I was first introduced to Lesswrong about 6 months ago, and started posting about 4 months ago, but my posts and comments have been downvoted which has caused me to become unable interact with this community. What am I not understanding? The posts I make just get downvoted and there's no feedback so I don't know how to improve. I read recommended guides for beginners, and I've been open-minded with all my posts & comments. I think maybe I have a fundamental misunderstanding of the people who comprise the Lesswrong community. Their goals, their knowledge, their intentions, etc. I understand that a lot of people in this community come from academia and I do not, so maybe that's part of the reason? Or maybe there is a set of norms I'm unaware of because I'm new? I'm guessing almost no one will be able to see this, but if you do, can you enlighten me about what I'm not seeing?
Yes, this seems to me like a good strategy for posting on LW. Start with smaller, then generalize (and link to previous posts when needed).
One advantage is that when things go wrong -- if one of the smaller articles is strongly rejected -- it gives you an opportunity to stop and reflect. Maybe you were wrong, in which case it is good that you didn't write the more general article (because it would be downvoted). Maybe the LW readers were wrong, but that still means that you should communicate your (smaller, specific) point better, before moving to more general claims.
Another advantage is that, if your circumstances or priorities change, and suddenly you don't have time to write for LW anymore, the smaller self-contained articles still provide value.
I have seen people make a mistake of posting a long outline first (which sometimes even got lots of upvotes), and then part 2 got downvoted because readers fundamentally disagreed with it... and now what? If someone disagrees with the part 2, they probably won't be happy about part 3 which builds upon the part 2, so now every part would get a downvote.