pretends to be Ravenclaw.

Comment author: HonoreDB 03 March 2011 01:46:05AM *  3 points [-]

The posting could be paraphrased as

"We generally say we spend too much time doing nothing because we don't have enough Hufflepuff in us. But in a Kitty Genovese situation, where there's an immediate need to act and a crowd of people watching, it's the Gryffindors who leap into motion while the Hufflepuffs do nothing. Maybe this generalizes."

Of course, it can take a Slytherin to notice these things.

Comment author: wedrifid 03 March 2011 02:09:41AM *  3 points [-]

Of course, it can take a Slytherin to notice these things.

A Ravenclaw will often notice too... just far too long after the fact to be useful in practice. :)

It is definitely Slytherin thinking that prompts one to harness this knowledge to useful practical effect. :)

Comment author: JGWeissman 03 March 2011 12:45:27AM 1 point [-]

It seems to convey a cynical view of Slytherin style thinking that may be blocking the achievement of Gryffindor and Hufflepuff values.

Comment author: Carinthium 03 March 2011 08:48:07AM 2 points [-]

Hasn't the very fanfic which introduced this idea pointed out that there are more ways of looking at an issue then just four?

Comment author: JGWeissman 03 March 2011 05:56:55PM 4 points [-]

Yes, and Less Wrong has way more than four tags, and this post is also tagged "akrasia". I am not too worried about us trying to fit everything into four little boxes from a fictional magical society.

Comment author: NancyLebovitz 03 March 2011 09:07:19AM 1 point [-]

Why "pretends" to be Ravenclaw? What would a real Ravenclaw analysis look like?

Comment author: Perplexed 03 March 2011 03:24:01PM 3 points [-]

Why "pretends" to be Ravenclaw?

My choice of words was too confrontational. Substitute "purports".

What would a real Ravenclaw analysis look like?

I'm not sure. But it probably would supply empirical evidence or cite authorities rather than quoting a friend and referring to one's own prior writing.