Closing a LOT of windows

All sorts of stuff before I do a major backup and upgrade… and I wonder I why keep these windows open, just so I can get around to blogging them.

WFMU’s Beware of the Blog: Early Science Fiction Fanzines: A Cover Gallery: So you can see all the scary drawings of… oh, I can’t even describe it.

 

It’s not you, it’s your books.

The World’s Best Insulting Lines: or at least the most generic ones…

How to Disagree:

The most obvious advantage of classifying the forms of disagreement is that it will help people to evaluate what they read. In particular, it will help them to see through intellectually dishonest arguments. An eloquent speaker or writer can give the impression of vanquishing an opponent merely by using forceful words. In fact that is probably the defining quality of a demagogue. By giving names to the different forms of disagreement, we give critical readers a pin for popping such balloons.

Such labels may help writers too. Most intellectual dishonesty is unintentional. Someone arguing against the tone of something he disagrees with may believe he’s really saying something. Zooming out and seeing his current position on the disagreement hierarchy may inspire him to try moving up to counterargument or refutation.

But the greatest benefit of disagreeing well is not just that it will make conversations better, but that it will make the people who have them happier. If you study conversations, you find there is a lot more meanness down in DH1 than up in DH6. You don’t have to be mean when you have a real point to make. In fact, you don’t want to. If you have something real to say, being mean just gets in the way.

If moving up the disagreement hierarchy makes people less mean, that will make most of them happier. Most people don’t really enjoy being mean; they do it because they can’t help it.

(Via Making Light.)

 

 

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