A fun game you can play on LessWrong is to stop just as you are about to click "comment" and make a prediction for how much karma your comment will receive within the next week. This will provide some quick feedback about how well your karma predictors are working. This exercise will let you know if something is broken. A simpler version is to pick from these three distinct outcomes: Positive karma, 0 karma, negative karma.
What other predictors are this easy to test? Likely candidates match one or more of the following criteria:
- Something we do on a regular (probably daily) basis
- An action that has a clear starting point
- Produces quick, quantifiable feedback (e.g. karma, which is a basic number)
- An action that is extremely malleable so we can take our feedback, make quick adjustments, and run through the whole process again
- An ulterior goal other than merely testing our predictors so we don't get bored (e.g. commenting at LessWrong, which offers communication and learning as ulterior goals)
- Something with a "sticky" history so we can get a good glimpse of our progress over time
It's an ADBOC thing. I've just learned there's a technical term for what I want to say here: Implicature - there is a reason for mentioning this particular correlation besides its truth.
Connotations travel through value-judgments and through false dichotomies - for example, "These people do this, while good people have bad things happen to them." You are juxtaposing two groups, and you are relying on the audience to figure out what dimension you're showing two sides of. The latter half of that sentence says "Good people" and "Bad things," so the first half must be "bad people" and "good things."
The only value judgment I see in zero_call's statement is the word "simple."