 boethius
boethius         
         Could it be that you have misunderstood this topic? It looks like it. The advice to assume your readers are stupid, lazy, and mean, is merely an arresting, memorable way of saying you should write clearly, concisely, and should argue carefully. — jamalrob
Even interpreted generously as "simple and concise", many of "the great philosophers" are not in such a category. — boethius
In philosophy we are taught a mnemonic to help ensure our writing will be as clear, concise, and unambiguous as possible — Pfhorrest
 Jamal
Jamal         
         However, I am not implying that Pfhorrest wants to do this, only pointing out that academia puts people on such a path with the certainly harmless "mnemonics" of thinking of people as "stupid, lazy and mean" as a hapless luck-charm to remember to be "simple, concise and disambiguate" for the purposes of institutional writing. — boethius
 boethius
boethius         
         But it is at least good to write like that sometimes in philosophy, say in academia; or here on the forum, as you obviously attempt to do yourself; or when writing for non-specialists. — jamalrob
 I like sushi
I like sushi         
          unenlightened
unenlightened         
         The advice to assume your readers are stupid, lazy, and mean, is merely an arresting, memorable way of saying you should write clearly, concisely, and should argue carefully. — jamalrob
 frank
frank         
         Basically don’t waste the reader’s time or it could effectively stop what you’ve done reaching an audience that would value it. — I like sushi
 Amity
Amity         
         Although, like I said, I think it's counterproductive and a waste of time to write for "mean" readers. — jamalrob
 SophistiCat
SophistiCat         
          Pantagruel
Pantagruel         
         Why doesn't it exemplify the care and clarity it recommends instead of this sensationalist macho hyperbolic tone? No, i think it betrays a real attitude that is as problematic as it is prevalent in academia. — unenlightened
 Jamal
Jamal         
          Pfhorrest
Pfhorrest         
         
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
         Know your audience but don't just play to those who clap... — Amity
 Amity
Amity         
         There are a variety of things you might aim to do in your paper. You'll usually begin by putting some thesis or argument on the table for consideration. Then you'll go on to do one or two of the following:
Criticize that argument or thesis
Offer counter-examples to the thesis
Defend the argument or thesis against someone else's criticism
Offer reasons to believe the thesis
Give examples which help explain the thesis, or which help to make the thesis more plausible
Argue that certain philosophers are committed to the thesis by their other views, though they do not come out and explicitly endorse the thesis
Discuss what consequences the thesis would have, if it were true
Revise the thesis in the light of some objection
You'll conclude by stating the upshot of your discussion. (For instance, should we accept the thesis? Should we reject it? Or should we conclude that we don't yet have enough information to decide whether the thesis is true or false?)
 Frank Apisa
Frank Apisa         
         You'll conclude by stating the upshot of your discussion. (For instance, should we accept the thesis? Should we reject it? Or should we conclude that we don't yet have enough information to decide whether the thesis is true or false?)
 jgill
jgill         
          Pfhorrest
Pfhorrest         
          Amity
Amity         
          Amity
Amity         
         Sure, but it doesn't follow that the way to persuade them is to follow the quoted advice, i.e., to use disclaimers and clarifications to remove all ambiguities. — jamalrob
You can write for a stupid and lazy audience, with clear, concise explanations, only if you can assume they’re charitable enough to look for your intended meaning without lengthy disclaimers and clarifications. — Pfhorrest
 Pfhorrest
Pfhorrest         
         There is no need for lengthy disclaimers to be able to write clearly and concisely so as to avoid misinterpretation. — Amity
 jgill
jgill         
         ↪jgill
Sounds like basically the same reason [you] wrote your history. To make some minor contribution to the field. — Pfhorrest
 Amity
Amity         
          Pantagruel
Pantagruel         
         but to write with even the worst of audiences i — Pfhorrest
 Hanover
Hanover         
         In philosophy we are taught a mnemonic to help ensure our writing will be as clear, concise, and unambiguous as possible: to write for an audience assumed to be “stupid, lazy, and mean”. — Pfhorrest
 Pfhorrest
Pfhorrest         
          ernestm
ernestm         
          ernestm
ernestm         
         Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.