少点错误 2024年12月30日
Learn to write well BEFORE you have something worth saying
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

这篇文章探讨了两种看似截然不同的写作类型:迷幻体验报告和学术论文,指出它们都普遍存在写作质量不高的问题。尽管作者在写作时拥有深刻的体验或专业的知识,但有效的沟通仍然是一项独立的技能。文章强调,清晰地表达复杂、抽象或有力的想法非常困难,仅仅拥有见解是不够的,还需要掌握良好的写作技巧。因此,作者建议在有重要信息需要分享之前,就应该开始练习写作,并从各种风格中学习,以提高表达能力。

✍️迷幻体验报告常流于平庸:虽然作者试图分享深刻的体验,但往往侧重于无关紧要的细节,使用陈词滥调,或以抽象的方式描述见解,未能有效传达其内在含义。

🔬学术写作也存在不足:学术论文虽然基于专业知识,但通常过于晦涩难懂,缺乏清晰的解释,结构设计也让读者感到费力,导致阅读体验不佳。

💡写作是一项独立技能:无论是记录个人体验还是分享学术成果,有效的沟通都需要良好的写作技巧,仅仅拥有深刻的见解或专业知识是不够的,需要通过练习和学习来提高。

📚提前练习的重要性:作者建议在有重要信息需要分享之前,就应该开始练习写作,学习不同的写作技巧,以便更好地表达复杂的思想和情感。

Published on December 29, 2024 11:42 PM GMT

I’ve been reading a lot of trip reports lately. Trip reports are accounts people write about their experiences doing drugs, for the benefit of other people who might do those same drugs. I don’t take illegal drugs myself, but I like learning about other people’s intense experiences, and trip reports are little peeks into the extremes of human consciousness. 

In some of these, people are really trying to communicate the power and revelation they had on a trip. They're trying to share what might be the most meaningful experience of their entire life. 

Here’s another thing: almost all trip reports are kind of mediocre writing.

This is wildly judgmental but I stand by it. Here are some common things you see in them:

It's not, like, a crime to write a mediocre trip report. It's not necessarily even a problem. They’re not necessarily trying to convince you of anything. A lot of them are just what it says on the tin: recording some stuff that happened. I can’t criticize these for being bland, because that seems like trying to critique a cookbook for being insufficiently whimsical: they’re just sharing information.

(...Though you can still take that as a personal challenge; “is this the best prose it can be?” For instance, How to Cook and Eat in Chinese by Chao Yang Buwei is a really well-written cookbook with a whimsical-yet-practical style. There’s always room to grow.)

But some of these trip reports very much do have an agenda, like “communicating crucial insights received from machine elves” or “convincing you not to take drug X because it will ruin your life”. In these cases, the goal would be better served if the writing were good, and boy howdy, my friends: the writing is not good.

Which is a little counter-intuitive, right? You’d think these intense and mind-blowing experiences would automatically give you rich psychic grist for sharing with others, but it turns out, no, accounts of the sublime and life-altering can still be astonishingly mid.

Now certain readers may be thinking, not unreasonably, “that’s because drug-induced revelations aren’t real revelations. The drug's effects makes some thoughts feel important – a trip report can’t explain why a particular 'realization' is important, because there’s nothing behind it.”

But you know who has something new and important to say AND knows why it’s important? Academic researchers publishing their latest work.

But alas, academic writing is also, too frequently, not good. 

And if good ideas made for good writing, you’d expect scientific literature to be the prime case for it. Academic scientists are experts: they know why they made all the decisions they did, they know what the steps do, they know why their findings are important. But that’s also not enough.

Ignore academic publishing and the scientific process itself, let’s just look at the writing. It’s very dense, denser than it needs to be. It does not start with simple ideas and build up, it’s practically designed to tax the reader. It’s just boring, it’s not pleasant to read. The rationale behind specific methods or statistical tests aren’t explained. (See The Journal of Actually Well-Written Science by Etienne Fortier-Dubois for more critique of the standard scientific style.) There’s a whole career field of explaining academic studies to laypeople, which is also, famously, often misleading and bad.

This is true for a few reasons:

First, there’s a floor of how “approachable” or “easy” you can make technical topics. A lot of jargon serves useful purposes, and what’s the point in a field of expertise if you can’t assume your reader is caught up on at least the basics? A description of synthesizing alkylated estradiol derivatives, or a study on the genome replication method of a particular virus, is simply very difficult to make layperson-accessible.

Second, academic publishing and the scientific edifice as it currently stands encourage uniformity of many aspects of research output, including style and structure. Some places like Seeds of Science are pushing back on this, but they’re in the minority.

But third, and this is what trips up the trip-reporters and the scientists alike, writing well is hard. Explaining complicated or abstract or powerful ideas is really difficult. Just having the insight isn’t enough - you have to communicate it well, and that is its own, separate skill.

I don’t really believe in esoterica or the innately unexplainable. “One day,” wrote Jack Kerouac, “I will find the right words, and they will be simple.” Better communication is possible. There are great descriptions of being zonked out of one’s gourd and there is great, informative, readable science writing.

So here’s my suggestion: Learn to write well before you have something you really need to tell people about. Practice it on its own. Write early and often. Write a variety of different things and borrow techniques from writing you like. And once you have a message you actually need to share, you'll actually be able to express it.

(A more thorough discussion of how to actually write well is beyond the scope of this blog post – my point here is just that it’s worth improving. if you’re interested, let me know and I might do a follow-up.)


Thank you Kelardry for reviewing a draft of this post.

Support Eukaryote Writes Blog on Patreon.

Crossposted to: [EukaryoteWritesBlog.comSubstackLessWrong]



Discuss

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

写作 沟通 表达 学术写作 迷幻体验
相关文章
阿笑呀小阿笑:想起高一的时候谈了一个对象,有次我给他…
董宇辉:过度表达和思考,会造成巨大的精神内耗。
和同事聊天,聊到输出倒逼输入,所以要保持个人成长速度,就要保证多输出。 在保证输出上,我的经验是:每天保持写作,写800-1000字的短内容。 大家听过金发女孩...
Comment on Workday Talent Marketplace Delivers Skills-based Talent Matching to Drive Greater Agility by aizen power
我公众号已经五天没发文章了,现在每天依然还有八九十个新增关注,其中一半来自于文章页关注。 也就是说,我之前写下来的文字,依然还在为我带来新的受众,这里...
【专访】普利策奖得主埃尔南·迪亚斯:金融事务对女性的排除旷日持久且有意为之
吵架,真不是两个人在吵,实则是六个人在吵。 真正的你,你眼里的你,ta眼里的你。 真正的ta,ta眼里的ta,你眼里的ta。
?? 一个好的领导者知道如何战略性地“拍马屁”: ? 来自Tim ferriss推荐 《克林顿战情室的12条胜选秘诀》 「如果你认为某些人是傻瓜,而你唯一的应对方...
#不是毕业后就不学习了,要主动定期升级自己的各种配置 “有些人的中央处理器(头脑)更强大一些,有些人的内存容量(记忆力)更大一些,有些人的硬盘空间(笔记...
在和我男朋友聊完我作为一个女性未来遇到的可能的困境的时候,他说:你有没有发现,学历越低男性越痛苦,学历越高女性越痛苦。 我当时眼泪就掉下来了,感受到一...