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Paul
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Comments involving the word "you" are not nice when part of an ad hominem

Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem

Figure Credit: Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem


The presence of words like "you/your" in technical criticism make it appear similar to "ad hominem" criticism. People see the "you" part -- which suggests blame or shame or some such thing -- and not the technical part.

Compare.

Before:

why do you want to do this? What benefit do you think it will give you? If you're making things async just because "it's the new way", then you are not thinking, you are cargo-culting. And you should never do that.

After depersonalizing:

why do this? What is the benefit? Changing the code on lines NNN-NNN to async won't fix the problem. Code shouldn't be made async simply because it is a fad/trend.

Which criticism sounds more technical and less rude?

Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem

Figure Credit: Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem


The presence of words like "you/your" in technical criticism make it appear similar to "ad hominem" criticism. People see the "you" part -- which suggests blame or shame or some such thing -- and not the technical part.

Compare.

Before:

why do you want to do this? What benefit do you think it will give you? If you're making things async just because "it's the new way", then you are not thinking, you are cargo-culting. And you should never do that.

After depersonalizing:

why do this? What is the benefit? Changing the code on lines NNN-NNN to async won't fix the problem. Code shouldn't be made async simply because it is a fad/trend.

Which criticism sounds more technical and less rude?

Comments involving the word "you" are not nice when part of an ad hominem

Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem

Figure Credit: Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem


The presence of words like "you/your" in technical criticism make it appear similar to "ad hominem" criticism. People see the "you" part -- which suggests blame or shame or some such thing -- and not the technical part.

Compare.

Before:

why do you want to do this? What benefit do you think it will give you? If you're making things async just because "it's the new way", then you are not thinking, you are cargo-culting. And you should never do that.

After depersonalizing:

why do this? What is the benefit? Changing the code on lines NNN-NNN to async won't fix the problem. Code shouldn't be made async simply because it is a fad/trend.

Which criticism sounds more technical and less rude?

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Paul
  • 27.4k
  • 30
  • 31

Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem

Figure Credit: Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem


The presence of words like "you/your" in technical criticism make it appear similar to "ad hominem" criticism. People see the "you" part -- which suggests blame or shame or some such thing -- and not the technical part.

Compare.

Before:

why do you want to do this? What benefit do you think it will give you? If you're making things async just because "it's the new way", then you are not thinking, you are cargo-culting. And you should never do that.

After depersonalizing:

why do this? What is the benefit? Changing thatthe code on lines NNN-NNN to async won't fix the problem. Code shouldn't be made async simply because thatit is a fad/trend.

Which criticism sounds more technical and less rude?

Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem

Figure Credit: Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem


The presence of words like "you/your" in technical criticism make it appear similar to "ad hominem" criticism. People see the "you" part -- which suggests blame or shame or some such thing -- and not the technical part.

Compare.

Before:

why do you want to do this? What benefit do you think it will give you? If you're making things async just because "it's the new way", then you are not thinking, you are cargo-culting. And you should never do that.

After depersonalizing:

why do this? What is the benefit? Changing that code to async won't fix the problem. Code shouldn't be made async simply because that is a fad/trend.

Which criticism sounds more technical and less rude?

Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem

Figure Credit: Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem


The presence of words like "you/your" in technical criticism make it appear similar to "ad hominem" criticism. People see the "you" part -- which suggests blame or shame or some such thing -- and not the technical part.

Compare.

Before:

why do you want to do this? What benefit do you think it will give you? If you're making things async just because "it's the new way", then you are not thinking, you are cargo-culting. And you should never do that.

After depersonalizing:

why do this? What is the benefit? Changing the code on lines NNN-NNN to async won't fix the problem. Code shouldn't be made async simply because it is a fad/trend.

Which criticism sounds more technical and less rude?

Source Link
Paul
  • 27.4k
  • 30
  • 31

Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem

Figure Credit: Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement, from Wikipedia: Ad Hominem


The presence of words like "you/your" in technical criticism make it appear similar to "ad hominem" criticism. People see the "you" part -- which suggests blame or shame or some such thing -- and not the technical part.

Compare.

Before:

why do you want to do this? What benefit do you think it will give you? If you're making things async just because "it's the new way", then you are not thinking, you are cargo-culting. And you should never do that.

After depersonalizing:

why do this? What is the benefit? Changing that code to async won't fix the problem. Code shouldn't be made async simply because that is a fad/trend.

Which criticism sounds more technical and less rude?