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by jcranberry
2488 days ago
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> It is an empirical claim, one that at least has not been refuted by observation. There are no sources or pieces of evidence cited in the section on what the essential tasks are. If it's an empirical claim, then the any claim made in the tarpit paper is certainly equally empirical. > ... and yet, no one has found a silver bullet yet (as per Brooks's definition), nor anything close to it. There was no such claim. |
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Then what does it have to do with No Silver Bullet? Brooks's point isn't that you can't make languages that some people may find more attractive, but that you can't drastically reduce complexity.
> There are no sources or pieces of evidence cited in the section on what the essential tasks are.
Right, that's why it's a claim. But it comes with an empirical prediction that was later verified by observation.
> If it's an empirical claim, then the any claim made in the tarpit paper is certainly equally empirical.
Of course it is, but if we take it as a silver-bullet claim (i.e. the ability to drastically cut down complexity), then it just doesn't fit with observation.