If it’s worth saying, but not worth its own post, then it goes here.
Notes for future OT posters:
- What accomplishments are you celebrating from the last month?
- What are you reading?
- What reflections do you have for yourself or others from the last month?
- What have you tried out this month?
- (Teaser for my next post) What is your relationship with yourself?
I mostly agree, except for:
I believe this is not how most people think. The default human mode is thinking in associations. Most people will read the article and remember that LW is associated with something weird right-wing. Especially when "neoreaction" is a section header, which makes it hard to miss. The details about who took interest in whom, if they notice them at all, will be quickly forgotten. (Just like when you publicly debunk some myths, it can actually make people believe them more, because they will later remember they heard it, and forget it was in the context of debunking.)
If the article would instead have a section called "politics on LW" mentioning the 'politics is the mindkiller' slogan, and how Eliezer is a libertarian, and then complete results of a political poll (including the NR)... most people would not remember that NR was mentioned there.
Similarly, the length of sections is instinctively perceived as a degree of how much the things are related. Effective altruism is reduced to one very unspecific sentence, while Roko's basilisk has a relatively longer explanation. Of course (availability bias) this makes an impression that the basilisk is more relevant than effective altruism.
If the article would instead have a longer text on effective altruism (for example, a short paragraph or explaining the outline of the idea, preceded by a link "Main article: Effective altruism"), people would get an impression that LW and EA are significantly connected.
The same truth can be described in ways that leave completely opposite impression. I think David understands quite well how this game works, which is why he keeps certain sections shorter and certain sections longer, etc.