There's too much online discussion where the topic at hand is reinvented from first principles again, and again, and again, in what can at best be described as a strenous relationship to actual reality as every debateperson is loaded with the assumption that they are imbued with the sum total of human knowledge and therefore must never read any material on anything other than other peoples posts that are also reinvented from first principles
These people should all be shamed away from participating in any discussion until they better themselves, which is what lurk moar did.
I disagree broadly with the premise. I think it is helpful to engage in topics you know nothing about. But by engage I don't mean try to tear down or refute, I mean ask questions, and then listen to the answers. Engage by consuming and learning. Learning is good and we often learn from each other. Engagement is good as long as that engagement isn't robbing anyone of a voice but is instead amplifying that voice. Asking good faith questions and then listening to the answers is one way to do this.
This is good advice for most people but I already know everything about everything.
It's fine to engage, albeit
is flying very close to the sun of gish gallop bullshit questions that, really, you should just google.
I'd argue this site has the concept pretty down pat. I mean there's some good souls who'd write your truthful answer as to things like "Why is blackface racist but not whiteface" or similar questions but really the appropiate answer is: there's enough written on this topic that you could just read that.
sometimes it's difficult to know where to look for good material on a subject, especially as search engines get inundated with seo approved llm generated garbage. discussions are a great way to spread around well written arguments and relate them to current topics, and i think we owe it to each other to share the good material we find.
I think we owe it to each other to search for shit first and ask questions second. there's a very thin line between earnest inquiry and exhausting marginalized comrades.
It's often the case that when you google something that doesn't have a simple answer you'll get at least one result which is just a discussion on a forum. Granted, not all forums are created equal (we have the best posters don't we folks) so YMMV, and getting more input from different people can always be worth something.
I'm very much in favor of asking earnest questions.
I do like the idea of pointing people toward previous discussions that turned out to be very helpful. Certain topics tend to follow the same path, and reading through a good discussion can scratch an itch that books or essays can't quite reach.
But even if the exact same discussion is created from whole cloth over and over, it's not a wasted effort if the people involved come out of it thinking more clearly.