The social bookmarking site metafilter has a sister site called metatalk, which works the same way but is devoted entirely to talking about metafilter itself. Arguments about arguments, discussions about discussions, proposals for changes in site architecture, etc.
Arguments about arguments are often less productive than the arguments they are about, but they CAN be quite productive, and there's certainly a place for them. The only thing wrong with them is when they obstruct the discussion that spawned them, and so the idea of splitting off metatalk into its own site is really quite a clever one.
Lesswrong's problem is a peculiar one. It is ENTIRELY devoted to meta-arguments, to the extent that people have to shoehorn anything else they want to talk about into a cleverly (or not so cleverly) disguised example of some more meta topic. It's a kite without a string.
Imagine if you had been around the internet, trying to have a rational discussion about topic X, but unable to find an intelligent venue, and then stumbling upon lesswrong. "Aha!" you say. "Finally a community making a concerted effort to be rational!"
But to your dismay, you find that the ONLY thing they talk about is being rational, and a few other subjects that have been apparently grandfathered in. It's not that they have no interest in topic X, there's just no place on the site they're allowed to talk about it.
What I propose is a "non-meta" sister site, where people can talk and think about anything BESIDES talking and thinking. Well, you know what I mean.
Yes?
I didn't learn about Bayes' theorem for the first time on LW; I learned it in my epistemology class when I was a sophomore in college. Having read LW has not made me better at or more affectionate towards or more enthusiastic about spending time on math. (It probably has contributed towards convincing me that if I devoted a lot of time to it, I could become good at math, but hasn't motivated me to do so.) I've come to value participating on LW enough that I'd solve a simple Bayes problem to stay. (Or at least goad a friend into giving me the answer.)
But my point wasn't about me so much - it was about future possible contributors. Assuming people here think it's good to have me around, introducing barrier conditions that would have deterred me may be unwise, because they could deter people like me.
I'm curious to see an example or two of what these Bayesian problems might look like, if anybody has any ideas. I mean, it may be relevant to know just what difficulty level this test would be. Of course, what's simple for some LessWrong contributors is probably not simple for everyone.