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Culture War Roundup for the week of January 6, 2025

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I have forgetten most of them

Have you forgotten what they taught you, though? I find with a lot of non-fiction I lose episodic memory of the book but I retain semantic memory of much of its theses ... which is really the right subconscious prioritization, I think. I find knowing assorted facts/theories/hypotheses useful far more often than I find knowing where I got them useful, because even when I need to look up a reference I don't really care that it be the same reference. And even the parts I forget are often things like supporting arguments that still served a value by indicating whether I should consider the central arguments worthwhile.

Additionally, a ton of books could have been an interesting blog post series but they've been puffed up and watered down to fill a 300 page book with a dumb title.

This is definitely true, but I'm not sure whether it's a bigger waste of time to have to speed-read through such books' puffery or to have to search through a bunch of uninteresting blog posts to find the most interesting ones. Publishers' selections aren't a great filter, but so far social media isn't either. I bet a significant fraction of Mottizans are still people who originally found it because even a filter as simple as "read Scott-Alexander-adjacent things" can still be competitive with the alternatives.