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by joelg87
5007 days ago
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Indeed. I actually try my best to find good research, and by my nature of reading many other blogs of founders much more successful than me, I often have great insights in my mind to include in my articles. My intention with this point was to take away the pressure. I think a personal blog often can be more about the individual's thoughts than about solid studies with large sample sizes. Even just a thought that comes into your mind and you write down and publish within a couple of hours can be very interesting to others. Completely understand how this point could come across, but it's much more about making it easier for a writer and showing that an article can be thoughts rather than solid "evidence". |
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"Good writers have two things in common: they prefer to be understood rather than admired; and they do not write for knowing and over-acute readers." -- Friedrich Nietzsche
EDIT: Let me elaborate a little about why I think this applies.
The GGP says that the idea that "research or strong points are not necessary" makes him sad. Joel is saying that one of his realizations is that writing does not need to be about compelling and unassailable logic, but can also be about communicating his personal experiences and emotions.
In other words, he prefers to be understood rather than satisfying the pedantic readers in his audience. I think this is the correct choice: being understood means that his emotions and experiences are related in such a way that the reader can emphasize with him; being correct means simply passing a mechanical examination of his logical structure.
At the end of the day, most people side with you because they empathize with you or because you stir their own emotions, not because you satisfy a system of equations.