How Does Veritula Work?

Showing only those parts of the discussion which lead to #1850.

See full discussion instead
  Log in or sign up to participate in this discussion.
With an account, you can revise, criticize, and comment on ideas.

Discussions can branch out indefinitely. Zoom out for the bird’s-eye view.
Zelalem Mekonnen’s avatar
Zelalem Mekonnen revised about 11 hours ago·#1851· Collapse
2nd of 2 versions leading to #1850

If I understand Veritula correctly, we first start with an idea/conjecture. We accept the idea as true until it has received a criticism. In which case, until the current criticism isn't resolved, the idea is tentatively seen as false and makes no sense to live in accordance to it. We don't do bulk criticism. Each criticism, even if they are related must be in it's own. Also, avoid duplicate ideas.

Criticized1 criticim(s)
Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis HackethalOP, about 23 hours ago·#1848· Collapse

Decent start with some room for improvement. Let’s learn Veritula by doing. I’ll submit criticisms of your idea one by one and you can practice Veritula by addressing them. Here’s the first one:

Also, avoid duplicate criticism.

Yes, but we should avoid duplicate ideas in general.

Try revising #1833 to address this criticism. Click ‘Revise’, change ‘avoid duplicate criticism’ to ‘avoid duplicate ideas’, deselect this criticism underneath the form, then hit submit.

Make sure that at each step you understand why you’re performing that step. Ask first if you don’t.

Criticism of #1851
Zelalem Mekonnen’s avatar
Zelalem Mekonnen, about 22 hours ago·#1849· Collapse

What of for "Supersedes previous version?" box? Would that be selected, since the new version would supersede the current version.

Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis HackethalOP, about 11 hours ago·#1850· Collapse

Checking that box is useful when you want a revision to override the original.

If you check it, Veritula automatically posts a criticism of the original idea on your behalf. This way, if the original idea is a criticism, it gets ‘neutralized’, which is usually what you want when you revise a criticism.

Consider what would happen if you didn’t neutralize an old criticism: then the parent idea would show two pending criticisms.

#1833 (your idea) isn’t a criticism. Even if it were, it’s already been criticized (#1848). So checking the box isn’t strictly necessary. But feel free to check it and see what happens.