Here's something to pick our collective spirits up:
According to Google's infallible algorithms, 20% of the content on LessWrong.com falls within the 'Advanced' reading level. For comparison, another well-known bastion of intelligence on the internets, Hacker News, only has 4% of it's content in that category.
Strangely, inserting a space before the name of the site in the query tends to reduce the amount of content that falls in the highest bucket, but I am told that highly trained Google engineers are interrogating the bug in a dimly lit room as we speak, and expect it to crack soon.
It's not evidence of any such thing. Read Orwell's Politics And The English Language - http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/orwell46.htm . Every example of bad writing he gives there would show up as 'advanced'.
I have no idea how google's algorithms work. If they're counting syllables per word or evaluating vocabulary then ranking as advanced is evidence for both the claim that we use too much jargon and the claim that we talk about difficult and complex ideas. But that isn't the only evidence to consider. We've both read much of Less Wrong and can evaluate the difficulty and complexity of the ideas we discuss here. Do you not think we talk about difficult and complex ideas here? If so, what makes you think the 'advanced' rating is a product of poor writing rath... (read more)