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Why are middlebrow dismissals so tempting? (2015)

1 pointsby goldemeraldabout 1 year ago

1 comment

coldteaabout 1 year ago
&gt;<i>If you can tell a new company is obviously flawed, congratulations! You don’t have a useful opinion. Only when you can articulate why a reasonable person would have built the company that way, and what that reasonable person is missing, can you escape the Curse of the Middlebrow.</i><p>Merely saying &quot;a new company is obviously flawed&quot; you&#x27;d be right most of the time. Which must be something, right? Being right most of the time sounds like a good quality - and dismissing things that are failing 99.9% of the time is also a good default.<p>This critique on middlebrow dismissals misses that they&#x27;re not supposed to be &quot;construcive criticism&quot; (which is what it laments they lack), they&#x27;re supposed to be summarily judgements. Hey, it&#x27;s even in the name you gave them.<p>It also cherry-picks the ultra-rare cases where they are wrong, like when a startup ended up worth billions. What about the majority of cases they didn&#x27;t go anywhere, and the middlebrow critique was right? This is not a stopped watch which is right &quot;twice a day&quot;. This is more like a watch that is right most of the time and shows the wrong time only for a few seconds per day.